Selling an Industrial Distribution Business in 2026: Multiples, Named Buyers, and the Real Playbook
Quick Answer
A US industrial distributor (power transmission, fluid power, motion control, fasteners, MRO supplies, electrical components, automation, safety supplies and similar categories) typically sells for roughly 0.5x-1.5x revenue or 6x-9x EBITDA in 2026. The detail: a $5M+ revenue distributor with $1M+ EBITDA routinely transacts at 6x-9x EBITDA; strategic premiums reach 10x+ for distributors that fill a specific consolidator’s category or geographic gap; sub-$5M-revenue distributors trade more like 0.5x-1x trailing revenue or 4x-5.5x SDE; industrial-sector multiples ticked up ~+0.4x over the past year. The spread is a margin-and-position game: industrial distribution runs ~8%-15% EBITDA margin (12%+ is premium) versus ~3%-7% for commodity wholesale, and the margin comes from a defensible niche, deep SKU breadth, technical sales engineers, value-added services (kitting, VMI, fabrication), and recurring/contract revenue (vendor-managed-inventory programs, integrated supply, blanket POs, MRO supply agreements). A broad-line, transactional, low-margin distributor is valued at the bottom; a niche, technical, value-added distributor with contract revenue and 12%+ margins is the platform target. The vendor-line moat (authorized-distributor status, and whether it’s transferable on a change of control) is core diligence. Active buyers, by name: Relevant Industrial (Fusion Capital Partners; acquired 2025 from LKCM Headwater), DXP Enterprises (public; acquired Arroyo Process Equipment), White Cap (acquired JLA Supply), Univar Solutions (Apollo-owned), Platinum Equity, the public industrial-distribution consolidators (Applied Industrial Technologies, DistributionNOW, SiteOne, MSC Industrial), PE-backed specialty-distribution roll-up platforms (CORE Industrial Partners, GenNx360 and others), strategic acquirers, and search funders. Most industrial-distribution sales close in 90 to 180 days off-market.
If you own an industrial distribution business, the headline range, 0.5x-1.5x revenue or 6x-9x EBITDA, hides the thing that actually sets your number: this is a margin-and-position game, not a volume game. Industrial distribution runs 8%-15% EBITDA margin versus 3%-7% for commodity wholesale, and that spread, driven by a defensible niche, technical sales capability, value-added services, and recurring/contract revenue, is the whole valuation conversation. A niche technical distributor with VMI contracts and 12%+ margins is a platform target; a broad-line, transactional, low-margin distributor is a 5-6x business. This guide gives you the real picture: multiples by company profile (with a chart), the named consolidators and PE platforms acquiring and who backs each one, the margin-and-recurring-revenue math that drives valuation, the operator-specific things buyers diligence, a preparation playbook in priority order, the dangers and traps that kill deals, and our view on where the market is going.
We are CT Acquisitions, a buy-side M&A advisory firm with buyers in our network actively acquiring industrial distribution businesses. Sellers pay nothing, the buyer pays our fee at closing. For adjacent verticals, see our guides on selling a contract packaging / co-packing business, selling a manufacturing business, and distribution business valuation.
