HVAC businesses typically sell for 2.5 to 4.0 times annual profit, and buyer demand in 2026 is as strong as the trades have ever seen. This guide covers what your company is likely worth, who is buying, how the confidential process works, and the mistakes that quietly kill deals.
2.5x - 4.0x
Profit Multiple (SDE)
4.0x - 6.0x
EBITDA Multiple ($1,000,000+ EBITDA)
6-9 mo
Time to Close
Very Strong
Buyer Demand
Private equity has spent the past several years building home-services platforms, and HVAC is the anchor trade. Dozens of well-funded groups are actively acquiring heating and cooling companies, which means more competing buyers for a well-run shop than at almost any point in the industry's history.
The technician shortage cuts in sellers' favor. Buyers cannot hire their way into a market, so acquiring a company with trained, tenured technicians is often the only way in. Your workforce is a real asset, not just your customer list.
The refrigerant transition to A2L systems has pushed equipment prices up and accelerated replacement decisions. Companies with strong replacement pipelines and maintenance-agreement bases are capturing that demand, and buyers are paying for it.
HVAC is essential, non-discretionary spending. Heating and cooling breakdowns get fixed in any economy, which is why lenders like the category and SBA financing for HVAC acquisitions remains readily available.
A large share of HVAC owners are within a decade of retirement. Buyers know consolidation is happening now, and they would rather buy a solid company today than bid against a platform for it in three years.
Most HVAC companies are valued on Seller's Discretionary Earnings (SDE): your net profit plus your salary, benefits, and personal expenses that run through the business. A buyer multiplies your SDE by a market multiple, typically 2.5 to 4.0 for HVAC, to arrive at a price. Once a company clears roughly $1,000,000 in EBITDA with a management layer under the owner, buyers switch to EBITDA multiples, typically 4.0 to 6.0, and the buyer pool shifts toward private equity and regional strategics. If you want the full math, our HVAC valuation guide breaks down every adjustment, and our SDE vs EBITDA explainer covers which measure applies to you. These are widely published market ranges, not a quote: where your company lands inside them depends almost entirely on the four drivers below.
Active service agreements are the closest thing HVAC has to subscription revenue. A base of 800 agreements renewing at 85 percent or better tells a buyer next year's revenue is already partly booked. Companies where agreements drive 15 to 30 percent of revenue routinely price at the top of the range; a shop with no agreement program sits at the bottom.
Buyers are buying your labor force as much as your customer list. Tenured, certified techs (EPA 608, NATE), documented pay scales, and low turnover raise the multiple. If two senior techs generate half your revenue and might walk at closing, buyers discount hard or demand retention terms.
A wrapped, GPS-tracked fleet averaging under 5 to 7 years old transfers as a working asset. A tired fleet is a hidden capital bill: a buyer who must replace six vans at $60,000 each will subtract that $360,000 from the price, or worse, from their confidence in how the whole business is run.
Residential service and replacement earns the strongest multiples: thousands of small customers, fast cash collection, no concentration. Commercial service with contracts is also prized. Heavy new-construction work is the discount case, it is cyclical, low margin, and tied to builder relationships that may not transfer.
Most of these are fixable in 6 to 12 months. Our HVAC sale preparation guide walks through the fixes in priority order.
Wondering how much your HVAC business is worth right now?
Our free calculator factors in your revenue mix, recurring agreements, and profitability. Takes about 5 minutes, and requesting the full report locks in a $1,000 credit toward the success fee if BridgeBook later sells your business.
Four main buyer types, listed by who typically pays the highest multiples:
Typically 4.0x - 6.0x EBITDA, sometimes more for scale. These groups roll up HVAC, plumbing, and electrical companies region by region. They move fast, pay well for recurring revenue and management depth, and usually want companies with $750,000+ in EBITDA. Some offer equity rollover so you keep a stake in the larger platform.
Typically 3.0x - 4.5x SDE. Larger HVAC or multi-trade contractors expanding into your territory or adding your commercial contracts and technicians. They understand the business, need little education, and can close efficiently because they already have licenses, insurance, and back office in place.
Typically 3.0x - 4.0x SDE. Individual acquirers backed by investor groups, hunting for one great company to run. They love HVAC for its essential demand and recurring agreements. Usually SBA-financed and often ask the seller to stay 6 to 12 months for transition.
Typically 2.5x - 3.5x SDE. Experienced tradespeople or career changers buying their first company, almost always with an SBA 7(a) loan. The most common buyer for HVAC businesses under $1,500,000 in price. Straightforward deals when the books are clean.
Not sure which buyer type fits your company? Book a free 45-minute exit consultation, we'll map your revenue mix, size, and goals to the buyers who actually pay for them. Booking and attending also locks in a $2,500 credit toward the success fee if BridgeBook sells your business.
