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Sell a Business · A Free Read

What’s your business worth?

SDE, EBITDA, the recast that raises your price, and what you actually net.

You can ask any number you want — but the business sells for what a buyer will pay, and on a Main Street deal that’s capped by what the buyer’s lender will finance. Three things, all from your own numbers, decide it.

What it really earns — the recast

Buyers pay a multiple of earnings, and your tax return understates earnings on purpose. A recast (normalization) adds back owner pay, perks, retirement, non-working family on payroll, and one-time costs to show the true owner benefit — documented so it survives the buyer’s quality-of-earnings review. A defensible recast is the single biggest lever on your price.

What that’s worth — the multiple

Small businesses trade on a multiple of earnings: roughly 2–3.5× SDE for owner-operated Main Street businesses, and 4–6× EBITDA — sometimes much more — as you move up in size and quality. Multiples also vary widely by industry. Where you land within a range is set by your value-drivers, so two similar businesses can sell a full turn apart.

Price is not net

The number that matters isn’t the headline price — it’s what you net after debt, broker fees (often 8–10%), advisory fees, and tax. A $1.2M price can leave wildly different amounts in your pocket depending on debt and how the deal is structured and taxed. Know the rough net, not the rough price.

Free tool: the Institute’s DCF Sanity Check gives you an independent read on what your earnings and growth are plausibly worth — before a broker frames a number for you.

Start free: the Seller’s Readiness toolkit

The “Are You Ready to Sell?” guide and the one-page Readiness Checklist — the worksheets that tell you whether you, and the business, are ready to sell well. Free, no signup.