What this guide covers
- Headline range: ~0.5x-1.5x revenue or 6x-9x EBITDA; $5M+ revenue / $1M+ EBITDA distributors at 6x-9x; strategic premiums 10x+; sub-$5M ~0.5x-1x revenue / 4x-5.5x SDE
- It’s a margin-and-position game. 8%-15% EBITDA margin (12%+ = premium) vs 3%-7% for commodity wholesale. Margin comes from niche position, SKU breadth, technical sales engineers, value-added services, and recurring/contract revenue
- Recurring revenue in distribution = VMI programs, integrated supply, blanket POs, MRO supply agreements; valued separately, much higher per dollar than transactional counter sales
- The vendor-line moat: authorized-distributor status and whether it’s transferable on a change of control is core diligence, loss of a key line on a sale is a real risk
- Named active buyers: Relevant Industrial (Fusion Capital; from LKCM Headwater 2025), DXP Enterprises (public; Arroyo Process Equipment), White Cap (JLA Supply), Univar (Apollo), Platinum Equity (R&B Wholesale), public consolidators (Applied Industrial, DistributionNOW, SiteOne, MSC), PE specialty-distribution platforms (CORE Industrial Partners, GenNx360), strategics, search funders. We have buyers in our network
- Free valuation: our 90-second tool applies distribution-specific adjustments for EBITDA margin, niche position, recurring/contract revenue, vendor-line moat, and working-capital efficiency
What an industrial distribution business is actually worth in 2026
An industrial distributor, covering power transmission, fluid power, motion control, fasteners, MRO supplies, electrical components, automation, safety supplies, and similar categories, typically sells in 2026 for roughly 0.5x-1.5x revenue or 6x-9x EBITDA, with the meaningful detail in the spread: a $5M+ revenue distributor with $1M+ EBITDA routinely transacts at 6x-9x EBITDA, strategic premiums reach 10x+ for distributors that fill a specific consolidator’s gap, and sub-$5M-revenue distributors trade more like 0.5x-1x trailing revenue or 4x-5.5x SDE. The Industrial sector’s multiples have ticked up roughly +0.4x over the past year.
Why this is a margin-and-position game, not a volume game
Industrial distribution runs roughly 8%-15% EBITDA margin, materially higher than commodity wholesale’s 3%-7%, and that spread is the whole valuation conversation. It comes from SKU breadth in a defensible niche, vendor relationships and authorized-distributor status, technical sales capability (the inside/outside sales engineers who specify the right component, not just take the order), value-added services (kitting, assembly, vendor-managed inventory, fabrication), and a recurring/contract revenue base (VMI programs, blanket POs, MRO supply agreements). A broad-line, low-margin, transactional distributor is valued at the bottom; a niche, technical, value-added distributor with contract revenue and 12%+ margins is the asset the public consolidators and PE roll-ups compete for.
| Factor | Why buyers price it |
|---|---|
| EBITDA margin (8%-15% range; 12%+ is premium territory) | The headline signal of niche position, technical sales capability, and pricing power. Sub-8% margins read as commodity wholesale and get valued accordingly |
| Niche / specialty position (motion control, fluid power, automation, safety, process equipment, etc.) vs broad-line MRO | A defensible niche with deep SKU breadth and technical expertise is harder to replicate and more strategic to a consolidator filling a category gap; broad-line MRO competes with the giants on price |
| Recurring / contract revenue (VMI / vendor-managed inventory programs, blanket POs, MRO supply agreements, integrated supply) | The closest thing to recurring revenue in distribution; sticky, predictable, embeds you in the customer’s operations. A book of VMI/integrated-supply contracts is worth far more per dollar than transactional counter sales |
| Vendor relationships and authorized-distributor / franchise status | Authorized status with key OEMs is a moat and a barrier to entry; the breadth and exclusivity of vendor lines, and whether they’re transferable on a change of control, is core diligence |
| Technical sales capability (inside/outside sales engineers, application expertise) | The people who specify the component, solve the customer’s problem, and own the relationship. Distributors that compete on technical value rather than price have higher margins and stickier customers, and the sales engineers are the asset |
| Value-added services (kitting, assembly, VMI, fabrication, light manufacturing, repair) | Higher-margin, stickier, more strategic; a distributor that’s really a solutions provider is worth more than a pure box-mover |
| Customer and vendor concentration | Concentration in a few large customers, or dependence on one OEM line, is a discount; a diversified customer base across resilient end markets (industrial, energy, food/bev, infrastructure) is what buyers want |
| Inventory quality and working-capital efficiency (turns, dead/obsolete stock, GMROI) | Distribution is a working-capital business; high turns, low dead stock, and good gross margin return on inventory signal discipline, slow-moving inventory and a bloated balance sheet is a price adjustment |
The translation: two industrial distributors at $1.5M of EBITDA can be worth ~5x and ~10x, and the difference is the margin (8% vs 13%), the position (broad-line MRO vs a defensible technical niche), the recurring/contract revenue base, and the vendor-line moat. A transactional broad-line distributor is a 5-6x business; a niche technical distributor with VMI contracts, sales engineers, and 12%+ margins is the platform target.
