Selling a Home Care Business in 2026: Multiples, Named Buyers, and the Operator Playbook
Quick Answer
A US non-medical home care business in 2026 typically sells for roughly 3x to 9x EBITDA, varying by payer mix (private-pay vs. Medicaid waiver vs. VA / long-term care insurance), franchise vs. independent, geographic density, and platform scale. By profile: a single-territory franchise or small independent operator at $300-700k SDE goes 3x-5x SDE; a profitable single-territory home care business with strong private-pay mix ($500k-1.5M SDE) goes 4x-6x SDE; a small multi-territory group ($1.5-4M EBITDA) goes 5x-7x EBITDA; a regional home care platform ($4-12M EBITDA, multi-state, diversified payer mix) goes 6x-8x EBITDA; a premium scale home care platform ($12M+ EBITDA, multi-state, strong private-pay revenue, modern operating system, low caregiver turnover) reaches 7x-9x+ EBITDA. Active buyers include BAYADA Home Health Care (BAYADA Trust/ESOP, the largest US non-profit home care company), Senior Helpers (Advocate Aurora Health, acquired 2021), Right at Home (private), Home Instead (acquired by Honor Technology in 2021 in ~$2.4B deal), Honor Technology (Bain Capital + Andreessen Horowitz, ~$1B+ post Home Instead acquisition), Comfort Keepers (Sodexo subsidiary), ComForCare, Visiting Angels (franchise), Griswold Home Care (franchise), Synergy HomeCare (franchise), Addus HomeCare (NASDAQ: ADUS, personal care segment with ~$1B+ revenue from PCS), Help at Home (PE-backed by Vistria Group + Centerbridge), plus PE sponsors (Bain Capital, Andreessen Horowitz, Sodexo, The Vistria Group, Centerbridge Partners, Advocate Aurora, and multiple healthcare-services PE funds). The biggest multiple drivers are private-pay revenue percentage (premium to Medicaid waiver / VA), caregiver retention (the industry struggle), modern operating system (ClearCare, MatrixCare, AxisCare, Generations, Smartcare), state-licensure compliance, and recurring-client base. Buyer-paid M&A advisory (CT Strategic Partners) costs the seller nothing.

If you own a non-medical home care business in 2026 — whether that is a single-territory franchise, an independent operator, or a multi-territory group — the M&A market is active. BAYADA Home Health Care (ESOP) is the largest US non-profit. Honor Technology (Bain Capital + a16z) acquired Home Instead in 2021 for ~$2.4B, creating the largest tech-enabled home care platform. Addus HomeCare (NASDAQ: ADUS) operates the largest US public personal care services business. Help at Home (Vistria + Centerbridge) is a major PE-backed platform. Senior Helpers (Advocate Aurora) and Comfort Keepers (Sodexo) are strategic-owned platforms.
What the asset is worth depends on three things: (1) payer mix (private-pay revenue is the premium-multiple category; Medicaid waiver and VA programs are lower-multiple but more stable), (2) caregiver retention (industry turnover is 60-80% annually; sub-50% turnover is a real multiple-builder), and (3) operating infrastructure: modern scheduling EMR, state licensure, client-base recurring revenue. This guide covers real multiples by profile, the named buyers transacting, and the operator-level diligence buyers will run.
This guide is about non-medical / private-duty home care (companionship, homemaker, personal care). For Medicare-certified skilled home health agencies (nursing visits, physical therapy, OT, speech), see our separate guide at how to sell a home health agency.
What this guide covers
- Home care multiples 2026: 3x-5x SDE for single-territory franchise or small independent, 4x-6x SDE for profitable single-territory with private-pay strength, 5x-7x EBITDA for small multi-territory, 6x-8x for regional platforms, 7x-9x+ for premium scale platforms with multi-state and modern operations.
- Active buyers: BAYADA Home Health Care (BAYADA Trust/ESOP), Honor Technology (Bain Capital + Andreessen Horowitz, ~$1B+ post Home Instead $2.4B 2021), Senior Helpers (Advocate Aurora), Comfort Keepers (Sodexo), Help at Home (Vistria Group + Centerbridge), Addus HomeCare (NASDAQ: ADUS, personal care segment), Right at Home, ComForCare, Visiting Angels (franchise), Griswold, Synergy HomeCare.
