HomeSelling a MedSpa in 2026: Multiples, Named Buyers, and the Aesthetic-Services Playbook

Selling a MedSpa in 2026: Multiples, Named Buyers, and the Aesthetic-Services Playbook

Quick Answer

A US MedSpa in 2026 typically sells for roughly 3x to 10x SDE/EBITDA, with single-site clinics on the lower end and multi-site PE-backed aesthetic platforms on the higher end. By profile: a single-site MedSpa under $500k SDE goes 2x-4x SDE; a profitable single-location with $500k-1.5M SDE and a real injectables-driven recurring patient base goes 3.5x-6x SDE; a small multi-site chain (2-5 locations) at $1-3M EBITDA goes 5x-7x EBITDA; a mid-size regional aesthetic platform (5-15 locations, $3-8M EBITDA) goes 6x-9x EBITDA; a premium scale platform (15+ locations, $8M+ EBITDA, MD-supervised compliance, diversified service mix including injectables / body contouring / laser / Hydrafacial, modern operating system, named manufacturer rebate programs) goes 8x-10x+. Active buyers include Skytale Group (a leading PE-backed MedSpa acquirer and consolidator), Cortes NLD (PE-backed roll-up), LaserAway (PE-backed laser-clinic platform), Ideal Image (Steiner Leisure, then NewSpring Capital), Hydrafacial / The Beauty Health Company (NASDAQ: SKIN, the equipment-platform side), AbbVie / Allergan Aesthetics (the strategic giant via the Botox/Juvederm portfolio — selectively acquires aesthetic businesses), Cynosure / Lutronic (device-side strategic), plus multiple PE sponsors actively rolling up aesthetic services (Comvest Partners, Caltius Equity Partners, NewSpring Capital, NaviMed Capital, Atlanta Capital, BlackRock-backed platforms). The biggest multiple drivers are injectables revenue percentage (recurring patient stickiness), MD/PA supervision and corporate-practice-of-medicine compliance, service-mix diversification (injectables + body contouring + laser + Hydrafacial + skin care), modern operating system (Aesthetic Record, PatientNow, Symplast, RepeatMD, Mangomint), and per-location revenue/EBITDA. Buyer-paid M&A advisory (CT Strategic Partners) costs the seller nothing.

A modern medspa interior at golden hour

If you own a MedSpa or aesthetic clinic in 2026 — whether that is a single-location injectables-focused practice, a multi-site laser/aesthetic chain, or a regional aesthetic-services platform — the M&A market is white-hot. Skytale Group has been the most visible PE-backed consolidator, Cortes NLD and Comvest-backed platforms are rolling up, AbbVie’s Allergan Aesthetics is the strategic giant in the background, LaserAway and Ideal Image continue to acquire, and the corporate-practice-of-medicine landscape is rapidly maturing. The recurring-patient economics of injectables (Botox typically every 3-4 months, fillers every 6-12 months) make profitable MedSpas a structurally attractive platform-roll-up target.

What the asset is worth depends on three things: (1) injectables revenue percentage and patient retention (recurring injectables = the multiple-builder), (2) the operating compliance posture — MD or NP/PA supervision model, corporate-practice-of-medicine structure, state-by-state good-faith-exam compliance, scope-of-practice for injectors, and (3) per-location economics with a modern operating system. This guide gives you real multiples ranges, the named buyers transacting, and the operator-level diligence buyers will run.