The buyers acquiring industrial distributors in 2026, by name
Industrial distribution is dominated by acquisitive public consolidators and PE-backed roll-up platforms; PE participants have concentrated on niche distributors with compelling market positions and recurring revenue, particularly in plumbing, HVAC, and electrical-adjacent segments. The buyer landscape:
| Buyer / platform | Backed by / structure | What they buy & recent activity |
|---|---|---|
| Relevant Industrial | Fusion Capital Partners (acquired 2025 from LKCM Headwater Investments, which retained a minority stake via reinvestment; Fusion launched in 2024, this was its second deal) | Instrumentation, automation, rotating equipment, valve, purification and thermal-equipment distributor; recent add-ons include Controlled Fluids (Feb 2025, Beaumont TX) and Loy Instrument (Dec 2024, Indianapolis). An active acquirer of specialty industrial distributors |
| DXP Enterprises (NASDAQ: DXPE) | Public company | Pumping solutions and industrial supplies distributor; acquired Arroyo Process Equipment among other deals. Acquisitive public consolidator in process/MRO distribution |
| White Cap | PE-backed (and public-adjacent ownership history) | Construction and industrial supplies distributor; acquired JLA Supply among others. Active roll-up of construction/industrial distributors |
| Univar Solutions | Apollo (took Univar private) | Specialty ingredients and chemicals distributor; acquired Brad-Chem Holdings (UK, corrosion-control products and lubricant additives). Acquires specialty-chemical distributors |
| Platinum Equity | Platinum Equity (PE) | Made a significant investment in home-appliance distributor R&B Wholesale Distributors; representative of large-cap PE building distribution platforms |
| Public industrial-distribution consolidators (Applied Industrial Technologies, DistributionNOW, SiteOne Landscape Supply, MSC Industrial, Fastenal-adjacent acquirers, etc.) | Public companies | Roll up niche and regional distributors to add category breadth, geographic coverage, and technical capability; pay strategic premiums for distributors that fill a specific category or geographic gap |
| PE-backed industrial-distribution roll-up platforms | Various sponsors (CORE Industrial Partners, GenNx360, and others active in industrial business services) | Build regional/super-regional specialty-distribution platforms; drawn by the predictable, non-discretionary MRO spend and the consolidation/operational-improvement opportunity. Pay up for niche position and recurring/contract revenue |
| Strategic acquirers (manufacturers integrating distribution, larger regional distributors, search funders) | Public companies, large privates, search-fund capital | Manufacturers acquire distributors to control channel; larger regionals bolt on for density; search funders for smaller niche distributors with clean books and transferable vendor lines |
(Financial details above are from public sources and industry reporting as of early 2026; specific deal terms are often undisclosed and multiples cited are indicative.)
The operator-knowledge layer: what buyers diligence in an industrial distributor
- The margin bridge. Gross margin by line, by customer segment, by channel (counter / inside sales / outside sales / e-commerce / contract), and the EBITDA bridge from gross to net. Buyers want to understand exactly where the 12% margin comes from, and whether it’s defensible (niche position, technical value, exclusive lines) or a function of one big rebate or one over-priced customer that won’t survive.
- Vendor relationships and authorized-distributor agreements. The list of vendor lines, authorized/franchise status, territory rights, exclusivity, rebate and co-op programs, minimum-purchase commitments, termination provisions, and change-of-control clauses. Loss of a key authorized line on a change of ownership is a real risk, and it’s the first thing a strategic acquirer’s category team checks.
- Recurring / contract revenue. VMI programs, integrated-supply agreements, blanket POs, MRO supply contracts, the dollar value, terms, renewal rates, and how embedded you are in the customer’s operations (on-site personnel, customer’s ERP integration). This is the closest thing to recurring revenue and buyers value it separately.
- Customer concentration and end-market mix. Top-5 and top-10 customer share, customer tenure, win/loss history, and exposure to cyclical or declining end markets vs resilient/growing ones (industrial, energy, food/bev, infrastructure, defense-adjacent).
- The sales force. Inside and outside sales engineers, tenure, the relationships they own, compensation structure, turnover, and how much of the book walks if a key rep leaves. The technical sales people are the asset; key-person risk here is real.
