HomeSelling a Rigid Packaging Business in 2026: Multiples, Named Buyers, and the Operator Playbook

Selling a Rigid Packaging Business in 2026: Multiples, Named Buyers, and the Operator Playbook

Quick Answer

A US rigid packaging business in 2026 typically sells for roughly 5x to 11x EBITDA, varying by substrate (plastic, glass, metal, paperboard), end-market mix, customer concentration, and platform scale. By profile: a single-plant rigid plastic injection-molded or blow-molded converter ($1-3M EBITDA) goes 5x-7x EBITDA; a regional multi-plant rigid packaging operator ($3-8M EBITDA) goes 6x-8x; a mid-size rigid packaging platform ($8-25M EBITDA, multi-plant, multi-substrate, diversified end-market) goes 7x-9x; a premium scale platform ($25M+ EBITDA, multi-state, food + beverage + healthcare end-markets, sustainability positioning, named blue-chip customers) reaches 8x-11x+ EBITDA. Active buyers include Berry Global Group (NYSE: BERY, ~$13B+ revenue), Pactiv-Evergreen (NASDAQ: PTVE, ~$5B+ revenue), Sonoco Products (NYSE: SON, ~$7B+ revenue), Silgan Holdings (NYSE: SLGN, ~$6B+ revenue), Crown Holdings (NYSE: CCK, ~$12B+ revenue, metal cans), Greif Inc. (NYSE: GEF, ~$5B+ revenue, industrial packaging), Sealed Air Corporation (NYSE: SEE, ~$5B+ revenue), Owens-Illinois (NYSE: OI, glass containers, ~$7B+ revenue), Ardagh Metal Packaging (NYSE: AMBP), plus PE-backed regional consolidators (Wind Point Partners, Wynnchurch Capital, Madison Dearborn Partners, Audax Group, ABRY Partners, BlackRock-backed platforms). The biggest multiple drivers are end-market mix (food, beverage, healthcare/pharma, personal care premium to industrial), customer base quality (blue-chip CPG customers – P&G, Unilever, Kraft Heinz, J&J, Nestlé, Coca-Cola, etc. – command premium), multi-substrate capability, sustainability positioning (PCR content, recyclability), modern manufacturing operations (lights-out automation, in-mold labeling capability), and ESG/SBTi alignment. Buyer-paid M&A advisory (CT Strategic Partners) costs the seller nothing.

A rigid packaging manufacturing plant interior at golden hour

If you own a rigid packaging business in 2026 — plastic injection or blow molding, glass containers, metal cans, or paperboard packaging — the M&A market is dominated by large public consolidators with disciplined return targets. Berry Global (NYSE: BERY, ~$13B+ revenue) is the largest US plastic packaging company. Pactiv-Evergreen, Sonoco, Silgan, Crown Holdings, Greif, and Sealed Air are the other major public participants. PE-backed roll-ups (Wind Point Partners, Wynnchurch Capital, Madison Dearborn) continue regional consolidation.

What the asset is worth depends on three things: (1) end-market mix (food, beverage, healthcare/pharma, personal care premium to industrial/commodity), (2) customer base quality with blue-chip CPG anchor accounts, and (3) sustainability/ESG positioning that aligns with brand-owner commitments (PCR content targets, recyclability, SBTi-aligned operations). This guide covers real multiples by profile, the named buyers transacting, and the operator-level diligence buyers will run.

This guide is about rigid packaging manufacturing (containers, bottles, jars, cans, tubs). For contract packaging services (filling, labeling, kitting, fulfillment for brand owners), see our separate guide at how to sell a co-packing business.

What this guide covers

  • Rigid packaging multiples 2026: 5x-7x EBITDA for single-plant converter, 6x-8x for regional multi-plant, 7x-9x for mid-size platforms, 8x-11x+ for premium scale with food/beverage/healthcare focus and named blue-chip customers.
  • Active public/strategic buyers: Berry Global (NYSE: BERY, ~$13B+), Pactiv-Evergreen (NASDAQ: PTVE, ~$5B+), Sonoco (NYSE: SON, ~$7B+), Silgan Holdings (NYSE: SLGN, ~$6B+), Crown Holdings (NYSE: CCK, ~$12B+ metal), Greif (NYSE: GEF, ~$5B+ industrial), Sealed Air (NYSE: SEE, ~$5B+), Owens-Illinois (NYSE: OI, glass), Ardagh Metal Packaging (NYSE: AMBP).
  • PE sponsor activity: Wind Point Partners, Wynnchurch Capital, Madison Dearborn Partners, Audax Group, ABRY Partners, BlackRock-backed platforms.
  • Multiple drivers: end-market mix (food/beverage/healthcare/pharma/personal care premium to industrial), blue-chip CPG customer base (P&G, Unilever, Kraft Heinz, J&J, Nestlé, Coca-Cola), multi-substrate capability, sustainability positioning (PCR content, recyclability, SBTi alignment), modern manufacturing with lights-out automation and in-mold labeling.
  • Things that compress the multiple: industrial-only or commodity end-market concentration, single-customer concentration above 25%, weak sustainability positioning, legacy aging equipment without capex roadmap, environmental compliance issues, weak ESG/SBTi alignment, owner-operator dependence.
  • Sellers pay nothing on CT Strategic Partners’ buyer-paid advisory.