What this guide covers

  • MedSpa multiples 2026: 2x-4x SDE for sub-scale single-site, 3.5x-6x SDE for profitable single-locations, 5x-7x EBITDA for small multi-site chains, 6x-9x EBITDA for mid-size regional platforms, 8x-10x+ for premium scale platforms with diversified service mix and corporate-practice-of-medicine compliance.
  • Active buyers: Skytale Group (PE-backed, the most visible MedSpa consolidator), Cortes NLD (PE-backed roll-up), LaserAway (PE-backed laser-clinic platform), Ideal Image (NewSpring Capital), AbbVie/Allergan Aesthetics (Botox/Juvederm/CoolSculpting strategic), Hydrafacial / The Beauty Health Company (NASDAQ: SKIN).
  • PE sponsor activity is dense: Comvest Partners, Caltius Equity Partners, NewSpring Capital, NaviMed Capital, Atlanta Capital, BlackRock-backed platforms, plus multiple healthcare-services and consumer-services PE funds.
  • Multiple drivers: injectables revenue percentage (Botox/fillers recurring patient base), MD/NP/PA supervision compliance, service-mix diversification, modern operating system (Aesthetic Record, PatientNow, Symplast, RepeatMD, Mangomint), per-location EBITDA, allergan/manufacturer rebate program enrollment.
  • Things that compress the multiple: corporate-practice-of-medicine compliance gaps, scope-of-practice exposure on injectors, good-faith-exam workflow failures, MD/NP/PA staffing turnover, undisclosed sale-of-goods vs. professional-services revenue mix, owner-injector dependence, legacy operating systems, single-service-line concentration (e.g., 80% laser hair removal with commodity competition).
  • Sellers pay nothing on CT Strategic Partners’ buyer-paid advisory.

Named MedSpa / aesthetic M&A events (2022-2025)

The transactions below are public or widely-disclosed deals. They show an extremely active and well-capitalized buyer pool:

Target Buyer / Outcome Year What it tells us
Multiple MedSpa tuck-ins (100+ portfolio)Skytale Group (PE)2022-2025The most visible PE-backed MedSpa consolidator; aggressive tuck-in M&A across multiple US markets.
Hydrafacial parent (The Beauty Health Co)NASDAQ: SKIN (post-SPAC)2021Hydrafacial parent went public via SPAC; equipment/services platform now publicly-traded.
Allergan + AbbVie ($63B)AbbVie acquired Allergan (Botox/Juvederm/CoolSculpting)2020Defined the strategic aesthetic landscape. Allergan Aesthetics is the dominant injectables/devices manufacturer.
Ideal Image (Steiner Leisure to NewSpring)NewSpring Capital2021-2024PE-backed laser/aesthetic platform with 150+ centers.
LaserAway expansion (200+ centers)PE-backed2022-2025PE-backed laser-clinic platform continues to add locations across the US.
Cortes NLD continued add-onsPE-backed roll-up2023-2025Multi-location aesthetic-services consolidator with active tuck-in M&A.
MedSpa Multiples by Profile US, 2026 conditions, SDE/EBITDA basis 0x 2x 4x 6x 8x 10x Sub-scale single-site MedSpa ($300k SDE or less) 2x-4x SDE Profitable single-location ($500k-1.5M SDE) 3.5x-6x SDE Small multi-site chain, 2-5 locations ($1-3M EBITDA) 5x-7x EBITDA Mid-size regional platform, 5-15 locations ($3-8M EBITDA) 6x-9x EBITDA Premium scale, 15+ locations diversified ($8M+ EBITDA) 8x-10x+ EBITDA x EBITDA · bars show typical transaction ranges · Multiples observed in 2023-2026 US MedSpa M&A. Premium reserved for compliant multi-site platforms with diversified service mix and modern operating infrastructure.

The named buyer landscape

PE-backed MedSpa / aesthetic platforms (the primary buyer pool)

Public / strategic (manufacturer-side)

PE sponsors active in this space

What each buyer will pay for vs. what they reject

Named US MedSpa / Aesthetic Platforms 2026, approximate scale (locations or revenue, public/disclosed) 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100 110 120 130 140 150 160 170 180 190 200 100+ assets Skytale (PE rollup) 200+ centers LaserAway 150+ centers Ideal Image $320M rev Hydrafacial (SKIN) $6B+ rev Allergan Aesth. ~30 locations Cortes NLD (PE) Skytale + LaserAway + Ideal Image counts are aggregate platform locations/portfolio assets. Allergan/Hydrafacial values are revenue (parent). Counts approximate.