- Inventory and working capital. Inventory turns, GMROI, dead and slow-moving stock (and the reserve against it), the working-capital ratio, and how working capital scales with revenue. Distribution is a working-capital business; a bloated balance sheet with slow inventory is a price adjustment, and the buyer will normalize the working-capital peg.
- Systems and e-commerce. The ERP / distribution-management system, e-commerce capability and revenue, pricing tools, and CRM. A modern, integrated system is a strength; a homegrown legacy system the buyer has to replace is a cost.
- Financial hygiene. Accrual accounting, rebate accruals (vendor and customer), inventory valuation method and reserves, documented add-backs, and a 2-3 year quality-of-earnings-ready package with margin and revenue broken out by line, segment, and channel.
How to prepare an industrial distributor for sale, in priority order
- Push the margin up and prove it’s defensible. Shift mix toward niche/technical lines and value-added services, raise prices where you have pricing power, prune unprofitable customers and lines, and document the margin bridge so a buyer can see the 12% is structural, not a one-off. Margin is the headline signal.
- Grow the recurring/contract revenue base. Convert transactional customers into VMI programs, integrated-supply agreements, and blanket POs; embed in their operations and ERP. A book of contract revenue changes which buyer pool you’re in.
- Lock down and document the vendor relationships. Confirm authorized-distributor status, territory rights, and change-of-control provisions; build the vendor-line moat (add complementary lines in your niche); make sure nothing critical is at risk on a sale.
- Retain the key sales engineers. Put retention arrangements in place for your top inside/outside sales people before you list; document the relationships and the pipeline.
- Clean up inventory and working capital. Liquidate dead and slow-moving stock, improve turns, document the reserve, and present a clean working-capital picture, the buyer will normalize the peg, so make it favorable.
- Diversify customer and end-market concentration, reduce reliance on the top accounts and on cyclical end markets; document the diversification.
- Modernize systems where it matters, and get the financials QoE-ready, accrual accounting, documented rebate accruals, inventory reserves, add-backs, with margin and revenue broken out by line, segment, and channel.
The dangers and traps: what kills industrial-distribution deals in diligence
- The commodity-margin trap. Sub-8% EBITDA margins read as commodity wholesale, not specialty distribution, and get valued accordingly, no matter how the seller describes the business.
- The vendor-line risk. A key authorized-distributor line that’s terminable on a change of control, or a vendor that won’t transfer the agreement, the buyer prices in the risk of losing it, or walks.
- The concentration trap. One customer or one OEM line at 25%+ of revenue, the buyer is underwriting a single relationship.
- The bloated-balance-sheet trap. Slow inventory, dead stock without an adequate reserve, a working-capital ratio way above the norm, the buyer normalizes the working-capital peg downward and the effective price comes down.
- Sales-rep flight risk. The book is really owned by two outside sales engineers who could leave, the buyer is buying their relationships, not a business.
- The legacy-system cost. A homegrown ERP the buyer has to replace, a real integration cost the buyer prices in.
- Cyclical end-market exposure. Heavy concentration in a declining or highly cyclical end market without diversification, the buyer discounts for the volatility.
- Margins propped up by one rebate or one over-priced customer, the QoE strips it and the multiple compresses.
Our view on where the industrial-distribution M&A market is going
Industrial distribution is one of the most reliably consolidating sectors in the economy, and the dynamic is durable. The public consolidators (Applied Industrial, DistributionNOW, SiteOne, MSC and others) need acquisitions to grow because organic share gains are slow, the PE-backed specialty-distribution platforms (Relevant Industrial / Fusion Capital, CORE Industrial Partners-type platforms, and many more) are drawn by the predictable non-discretionary MRO spend and the operational-improvement upside, and the universe of fragmented niche distributors is deep. Industrial-sector multiples ticked up roughly +0.4x over the past year, and the 2026 outlook is for sustained activity driven by infrastructure spending, re-shoring, and continued consolidation.