Named rigid packaging M&A transactions (2021-2025)

TargetBuyerYearWhat it tells us
Multiple Berry Global tuck-insBerry Global (NYSE: BERY)2022-2025Largest US plastic packaging consolidator continues regional and capability tuck-in M&A.
Crown Holdings beverage-can expansionCrown Holdings (NYSE: CCK)2022-2025Metal beverage can leader continues capacity expansion and select M&A.
Sonoco transactionsSonoco Products (NYSE: SON)2022-2025Diversified packaging player continues bolt-on M&A across rigid and flexible.
Silgan acquisitionsSilgan Holdings (NYSE: SLGN)2022-2025Metal/plastic closure leader continues consolidation in dispensing/closures.
Ardagh Metal Packaging spin/IPOPublic (NYSE: AMBP)2021Metal beverage cans spun off to public; established public-market valuation comp.
Multiple PE-backed regional roll-upsWind Point, Wynnchurch, Madison Dearborn, Audax2022-2025PE sponsors continue building regional rigid-packaging platforms for eventual strategic exits.
Rigid Packaging Business Multiples by Profile US, 2026 conditions, EBITDA basis 0x 5x 10x 15x Single-plant converter ($1-3M EBITDA) 5x-7x Regional multi-plant operator ($3-8M EBITDA) 6x-8x Mid-size, multi-substrate platform ($8-25M EBITDA) 7x-9x Premium scale, food/bev/healthcare ($25M+ EBITDA) 8x-11x+ x EBITDA · bars show typical transaction ranges · Multiples observed in 2023-2026 US rigid packaging M&A. Premium reserved for platforms with food/beverage/healthcare end-market exposure, named blue-chip CPG customers, and sustainability positioning.

The named buyer landscape

Public / strategic plastic packaging buyers

Metal packaging buyers

Glass packaging

Industrial / paperboard

PE-backed regional consolidators

What each buyer will pay for vs. what they reject

Named US Rigid Packaging Public Companies by Revenue 2026, approximate revenue ($B, public/disclosed) 0 10 20 $13B+ Berry Global (BERY) $12B+ metal Crown Holdings (CCK) $7B+ Sonoco (SON) $7B+ glass Owens-Illinois (OI) $6B+ Silgan (SLGN) $5B+ Pactiv-Evergreen (PTVE) Revenue ($B, approx). Sealed Air ($5B+) and Greif ($5B+) similar scale, not shown.

The operator-level KPI playbook buyers will diligence

Substrate and product mix

End-market mix and customer base

Manufacturing operations

Quality and food-safety certifications

Sustainability and ESG

Environmental compliance

Dangers and traps in rigid packaging M&A

1. Industrial-only or commodity end-market concentration

Commodity end-markets (industrial drums, generic plastic containers, single-purpose bottles) face commodity pricing and lower multiples. Food, beverage, healthcare, pharma, and personal care end-markets are premium.

2. Single-customer concentration

Above 25% single-customer concentration creates churn-risk reserve.

3. Weak sustainability positioning

CPG brand owners (Unilever, P&G, Nestlé, etc.) have made public sustainability commitments (e.g., 50% PCR content by 2030, 100% recyclable). Converters without sustainability roadmap face structural revenue risk.

4. Resin price pass-through and margin management

Resin and material costs are 40-60% of rigid packaging COGS. Document pass-through mechanisms in customer contracts; margin compression during resin price spikes is a real risk.

5. Legacy aging equipment

Old injection presses, blow molders, and thermoformers without lights-out capability compress operating margins and reduce competitiveness.

6. Quality / food-safety certification gaps

FSSC 22000, SQF, or BRC certification is non-negotiable for food packaging. Pharma packaging requires 21 CFR Part 11 / GMP.

7. Environmental compliance and Title V air permits

Plastics manufacturing has air emissions (VOCs, particulate). Title V permit issues are deal-killers.

8. EPR (Extended Producer Responsibility) state rollout

EPR programs in Maine, Oregon, Colorado, California, Minnesota create new compliance obligations. Document impact and response.

