HomeHow to Choose a Business Valuation Professional (2026)

How to Choose a Business Valuation Professional (2026)

Quick Answer

To choose a business valuation professional, start by confirming you actually need one, for a sale, a free sector-adjusted estimate or a sell-side advisor’s indicative valuation is usually enough; you need a credentialed appraiser only for tax, divorce, ESOP, shareholder disputes, certain SBA loans, or litigation. When you do need one, look for the right credential (ASA, ABV, CVA, or CBA, with ASA and ABV being the most respected in high-scrutiny matters), relevant experience in your specific situation (tax vs divorce vs ESOP vs litigation are different specialties) and your industry, and, if litigation is possible, expert-witness experience. Ask about their methodology, the standard of value they’ll apply, the engagement type (calculation vs full valuation engagement), the fee structure (push for a fixed or capped fee), the timeline, and references. Red flags: no recognized credential, a number quoted before any analysis, reluctance to explain methodology, no relevant experience in your situation, or a fee structure that creates a conflict (a percentage of the valuation).

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Choosing the wrong valuation professional, or paying for one when you don’t need one, is one of the more common and avoidable mistakes in this area. The first question is whether you need a credentialed appraiser at all (for a sale, often not). The second is which one, because tax valuations, divorce valuations, ESOP valuations, and litigation valuations are different specialties, and a great appraiser for one is the wrong choice for another. This page covers how to make both decisions.

We are CT Acquisitions, a buy-side M&A advisory firm, not a credentialed appraisal firm, so when you need a certified valuation we’ll point you to one. For a free market check before a sale, use our 90-second valuation tool.

What this guide covers

  • First, confirm you need one. For a sale, a free estimate or sell-side advisor’s indicative valuation is usually enough; you need a credentialed appraiser for tax, divorce, ESOP, disputes, certain SBA loans, litigation
  • Credentials: ASA, ABV (AICPA), CVA (NACVA), CBA, with ASA and ABV most respected for high-scrutiny matters
  • Match experience to your situation. Tax, divorce, ESOP, litigation are different specialties; also match your industry
  • If litigation is possible, require expert-witness experience. A great report from someone who can’t testify well is worth less
  • Ask about: methodology, standard of value, engagement type (calculation vs full), fee structure (push for fixed/capped), timeline, references
  • Red flags: no recognized credential, a number quoted before analysis, won’t explain methodology, no relevant experience, percentage-of-value fee

Step 1: Confirm you actually need a credentialed appraiser

Most owners who think they need a ‘business valuation’ actually need a market estimate, which is free.

Step 2: Understand the credentials

CredentialBodyBest for
ASA (Accredited Senior Appraiser, Business Valuation)American Society of AppraisersLitigation, tax, ESOP, high-scrutiny matters; rigorous requirements; widely respected on the witness stand
ABV (Accredited in Business Valuation)AICPAHeld by CPAs; combines accounting depth with valuation training; respected in tax and litigation
CVA (Certified Valuation Analyst)NACVACommon among CPAs and financial professionals; suitable for many engagements; training, exam, sample report
CBA (Certified Business Appraiser)Institute of Business Appraisers (now under NACVA)Long-established business-appraisal designation
MAIAppraisal InstitutePrimarily real estate; relevant when business value is dominated by real property

For the highest-stakes work, IRS disputes, ESOPs, contested litigation, the ASA and ABV are the designations most often seen on the witness stand. Any of these credentialed professionals can produce a defensible report; the right choice depends on the matter and the venue.

Step 3: Match experience to your specific situation

Step 4: Questions to ask candidates

Step 5: Watch for red flags

How we know this: the ranges, timelines, and patterns on this page reflect the transactions we work on and the buyer mandates in our network of 100+ active capital partners. They are informed starting points, not guarantees, your actual outcome depends on the specifics. For a sector-adjusted estimate, use our free 90-second valuation tool.

Where a sell-side advisor fits (and where they don’t)

A sell-side advisor’s indicative valuation is the right tool for understanding what your business might fetch in the market, often free, market-grounded, with a read on which buyer pools fit. It is not a substitute for a credentialed appraisal in tax, divorce, ESOP, dispute, or litigation contexts, those require professional standing the advisor’s opinion doesn’t carry. Use the advisor’s indicative valuation to prepare for a sale; use a credentialed appraiser when a court, the IRS, or a regulator is involved. Many owners do the informal version first and commission a formal appraisal only if a situation requires it.