- PE sponsor activity: Bain Capital + Andreessen Horowitz (Honor), The Vistria Group + Centerbridge (Help at Home), Sodexo (Comfort Keepers), Advocate Aurora (Senior Helpers), plus multiple healthcare-services PE funds.
- Multiple drivers: private-pay revenue mix (premium category), caregiver retention rate (sub-50% turnover is a multiple-builder), modern operating system (ClearCare, MatrixCare, AxisCare, Generations), state licensure compliance, multi-state footprint, recurring-client base.
- Things that compress the multiple: heavy Medicaid waiver concentration without private-pay diversification, high caregiver turnover (above 80%), owner-operator dependence, weak state licensure, single-state without expansion path, legacy operating systems, wage compression issues.
- Sellers pay nothing on CT Strategic Partners’ buyer-paid advisory.
Named non-medical home care M&A transactions (2021-2025)
| Target | Buyer | Year | What it tells us |
|---|---|---|---|
| Home Instead ($2.4B disclosed) | Honor Technology (Bain Capital + Andreessen Horowitz) | 2021 | Tech-enabled home care platform created the largest combined home care business. |
| BAYADA conversion to ESOP/Trust | BAYADA Trust (employee ownership) | 2019-2025 | Largest US non-profit home care evolved its ownership structure to long-term trust. |
| Help at Home recap and growth | The Vistria Group + Centerbridge Partners | 2020-2025 | PE-backed Medicaid-focused home care platform continues regional rollups. |
| Multiple Addus tuck-ins | Addus HomeCare (NASDAQ: ADUS) | 2022-2025 | Public home-care + hospice + home health platform continues personal care tuck-in M&A. |
| Senior Helpers acquisition | Advocate Aurora Health | 2021 | Health system acquired franchise platform for population-health strategy. |
| Comfort Keepers continued operations | Sodexo | 2009-2025 | French foodservice giant has operated Comfort Keepers since 2009; continues franchise platform. |
The named buyer landscape
National platform buyers
- BAYADA Home Health Care (BAYADA Trust / ESOP) — ~$2B+ revenue, the largest US non-profit home care company. Selective acquirer.
- Honor Technology (Bain Capital + Andreessen Horowitz, ~$1B+ revenue) — tech-enabled home care platform; acquired Home Instead in 2021 for ~$2.4B.
- Addus HomeCare (NASDAQ: ADUS) — ~$1B+ revenue in personal care services segment.
- Help at Home (The Vistria Group + Centerbridge Partners) — ~$1.5B+ revenue, Medicaid-focused.
- Senior Helpers (Advocate Aurora Health) — franchise platform.
- Comfort Keepers (Sodexo subsidiary) — franchise platform.
Franchise platforms (selective acquirers)
- Right at Home (private) — franchise platform.
- Visiting Angels — franchise.
- Griswold Home Care — franchise.
- Synergy HomeCare — franchise.
- ComForCare — franchise.
PE sponsors active in this space
- Bain Capital + Andreessen Horowitz (Honor), The Vistria Group + Centerbridge Partners (Help at Home), Sodexo (Comfort Keepers), Advocate Aurora Health (Senior Helpers), plus multiple healthcare-services PE funds.
What each buyer will pay for vs. what they reject
- Will pay premium for: private-pay revenue mix (premium category), long-term-care insurance revenue, VA programs (HCBV, VetAid), sub-50% caregiver turnover, modern operating system (ClearCare, MatrixCare, AxisCare, Generations, Smartcare, Wellsky), multi-state licensure footprint, recurring-client base with documented retention, no single client over ~15% of revenue.
- Will compress or reject: heavy Medicaid waiver concentration without private-pay diversification, high caregiver turnover (above 80%), owner-operator dependence, weak state licensure, single-state without expansion path, legacy operating systems (paper scheduling), wage compression and inability to pass through to clients, undocumented payroll classification, EVV (electronic visit verification) compliance gaps.