For an owner, the premium is for the niche, not the breadth, and for the margin, not the revenue. A niche technical distributor with VMI contracts, sales engineers, transferable vendor lines, and 12%+ EBITDA margins is the asset the consolidators will compete for at 8x-10x+, and a strategic that needs your specific category or geography can pay above that. A broad-line, transactional, low-margin distributor is a 5-6x business in any market. That gap, margin and recurring revenue and niche position, is built over a 12-24 month preparation window: shifting the mix, converting customers to contracts, pruning the unprofitable, cleaning the inventory. The owner who has done that should run a competitive process that includes both the public consolidators and the PE platforms; the owner who hasn’t should do the work first.
Related guides: selling a contract packaging / co-packing business, selling a manufacturing business, distribution business valuation, selling a 3PL / fulfillment business, selling a medical device manufacturer, selling an electrical contracting business, selling a restoration business, how private equity creates value, which industries PE is buying most, sell your business, the buyer-paid broker alternative, business brokers by state, how to value a small business, about CT Acquisitions, or use our free valuation tool or book a confidential call.
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How much is my industrial distribution business worth in 2026?
US industrial distributors typically sell for roughly 0.5x-1.5x revenue or 6x-9x EBITDA in 2026. The detail: a $5M+ revenue distributor with $1M+ EBITDA routinely transacts at 6x-9x EBITDA; strategic premiums reach 10x+ for distributors that fill a specific consolidator’s category or geographic gap; sub-$5M-revenue distributors trade more like 0.5x-1x trailing revenue or 4x-5.5x SDE. The biggest drivers are EBITDA margin (8%-15% is the industrial-distribution range vs 3%-7% for commodity wholesale; 12%+ is premium territory), niche/specialty position vs broad-line MRO, recurring/contract revenue (VMI programs, integrated supply, blanket POs), the vendor-line moat (authorized-distributor status), technical sales capability, value-added services, customer/vendor concentration, and inventory/working-capital efficiency. Use our free valuation tool for a sector-adjusted estimate.
Why does EBITDA margin matter so much when valuing an industrial distributor?
Because it’s the headline signal of whether you’re specialty distribution or commodity wholesale. Industrial distribution that competes on technical value, sales engineers who specify the right component, deep SKU breadth in a defensible niche, value-added services, authorized vendor lines, runs roughly 8%-15% EBITDA margin and 12%+ is premium territory. Commodity wholesale that competes on price runs 3%-7%. So a buyer looks at your margin first: a 12%+ margin says niche position and pricing power and gets a 8x-10x+ multiple; a sub-8% margin says commodity box-mover and gets valued like one regardless of how you describe the business. And the buyer’s quality-of-earnings team will probe whether the margin is structural (niche, technical, exclusive lines) or a one-off (one big rebate, one over-priced customer that won’t survive). Pushing the margin up and proving it’s defensible is the single highest-return preparation move.
What is recurring revenue in industrial distribution, and how is it valued?
The closest thing to recurring revenue in distribution is contract/program revenue: vendor-managed inventory (VMI) programs where you stock and replenish the customer’s bins, integrated-supply agreements where you manage a category or a whole MRO storeroom for the customer (often with on-site personnel and ERP integration), blanket purchase orders, and multi-year MRO supply contracts. This revenue is sticky (you’re embedded in the customer’s operations), predictable, and harder to displace than transactional counter sales, so buyers value a book of VMI/integrated-supply contracts far more per dollar than the same revenue in counter sales, often treating it as a separate, higher-multiple component layered onto the EBITDA multiple. Converting transactional customers into VMI/integrated-supply programs before a sale changes which buyer pool you’re in and lifts the multiple.
What do buyers diligence most carefully in an industrial distribution business?
Beyond standard financials: the margin bridge (gross margin by line, customer segment, and channel, and exactly where the EBITDA margin comes from and whether it’s defensible); vendor relationships and authorized-distributor agreements (line list, authorized/franchise status, territory rights, exclusivity, rebate/co-op programs, termination and change-of-control provisions, since loss of a key line on a sale is a real risk); recurring/contract revenue (VMI programs, integrated-supply agreements, blanket POs, terms, renewal rates, how embedded you are); customer concentration and end-market mix (top-5/top-10 share, tenure, exposure to cyclical vs resilient end markets); the sales force (inside/outside sales engineers, tenure, the relationships they own, turnover, key-person risk); inventory and working capital (turns, GMROI, dead/slow-moving stock and the reserve, how working capital scales); systems and e-commerce (the ERP, e-commerce capability, pricing tools); and financial hygiene (accrual accounting, rebate accruals, inventory valuation and reserves, documented add-backs). The two things most likely to break a deal are a key vendor line that’s at risk on a change of control and a margin that doesn’t survive the quality-of-earnings re-cut.