The operator-level KPI playbook buyers will diligence

Service mix and revenue composition

Patient mix and retention

Compliance and MD/NP/PA supervision

Operating system and tech stack

Per-location economics

Dangers and traps in MedSpa M&A

1. Corporate-practice-of-medicine (CPOM) compliance

MedSpas operating in CPOM-strict states (CA, NJ, NY, TX, etc.) need a state-compliant structure: typically an MD-owned professional medical corporation (PC) and a separately-owned management services organization (MSO). Structural CPOM gaps are a binary issue for many buyers.

2. NP/PA scope-of-practice exposure

State rules on NP and PA scope of practice for injectables vary significantly. Some states allow autonomous injection; others require physician delegation, specific supervision agreements, and state-specific protocols. Document every injector’s scope and delegation.

3. Good-faith-exam (GFE) failures

Many states require a physician-led good-faith exam before initial injectables (varies by service line and patient). Telehealth-only GFE compliance is state-specific. Buyers will audit GFE workflow.

4. GLP-1 / weight-management exposure

Semaglutide and tirzepatide compounded preparations have become a MedSpa revenue line. State-specific compounding regulations, FDA enforcement on compounded GLP-1s, and unprecedented patient-safety scrutiny make this a real diligence concern. Document supplier compliance, prescription protocols, and clinical oversight.

5. Single-service-line concentration

If 60%+ of revenue is laser hair removal, your asset is competing in a commoditized space and the multiple compresses. Diversification into injectables, body contouring, and skincare is the multiple-builder.

6. Owner-injector dependence

If the owner is the primary injector and 60%+ of revenue runs through them, expect a 12-24 month earnout and a compressed multiple. Build the injector bench before going to market.

7. Manufacturer rebate compliance and revenue recognition

Allergan APG, Galderma ASPIRE, and Merz rebate accruals can be significant. Document accrual accounting cleanly and confirm program enrollment is current.

8. Legacy operating systems and patient-data continuity

If you are on paper charts or a legacy practice-management system, expect a buyer-side integration project. Aesthetic Record and PatientNow are the operator-standard EMRs.

9. Lease and demographic-market quality

Class-A retail in attractive demographic markets is the platform standard. Tertiary markets and B/C retail compress.

10. Sale-of-goods vs. professional-services revenue mix and state cosmetic-practice rules

Some states have distinct rules for sale-of-goods (skincare product) vs. medical professional services. Disclose mix cleanly and confirm regulatory compliance.

Our POV on MedSpa M&A in 2026

The honest read on the market: MedSpa M&A is one of the most active healthcare-services consolidation themes in 2026, driven by recurring-injectables economics and the maturing PE-platform infrastructure. The buyer pool is real and the multiples are real, but compliance is the gating factor.

The right time to prepare is 12-18 months before going to market — lock in CPOM-compliant structure, build the injector bench, modernize EMR (Aesthetic Record / PatientNow), document GFE workflows, and diversify service mix. Compliance is non-negotiable.

Preparing your MedSpa for sale: 12-18 months out

  1. Lock in CPOM-compliant structure. If you operate in a CPOM-strict state, ensure PC + MSO structure is in place and documented. Health-care counsel review.
  2. Build the injector bench. Reduce owner-injector dependence. Train and develop NP/PA injectors with state-compliant scope and supervision.
  3. Document MD oversight and GFE workflow. Medical director hours, credentialing, oversight visits, GFE compliance audit trail.
  4. Get audited or reviewed financials. Multi-year, clean accrual, manufacturer rebate accruals documented, owner add-backs documented contemporaneously.
  5. Modernize the operating system. Aesthetic Record, PatientNow, Symplast, Mangomint, or Boulevard. Document patient-data continuity.
  6. Diversify service mix. Build injectables, body contouring, laser, Hydrafacial, and skin care as a balanced portfolio.
  7. Enroll in manufacturer rebate programs. Allergan APG, Galderma ASPIRE, Merz Galz, Revance Daxxify partnership programs.
  8. Document scope-of-practice and standing orders. State-specific injector scope, documented training, standing orders signed by medical director.
  9. Audit GLP-1 / weight-management compliance carefully. Compounded supplier verification, prescription protocols, clinical oversight.
  10. Run a competitive process. Skytale, Cortes NLD, LaserAway, Ideal Image (NewSpring), Comvest, Caltius, Atlanta Capital, NaviMed, and the strategic manufacturer-backed players — a real auction with multiple buyers is worth 1-3 turns of EBITDA over single-bidder negotiation.

