HomeSelling an Alarm Monitoring Company in 2026

Selling an Alarm Monitoring Company in 2026

Quick Answer

An alarm monitoring company is valued primarily as a multiple of its recurring monthly revenue (RMR), not EBITDA. In 2026, residential and small-commercial alarm monitoring accounts typically trade at roughly 28x to 40x RMR, higher-quality books (low attrition, long contracts, owned central station) reach 40x to 50x+ RMR, and the largest portfolios with the best metrics can exceed that. So a company with $100,000 of RMR is worth roughly $2.8M to $5M+ depending on quality. The factors that move the multiple: attrition rate (under 8-10% annual is strong), contract term and auto-renewal language, account vintage and concentration, whether the company owns a UL-listed central station versus wholesaling monitoring, RMR mix (commercial fire monitoring commands premiums over residential burglar), and creation cost/efficiency. Active buyers include the large monitoring consolidators and PE-backed security platforms; we have buyers in our network. Most alarm monitoring company sales close in 60 to 150 days.

A central monitoring station control room at golden hour

Alarm monitoring is one of the few businesses valued on a multiple of revenue rather than EBITDA, and the convention, the RMR multiple, is so well established that the entire deal turns on it. The RMR multiple ranges from roughly 28x to 50x+ depending on the quality of the account book, attrition, contract terms, RMR mix, and whether you own a central station. Knowing what drives the multiple, and what to fix before a sale, is the difference between a 30x deal and a 45x deal on the same book. This guide covers the RMR-multiple math, the value drivers, the buyers, what kills deals, and the process.

We are CT Acquisitions, a buy-side M&A advisory firm with buyers in our network actively acquiring alarm monitoring companies and security platforms. Sellers pay nothing, the buyer pays our fee at closing. For adjacent verticals, see our guides on selling a fire alarm company and selling a security integration company.

What this guide covers

  • Valued on RMR (recurring monthly revenue) multiple, not EBITDA. Residential/small-commercial accounts ~28x-40x RMR; high-quality books 40x-50x+ RMR
  • So a $100K RMR book is worth roughly $2.8M-$5M+ depending on attrition, contract terms, RMR mix, central-station ownership
  • Biggest multiple drivers: attrition rate (under 8-10% annual is strong), contract term/auto-renewal, account vintage and concentration, owned UL-listed central station vs wholesale, commercial fire monitoring premium over residential burglar
  • Owning a UL-listed central station adds value (the station itself + the wholesale-monitoring revenue stream + control of the customer relationship)
  • Active buyers: the large monitoring consolidators, PE-backed security platforms, fire and life safety platforms (Pye-Barker etc.); we have buyers in our network
  • Free valuation: our 90-second tool applies monitoring-specific adjustments for RMR mix, attrition, contract terms, and central-station ownership

The RMR-multiple math: how alarm monitoring companies are valued

Unlike most businesses, an alarm monitoring company is valued as a multiple of its recurring monthly revenue (RMR), the contracted monthly fees from monitored accounts, not as a multiple of EBITDA. The convention exists because the account book is the asset, and its value is a function of how reliably those monthly fees will keep coming.

Account book qualityTypical RMR multipleCharacteristics
Lower-quality residential book~24x-30x RMRHigher attrition, short or month-to-month contracts, older accounts, possible concentration, wholesaled monitoring
Standard residential / small-commercial book~30x-40x RMRModerate attrition (8-12% annual), multi-year contracts with auto-renewal, reasonable account vintage spread
High-quality book~40x-50x RMRLow attrition (under 8-10%), long contracts, strong auto-renewal language, owned UL-listed central station, diversified, good RMR-per-account
Premium / commercial-fire-heavy book50x+ RMRHeavy commercial fire monitoring (code-mandated, very sticky), pristine metrics, scale; the largest deals reach the high end

The arithmetic: a company with $100,000 of RMR ($1.2M of annual recurring revenue) is worth roughly $2.8M at 28x, $3.5M at 35x, $4.5M at 45x. Moving from a 30x book to a 45x book, by cutting attrition, lengthening contracts, and shifting RMR mix toward commercial fire, is a 50% increase in enterprise value on the same revenue. That is the prize.