Who is buying industrial distributors right now?
Industrial distribution is dominated by acquisitive public consolidators and PE-backed roll-up platforms. Named acquirers and platforms include Relevant Industrial (backed by Fusion Capital Partners, acquired 2025 from LKCM Headwater Investments; recent add-ons Controlled Fluids and Loy Instrument), DXP Enterprises (public; acquired Arroyo Process Equipment among others), White Cap (acquired JLA Supply among others), Univar Solutions (Apollo-owned; acquired Brad-Chem Holdings), Platinum Equity (invested in R&B Wholesale Distributors), the public industrial-distribution consolidators (Applied Industrial Technologies, DistributionNOW, SiteOne Landscape Supply, MSC Industrial and others), PE-backed specialty-distribution roll-up platforms (CORE Industrial Partners, GenNx360 and others active in industrial business services), and strategic acquirers and search funders. PE participants have concentrated on niche distributors with compelling market positions and recurring revenue. CT also has buyers in its network actively acquiring niche industrial distributors.
How do I increase the value of my industrial distribution business before selling?
In priority order: (1) push the EBITDA margin up and prove it’s defensible, shift mix toward niche/technical lines and value-added services, raise prices where you have pricing power, prune unprofitable customers and lines, and document the margin bridge so the buyer sees it’s structural; (2) grow the recurring/contract revenue base, convert transactional customers into VMI programs, integrated-supply agreements, and blanket POs; (3) lock down and document the vendor relationships, confirm authorized status and change-of-control provisions, build the vendor-line moat, make sure nothing critical is at risk on a sale; (4) retain the key sales engineers with retention arrangements before you list; (5) clean up inventory and working capital, liquidate dead stock, improve turns, present a favorable working-capital picture; (6) diversify customer and end-market concentration; (7) modernize systems where it matters and get the financials QoE-ready with margin and revenue broken out by line, segment, and channel. Margin improvement and recurring-revenue growth are the biggest levers and take 12-24 months.
How long does it take to sell an industrial distribution business?
Traditional broker-listed industrial distributors typically take 9-18 months. Off-market sales to a public consolidator (Applied Industrial, DistributionNOW, SiteOne, DXP, MSC and others) or a PE-backed specialty-distribution platform typically take 90-180 days, because the buyer is pre-qualified, actively consolidating, and looking specifically for distributors in your category and geography, often to fill a known gap, rather than a broker marketing to a large unqualified pool. The diligence (margin bridge, vendor agreements, recurring/contract revenue, customer concentration, sales force, inventory and working capital, systems, financial hygiene) is well-trodden ground for these acquirers.
Do I need a business broker to sell my industrial distribution business?
For a small distributor, a business broker can work but charges 8%-15% commissions. For a niche/specialty distributor with healthy margins, recurring/contract revenue, and transferable vendor lines, working with a buyer-paid sell-side advisor that has direct relationships with the public consolidators’ corporate-development teams and the PE-backed specialty-distribution platforms usually produces better outcomes, higher multiples (especially when a strategic that needs your specific category or geography pays a premium), better-matched buyers, a faster close, and no seller fee (the buyer pays at closing). Some sellers go directly to a known consolidator with just a transactional attorney, but in a sector this competitive a properly run process that puts more than one consolidator and one or two PE platforms in play almost always lifts the price.
Related research
- Free Business Valuation Tool, your business is worth in 90 seconds
- The Business Broker Alternative Guide (national pillar)
- Business Brokers by State, with a free alternative
- The Complete Guide to Selling Your Business in 2026
- What’s My Business Worth? Founder’s Valuation Guide
- Who Buys These Companies? Buyer Types Explained
- How to Sell to Private Equity, A Founder’s Walkthrough
- Owner’s Pre-Exit Checklist, 90 Days Before You List
- CT Commentary, Founder & M&A Insights