Our POV on rigid packaging M&A in 2026

Rigid packaging M&A is dominated by large public consolidators (Berry Global, Crown Holdings, Sonoco, Silgan, Pactiv-Evergreen, Sealed Air, Owens-Illinois, Greif). PE-backed regional roll-ups (Wind Point, Wynnchurch, Madison Dearborn) continue building platforms for eventual strategic exits. Premium multiples require food/beverage/healthcare end-market exposure, blue-chip CPG customers, and sustainability/ESG positioning aligned with brand-owner commitments.

Preparing your rigid packaging business for sale: 12-18 months out

  1. Get multi-year audited financials. Track revenue by substrate, end-market, customer.
  2. Diversify end-market mix. Build food, beverage, healthcare, pharma, personal care exposure.
  3. Develop blue-chip CPG customer relationships.
  4. Build sustainability positioning. PCR content programs, APR design-guide compliance, SBTi alignment.
  5. Document EPR compliance.
  6. Confirm quality / food-safety certifications. FSSC 22000, SQF, BRC, GMP.
  7. Modernize manufacturing. Lights-out automation, IML, digital printing where applicable.
  8. Document capex roadmap.
  9. Resolve environmental compliance matters.
  10. Run a competitive process. Berry Global, Sonoco, Silgan, Pactiv-Evergreen, Sealed Air, Crown Holdings, Greif, Owens-Illinois, plus PE sponsors (Wind Point Partners, Wynnchurch Capital, Madison Dearborn Partners, Audax Group, ABRY Partners).

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Frequently asked questions

What is the typical multiple for a rigid packaging business in 2026?

Single-plant rigid plastic injection-molded or blow-molded converters ($1-3M EBITDA) typically sell at 5x-7x EBITDA. Regional multi-plant operators ($3-8M EBITDA) go 6x-8x. Mid-size multi-substrate platforms ($8-25M EBITDA) go 7x-9x. Premium scale platforms ($25M+ EBITDA, multi-state, food/beverage/healthcare end-markets, sustainability positioning, named blue-chip customers) reach 8x-11x+.

Who are the active buyers of rigid packaging businesses?

Public/strategic: Berry Global Group (NYSE: BERY, ~$13B+ revenue, largest US plastic packaging), Pactiv-Evergreen (NASDAQ: PTVE, ~$5B+), Sonoco Products (NYSE: SON, ~$7B+), Silgan Holdings (NYSE: SLGN, ~$6B+), Sealed Air Corporation (NYSE: SEE, ~$5B+). Metal: Crown Holdings (NYSE: CCK, ~$12B+), Ardagh Metal Packaging (NYSE: AMBP), Ball Corporation (NYSE: BALL). Glass: Owens-Illinois (NYSE: OI, ~$7B+). Industrial: Greif Inc. (NYSE: GEF, ~$5B+). PE sponsors: Wind Point Partners, Wynnchurch Capital, Madison Dearborn Partners, Audax Group, ABRY Partners.

What hurts a rigid packaging business’s valuation most?

Industrial-only or commodity end-market concentration, single-customer concentration above 25%, weak sustainability positioning (CPG brand owners require PCR content roadmaps), legacy aging equipment without documented capex plan, environmental compliance issues (RCRA, Title V air), no ESG/SBTi alignment, owner-operator dependence, weak food-safety/quality certifications (FSSC 22000, SQF, BRC, GMP).

How is rigid packaging different from co-packing?

Rigid packaging manufactures the containers themselves (injection-molded bottles, blow-molded jars, metal cans, glass containers). Co-packing (contract packaging) takes brand-owner products and fills, labels, kits, or fulfills them in finished-goods packaging. Different buyer pools (Berry/Pactiv/Sonoco vs. MSI Express/Massman/ProAmpac contract-fill); different operating economics. See our co-packing guide for that segment.

Why is sustainability positioning so important?

CPG brand owners (Unilever, P&G, Nestlé, Coca-Cola, PepsiCo, Mondelēz, Kraft Heinz, etc.) have made public commitments to PCR content (often 50% by 2030), 100% recyclable/reusable packaging, and SBTi-aligned emissions reductions. Rigid packaging converters without sustainability roadmaps face structural revenue risk as brands consolidate to suppliers that can meet commitments. Premium multiples increasingly require PCR programs, APR-design-guide-compliant products, and SBTi alignment.

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 rigid packaging business?

Once you go to market with a buyer-paid advisor, a typical process runs 5-9 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 end-market mix, build PCR/sustainability positioning, develop blue-chip CPG customer relationships, confirm quality/food-safety certifications, document capex roadmap, and resolve environmental compliance.

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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