The operator-level KPI playbook buyers will diligence
Payer mix and revenue composition
- Payer mix: Private-pay %, Medicaid waiver / HCBS (Home and Community-Based Services) %, VA programs %, long-term-care insurance %, workers’-comp %.
- Private-pay percentage: Premium platforms target 50%+ private pay.
- Average hourly rate by payer.
- Average client engagement (hours per client per week).
Caregiver workforce
- Caregiver headcount and tenure.
- Caregiver annual turnover rate: Industry average is 60-80%; sub-50% is a real multiple-builder.
- Caregiver wage rate vs. local market.
- Caregiver classification: W-2 (preferred by most buyers) vs. 1099 (classification exposure).
- Background checks, training records, certifications.
Client base and retention
- Active client count.
- Average length of service.
- Client churn reasons: Death, hospitalization, transition to facility, cost.
- Client concentration: No single client over ~15%.
State licensure and compliance
- State home care licensure: Current in every state of operation.
- EVV compliance: Electronic Visit Verification mandated under the 21st Century Cures Act for Medicaid; document compliance.
- Background check compliance: State-specific requirements.
- Caregiver training requirements: State-mandated initial and ongoing training.
Operating system and technology
- Scheduling and EMR: ClearCare (WellSky), MatrixCare (ResMed Brightree), AxisCare, Generations, Smartcare, Wellsky, Alora Plus.
- Mobile caregiver app: Documented check-in/check-out, care plan adherence.
- Family portal: Client/family visibility into schedule and care plan.
- Billing automation.
Operations
- Branch count and geographic density.
- Schedule fill rate.
- Missed visit rate.
- Caregiver-to-client matching analytics.
Dangers and traps in home care M&A
1. Heavy Medicaid waiver concentration without private-pay diversification
Medicaid waiver revenue is lower-margin and rate-pressured. Premium multiples require private-pay diversification (50%+ private pay is the platform benchmark).
2. High caregiver turnover
Above 80% caregiver turnover signals operational and culture issues. Buyer-side diligence pulls turnover data; lower turnover (sub-50%) is a real multiple-builder.
3. 1099 vs. W-2 caregiver classification
1099 caregiver classification has been challenged by state agencies; W-2 with proper payroll is cleaner. Worker classification exposure is a real diligence risk.
4. EVV (Electronic Visit Verification) compliance gaps
EVV is mandated under the 21st Century Cures Act for Medicaid personal care services. Compliance gaps trigger billing recoupments.
5. Owner-operator dependence
If the owner manages client relationships and caregiver scheduling personally, build the operational bench.
6. State licensure issues
State home care licensure requirements vary; ensure current and clean in every state of operation.
7. Franchise vs. corporate-owned dynamics
Franchise locations have different buyer pools and valuation dynamics than corporate-owned. Document franchise agreements and territory rights.
8. Wage-pass-through to clients
Caregiver wage pressure is real. Track ability to pass-through wage increases to private-pay clients; Medicaid waiver rates lag wage inflation.
Our POV on home care M&A in 2026
- Single-territory franchise or independent operators ($300-700k SDE) go 3x-5x SDE.
- Profitable single-territory with private-pay strength ($500k-1.5M SDE) go 4x-6x SDE.
- Small multi-territory groups ($1.5-4M EBITDA) go 5x-7x EBITDA.
- Regional platforms ($4-12M EBITDA, multi-state, diversified payer mix) go 6x-8x.
- Premium scale platforms ($12M+ EBITDA, multi-state, strong private-pay, modern operations, low caregiver turnover) reach 7x-9x+.
The right time to prepare is 12-18 months before going to market — diversify into private-pay revenue, improve caregiver retention, modernize operating system, confirm state licensure cleanliness, and address EVV compliance.
Preparing your home care business for sale: 12-18 months out
- Get multi-year audited or reviewed financials. Break out revenue by payer.
- Diversify into private-pay revenue. Target 50%+ private pay.