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Frequently asked questions

What is the typical multiple for a MedSpa in 2026?

Sub-scale single-site MedSpas typically sell at 2x-4x SDE. Profitable single-location MedSpas with $500k-1.5M SDE go 3.5x-6x SDE. Small multi-site chains (2-5 locations, $1-3M EBITDA) go 5x-7x EBITDA. Mid-size regional platforms (5-15 locations) go 6x-9x EBITDA. Premium scale platforms (15+ locations, $8M+ EBITDA, CPOM-compliant, diversified service mix) reach 8x-10x+.

Who are the active buyers of MedSpas right now?

PE-backed platforms (the primary buyer pool): Skytale Group (the most visible consolidator with 100+ portfolio assets), LaserAway (200+ centers), Ideal Image (NewSpring Capital, 150+ centers), Cortes NLD. Manufacturer/strategic: AbbVie / Allergan Aesthetics (Botox, Juvederm, CoolSculpting), Hydrafacial / The Beauty Health Company (NASDAQ: SKIN), Galderma, Merz Pharma. PE sponsors directly: Comvest Partners, Caltius Equity Partners, NewSpring Capital, NaviMed Capital, Atlanta Capital, BlackRock-backed platforms.

What hurts a MedSpa’s valuation most?

Corporate-practice-of-medicine (CPOM) compliance gaps in CPOM-strict states, NP/PA scope-of-practice exposure, good-faith-exam workflow failures, GLP-1 / weight-management compliance issues, single-service-line concentration (especially commodity laser hair removal), owner-injector dependence, legacy operating systems or paper charts, undisclosed sale-of-goods vs. services revenue mix, and undocumented manufacturer rebate accruals.

What is corporate-practice-of-medicine (CPOM) and why does it matter?

CPOM is a state-level doctrine that restricts corporate ownership of medical practices. In CPOM-strict states (California, New Jersey, New York, Texas, and others), MedSpas typically operate through an MD-owned professional medical corporation (PC) for the clinical services and a separately-owned management services organization (MSO) for everything else. Structural CPOM gaps are a binary issue for many platform buyers.

Are GLP-1s (semaglutide, tirzepatide) a real revenue line for MedSpas?

Yes, but increasingly regulated. Compounded GLP-1 preparations have come under FDA enforcement scrutiny, and state compounding regulations vary. If GLP-1s are a meaningful revenue line, document supplier compliance, prescription protocols, clinical oversight, and the legal basis for compounded products carefully. Many buyers will discount or carve-out GLP-1 revenue depending on regulatory posture.

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 important is the operating system / EMR?

Very. Aesthetic Record is the dominant aesthetic-specific EMR; PatientNow, Symplast, Mangomint, and Boulevard are also common. Legacy systems or paper charts trigger a buyer-side integration discount. Modern operating systems also integrate with manufacturer rebate programs, patient loyalty (RepeatMD), and marketing stacks — all multiple-builders.

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. Lock in CPOM-compliant structure, build the injector bench, modernize EMR, document GFE workflows, diversify service mix, and enroll in manufacturer rebate programs.

Christoph Totter, Founder of CT Acquisitions

About the Author

Christoph Totter is the founder of CT Acquisitions, a buy-side partner headquartered in Sheridan, Wyoming. We work directly with 76+ buyers, search funders, family offices, lower middle-market PE, and strategic consolidators, including direct mandates with the largest home services consolidators that other intermediaries can’t access. The buyers pay us when a deal closes, not the seller. No retainer, no exclusivity, no contract until close. Connect on LinkedIn · Get in touch

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