What drives the RMR multiple up or down

FactorPushes multiple UPPushes multiple DOWN
Attrition rateUnder 8-10% annualAbove 13-15% annual
Contract term & renewalLong initial term (3-5 years), strong auto-renewal/evergreen language, enforceableMonth-to-month, short term, weak renewal language
RMR mixHeavy commercial fire monitoring (code-mandated, sticky), commercial intrusion/access, video verificationPure residential burglar, especially DIY/self-install accounts with high churn
Central stationOwn a UL-listed (and ideally Five Diamond / TMA-certified) central station; also generates wholesale monitoring revenueWholesale all monitoring to a third party (less control, lower margin, the wholesaler “owns” part of the relationship)
Account vintageMature, seasoned accounts (past the early-attrition window)Heavy concentration of brand-new accounts not yet seasoned
ConcentrationDiversified across many accounts; no single account or dealer over a small shareOne large commercial account or one dealer relationship dominating
RMR per account & creation costHigher RMR per account; efficient account creation (low cost per RMR added)Low RMR per account; expensive, subsidized account creation
Platform/billing systemsClean account data, modern monitoring/billing platform, accurate RMR reportingMessy records, unclear which accounts are active, RMR overstated

The central station question

Whether you own a UL-listed central station materially affects value. Owning one means: (1) the station itself is an asset (real estate/equipment/redundancy infrastructure plus the UL listing and any TMA Five Diamond certification), (2) you can generate wholesale-monitoring revenue by monitoring other dealers’ accounts, which is its own recurring stream, and (3) you control the customer relationship end to end rather than depending on a third-party wholesaler. Companies that wholesale all their monitoring trade at lower RMR multiples because they have less control and lower margins. If you own a quality central station, make sure the buyer values it separately, it is not just folded into the RMR multiple.

Who is buying alarm monitoring companies in 2026

We have buyers for alarm monitoring businesses. CT works with a network of 100+ active capital partners, private equity firms, family offices, strategic acquirers, and search funders, and several of them have stated mandates to acquire alarm monitoring businesses. The multiples, buyer types, and dynamics on this page reflect those mandates plus current public M&A data, they are informed starting points, not guarantees; your outcome depends on the specifics. With the buyer-paid model, sellers pay no advisory fee, the buyer pays at closing. Get a sector-adjusted estimate with our free 90-second valuation tool.

How to prepare an alarm monitoring company for sale

What kills alarm monitoring company deals in diligence

The process: first conversation to close

Alarm monitoring deals often move faster than other trades, roughly 60-150 days, because the asset (the RMR book) is well understood and the valuation convention is established. Days 1-14 conversation/RMR review/fit, days 14-30 buyer introductions, days 30-50 LOI (with the RMR multiple as the headline term), days 45-120 diligence (RMR audit, attrition analysis, contract review, central-station review, account-level data) and definitive agreement, days 90-150 close. Traditional broker listings take longer. See our broker alternative guide.

Related: selling a fire protection business, selling a fire alarm company, selling an alarm monitoring company, selling a security integration company, selling an AV integration company, selling a low-voltage company, electrical contractor sale, how PE roll-ups unlock value, private equity value creation, the buyer-paid broker alternative.

Alarm Monitoring Valuation

What’s your alarm monitoring company worth?

Get a sector-adjusted RMR-multiple estimate using current 2026 monitoring transactions. We apply monitoring-specific adjustments for RMR mix, attrition, contract terms, account vintage, concentration, and central-station ownership.

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Frequently asked questions

How much is my alarm monitoring company worth?

Alarm monitoring companies are valued as a multiple of recurring monthly revenue (RMR), not EBITDA. In 2026, standard residential and small-commercial account books typically trade at roughly 28x to 40x RMR; high-quality books (low attrition, long contracts, owned UL-listed central station) reach 40x to 50x+ RMR; and premium commercial-fire-heavy portfolios can exceed that. So a company with $100,000 of RMR is worth roughly $2.8M to $5M+ depending on attrition, contract terms, RMR mix, and central-station ownership. Use our free valuation tool for a sector-adjusted estimate.