- Improve caregiver retention. Wages, training, recognition, scheduling stability — target sub-50% annual turnover.
- Resolve 1099 vs. W-2 classification issues.
- Confirm state licensure cleanliness. Every state of operation.
- Document EVV compliance.
- Modernize the operating system. ClearCare, MatrixCare, AxisCare, Generations, Smartcare.
- Build the operational management bench.
- Document KPIs, add-backs, and territory rights.
- Run a competitive process. BAYADA, Honor Technology (Bain Capital + a16z), Senior Helpers (Advocate Aurora), Comfort Keepers (Sodexo), Help at Home (Vistria + Centerbridge), Addus HomeCare, Right at Home, plus PE sponsors directly.
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Start a Confidential Conversation →Frequently asked questions
What is the typical multiple for a home care business in 2026?
Single-territory franchise or independent operators ($300-700k SDE) typically sell at 3x-5x SDE. Profitable single-territory with private-pay strength ($500k-1.5M SDE) goes 4x-6x SDE. Small multi-territory groups ($1.5-4M EBITDA) go 5x-7x EBITDA. Regional platforms ($4-12M EBITDA) go 6x-8x. Premium scale platforms ($12M+ EBITDA, multi-state, strong private-pay, low caregiver turnover) reach 7x-9x+.
Who are the active buyers of home care businesses right now?
National platforms: BAYADA Home Health Care (BAYADA Trust/ESOP, ~$2B+ revenue), Honor Technology (Bain Capital + Andreessen Horowitz, ~$1B+ post Home Instead $2.4B 2021 acquisition), Addus HomeCare (NASDAQ: ADUS, ~$1B+ in personal care services segment), Help at Home (Vistria Group + Centerbridge Partners, ~$1.5B+), Senior Helpers (Advocate Aurora Health), Comfort Keepers (Sodexo). Franchise platforms: Right at Home, Visiting Angels, Griswold, Synergy HomeCare, ComForCare. PE sponsors: Bain Capital + Andreessen Horowitz, Vistria + Centerbridge, Sodexo, Advocate Aurora Health.
What hurts a home care business’s valuation most?
Heavy Medicaid waiver concentration without private-pay diversification, high caregiver turnover (above 80% annually), 1099 vs. W-2 caregiver classification exposure, EVV (electronic visit verification) compliance gaps, owner-operator dependence, weak state licensure, single-state operations without expansion path, legacy paper scheduling systems.
How is selling a home care business different from selling a home health agency?
Non-medical home care (companionship, homemaker, personal care) has different payer mix (private-pay, Medicaid waiver, VA, LTC insurance), different licensure (state home care), different operating model (W-2 caregivers, longer client engagements), and a distinct buyer pool (BAYADA, Honor, Help at Home, Comfort Keepers, Senior Helpers). Medicare-certified home health agencies provide skilled nursing visits, PT, OT, speech therapy on Medicare benefit, with different buyer pool (Amedisys, Encompass, Aveanna, BrightSpring, AccentCare). See our home health agency guide for that segment.
Why is caregiver retention so important for valuation?
Industry-average caregiver turnover is 60-80% annually. Sub-50% retention signals strong operational culture, training, and scheduling discipline. Buyer-side diligence pulls turnover data; lower turnover translates directly to lower recruiting/onboarding cost, better client retention, and 1-2 turn EBITDA multiple premium.
Do I have to pay a broker fee?
No. CT Strategic Partners runs a buyer-paid M&A advisory model. The seller pays nothing. The buyer pays the success fee at closing.
How long does it take to sell a home care business?
Once you go to market with a buyer-paid advisor, a typical process runs 5-8 months from initial outreach to closing. Add 12-18 months of preparation work before going to market.
When should I start preparing if I plan to sell in 2027 or 2028?
12-18 months before going to market is the right window. Highest-leverage pre-sale work: diversify into private-pay revenue, improve caregiver retention to sub-50% turnover, resolve 1099 vs. W-2 classification, confirm state licensure, document EVV compliance, modernize the operating system.
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