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For a Sale, Start Here

Selling? You may not need an appraiser at all

If you’re preparing to sell, start with a free sector-adjusted estimate, no email gate, no obligation. Only hire a credentialed appraiser if your situation actually requires one.

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Frequently asked questions

How do I choose a business valuation professional?

First confirm you need one, for a sale, a free estimate or a sell-side advisor’s indicative valuation is usually enough; you need a credentialed appraiser only for tax, divorce, ESOP, shareholder disputes, certain SBA loans, or litigation. When you do need one, look for the right credential (ASA, ABV, CVA, or CBA, with ASA and ABV most respected for high-scrutiny matters), relevant experience in your specific situation and industry, and expert-witness experience if litigation is possible. Ask about methodology, standard of value, engagement type, fee structure (push for fixed or capped), timeline, and references.

What credentials should a business valuation expert have?

ASA (Accredited Senior Appraiser, Business Valuation, from the American Society of Appraisers), ABV (Accredited in Business Valuation, held by CPAs, from the AICPA), CVA (Certified Valuation Analyst, from NACVA), or CBA (Certified Business Appraiser). For the highest-stakes work, IRS disputes, ESOPs, contested litigation, the ASA and ABV are the designations most often seen on the witness stand. Also confirm the appraiser’s experience in your specific situation (tax vs divorce vs ESOP vs litigation are different specialties) and your industry.

Do I need a certified appraiser or will a CPA do?

It depends on the purpose and the CPA’s credentials. A CPA with a valuation credential (ABV or CVA) can produce a defensible certified valuation. A CPA without one generally shouldn’t be doing formal valuations for high-scrutiny purposes (tax, divorce, ESOP, litigation), those need a credentialed appraiser. For a sale or rough internal planning, your CPA’s informal sense of value plus a sector-adjusted tool estimate is usually enough. Match the level of rigor to the purpose.

What questions should I ask a business appraiser before hiring?

Their credential and how long they’ve held it; how many valuations they’ve done in the last 12 months for purposes like yours and in your industry; the standard of value they’ll apply and why; whether you need a calculation engagement or a full valuation engagement; which approaches they’ll consider and how they’ll weight them; their expert-witness experience if litigation is possible; the fee structure (push for fixed or capped); the timeline and what they need from you; a redacted sample report; references from similar clients; and any conflicts of interest.

What are red flags when choosing a business valuation professional?

No recognized credential; a number quoted before any analysis (real valuations require reviewing financials); reluctance to explain methodology; no relevant experience in your specific situation (a great ESOP appraiser may be wrong for a contested divorce); a fee that’s a percentage of the valuation or contingent on a result (compromises independence); inability or unwillingness to testify if your matter could go to litigation; no professional liability insurance; and pressure to sell you a paid certified valuation when you’ve said it’s for a sale (where you usually don’t need one).

How much should I expect to pay a business valuation professional?

Roughly $1,500-$8,000 for a calculation engagement (limited analysis, ‘calculated value’) and $5,000-$15,000 for a full valuation engagement (comprehensive, detailed report), more for complex businesses, multiple entities, or specialized industries. Litigation/expert-witness work adds hourly deposition and trial-testimony fees on top, often pushing the all-in cost to $15,000-$50,000+. Push for a fixed or capped fee in writing for a defined scope. For a sale, you usually don’t need to pay anything, a free sector-adjusted estimate or a sell-side advisor’s indicative valuation is enough.

Can a sell-side advisor value my business instead of an appraiser?

For understanding what your business might fetch in the market, yes, a sell-side advisor’s indicative valuation is often free, market-grounded, and comes with a read on which buyer pools fit. But it’s not a substitute for a credentialed appraisal in tax, divorce, ESOP, shareholder-dispute, or litigation contexts, those require professional standing the advisor’s opinion doesn’t carry. Use the advisor’s indicative valuation to prepare for a sale; use a credentialed appraiser when a court, the IRS, or a regulator is involved.

Should the same appraiser do my valuation for taxes and for a sale?

Not necessarily, the purposes are different and may call for different expertise. A tax (estate/gift) valuation needs someone who produces ‘qualified appraisals’ following IRS guidance with deep discounts experience; a sale needs market-grounded thinking and buyer-pool knowledge (often a sell-side advisor’s domain, not a credentialed appraiser’s). If you need both, ask whether one professional has genuine experience in both contexts, or use a credentialed appraiser for the tax piece and a sell-side advisor for the sale piece.

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