What is an RMR multiple?

RMR stands for recurring monthly revenue, the contracted monthly fees from monitored accounts. An alarm monitoring company is valued by multiplying its RMR by a market multiple (the ‘RMR multiple’), typically roughly 28x to 50x+ depending on the quality of the account book. The multiple captures attrition (low attrition = high multiple), contract term and renewal strength, RMR mix (commercial fire commands premiums), account vintage and concentration, and whether the company owns a central station. It is the central valuation metric in alarm monitoring M&A, the entire deal turns on it.

What drives the RMR multiple up?

Low attrition (under 8-10% annual is strong); long initial contract terms (3-5 years) with enforceable auto-renewal/evergreen language; an RMR mix weighted toward commercial fire monitoring (code-mandated, very sticky) rather than pure residential burglar (especially DIY/self-install, which churns); owning a UL-listed central station (ideally TMA Five Diamond certified) rather than wholesaling monitoring; mature, seasoned accounts past the early-attrition window; diversification across many accounts with no single account or dealer dominating; higher RMR per account; efficient account creation; and clean account data with accurate RMR reporting. Cutting attrition and lengthening contracts are usually the two biggest levers.

Does owning a central station increase the value of my alarm monitoring company?

Yes, materially. Owning a UL-listed central station means the station itself is an asset (infrastructure, the UL listing, any TMA Five Diamond certification), you can generate wholesale-monitoring revenue by monitoring other dealers’ accounts (its own recurring stream), and you control the customer relationship end to end rather than depending on a third-party wholesaler. Companies that wholesale all their monitoring trade at lower RMR multiples because they have less control and lower margins. If you own a quality central station, make sure the buyer values it separately rather than just folding it into the RMR multiple.

How do I reduce attrition before selling my alarm monitoring company?

Audit why accounts cancel, the common drivers are moves (customer relocates), price sensitivity, dissatisfaction with service or false alarms, and contract expiration without renewal. Then: tighten onboarding and the early-account experience (most attrition happens in the first year); move customers to 3-5 year contracts with clean auto-renewal language; improve customer service and false-alarm reduction; offer move-with-you transfers to retain relocating customers; and proactively re-contract accounts approaching expiration. Every point of attrition below ~10% annual lifts your RMR multiple, and attrition is the number-one thing diligence will scrutinize.

Who is buying alarm monitoring companies in 2026?

The large national and super-regional monitoring consolidators; PE-backed security platforms (multiple new large-cap PE firms entered the fire and security space in 2024); fire and life safety platforms like Pye-Barker Fire & Safety (which closed roughly 41 acquisitions in 2025) acquiring monitoring books, especially commercial fire monitoring, as part of a fire-life-safety-security-monitoring continuum; regional security companies adding density; and account-book buyers who acquire just the RMR portfolio without the operating company. CT also has buyers in its network actively acquiring alarm monitoring companies and security platforms.

Can I sell just my monitored accounts and keep my install business?

Yes, this is common. Some buyers specialize in acquiring just the RMR portfolio (the monitored-account book) without the operating company, which lets you exit the recurring-revenue accounts at a strong RMR multiple while keeping (or separately selling) the installation and service business. The trade-off: the install business without a recurring base is worth less per dollar of revenue, and you lose the customer relationships the accounts represented. Whether to sell the whole company, just the accounts, or both separately depends on your goals, a sell-side advisor can model the options.

How long does it take to sell an alarm monitoring company?

Alarm monitoring deals often move faster than other trades, roughly 60-150 days, because the asset (the RMR book) is well understood and the valuation convention (the RMR multiple) is established. The diligence focuses on auditing the RMR (confirming accounts are active and paying), the attrition rate, contract terms, and the central station. Traditional broker listings take longer; an off-market process to pre-qualified monitoring consolidators and PE-backed platforms compresses the timeline.

Related research

More vertical M&A guides: selling a fire protection business · selling a fire alarm company · selling a security integration company · selling an AV integration company · selling a low-voltage company · selling a behavioral health practice · selling an ABA therapy business · selling a home health agency · selling a cybersecurity services company.

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