The entire process runs under confidentiality. Your company name, location, and financials stay hidden until a buyer has signed an NDA and shown they can actually fund a deal. Here is how a well-run HVAC business exit unfolds:
Start with our free valuation calculator. It takes about 5 minutes and gives you a range based on your revenue, profit, and business characteristics. Knowing your number first keeps you from anchoring to a lowball unsolicited offer, and PE groups send plenty of those to HVAC owners.
Before going to market, assemble what every serious buyer will request:
Your HVAC business broker builds a blind profile ("residential-focused HVAC company in the Southeast, $2,400,000 revenue, strong agreement base") and markets it to vetted buyers, including through an NDA-gated marketplace like BridgeBook's. Buyers sign an NDA and verify funds before they see your name or financials. Your employees, customers, and competitors stay in the dark.
Qualified buyers review your information package, ask questions through your advisor, and meet you by video or after hours at the shop. Serious ones submit a Letter of Intent (LOI) stating price, structure, financing, and timeline. With multiple interested buyers, you compare structures, not just headline numbers: an all-cash offer at $2,600,000 can beat a $2,900,000 offer built on a large earnout.
After you sign an LOI, the buyer verifies everything: financials against bank statements, agreement renewals, technician records, fleet condition, licenses, and open warranty obligations. This typically runs 45 to 90 days. The sellers who sail through are the ones whose numbers match their books. Surprises found here do not just delay deals, they reprice them.
Lawyers finalize the purchase agreement, the lender funds, licenses and permits transfer, and you get paid. Most HVAC sellers stay on for a 30 to 90 day transition to introduce commercial accounts, hand off vendor relationships, and steady the crew. If you carried a seller note or earnout, your involvement terms are written into the agreement.
Want the generic version of this process for any industry? Read our full guide on how to sell a business.
Two offers with the same price can put very different amounts in your pocket. Structure determines taxes, risk, and timing.
Most HVAC deals under $5,000,000 are asset sales: the buyer purchases your equipment, fleet, customer list, agreements, and goodwill through a new entity, leaving historical liabilities behind. Buyers prefer this for the liability shield and the tax basis step-up. Sellers should watch how the purchase price is allocated, since amounts assigned to equipment can be taxed as ordinary income while goodwill gets capital-gains treatment.
Stock (or membership-interest) sales appear more often in commercial HVAC, where transferring the entity keeps service contracts, contractor licenses, and vendor agreements intact without re-signing. They are usually more tax-favorable for the seller, and buyers price that into their offer.
HVAC companies are among the most bankable businesses in SBA lending: essential demand, steady cash flow, and real collateral in the fleet and equipment. SBA 7(a) loans fund acquisitions up to $5,000,000 with roughly 10 percent buyer down payment. For you, SBA eligibility means a far deeper pool of individual and searcher buyers, and cash at closing instead of a payment plan. Clean tax returns are non-negotiable here: the lender underwrites what you reported to the IRS, not what you say the business "really" makes.
A seller note means you finance part of the price, commonly 10 to 15 percent, repaid over 3 to 5 years with interest. In SBA deals the lender often requires the note to sit on "standby" for a period. A reasonable note signals confidence in your own numbers and can support a higher total price. An earnout ties part of the price to future performance; treat earnouts cautiously once you no longer control the business, and cap how much of your price depends on them.
For a deeper comparison of cash-heavy versus financed structures, see our guide on seller financing vs all-cash deals.
Most failed HVAC deals die from problems that were knowable months in advance. These are the ones that show up again and again:
Every one of these has the same antidote: prepare early, disclose honestly, and keep running the business like you are keeping it. For the broader patterns, read why M&A deals fall through.
A typical HVAC business exit takes 6 to 9 months from decision to closing. Broken down:
Months 1-3
Valuation, financial cleanup, records assembly, blind profile and information package built. Owners who prepared a year ahead compress this stage dramatically.
Months 2-5
Confidential outreach, NDA-gated buyer review, management calls, and competing LOIs. Strong companies often collect multiple offers within 60 to 90 days.
Months 5-9
LOI to closing typically runs 60 to 120 days: verification, SBA underwriting if financed, purchase agreement, license transfers, and funding.
The best time to start is 12 to 24 months before you want to be done. That window is long enough to grow the agreement base, document operations, and let a full year of clean financials accrue, each of which shows up directly in the multiple.
BridgeBook is a founder-led brokerage: Legend Atty works your deal directly rather than handing it to a junior associate. The model is built around one promise, we only get paid when you do.
No retainers, no upfront fees, no monthly charges. The fee is tiered: 10 percent on the first $1,000,000 of the sale price, sliding down to 3 percent on value above $7,000,000. If your business does not sell, you owe nothing.
Booking and attending a free 45-minute consultation locks in a $2,500 credit toward the success fee. Requesting the free valuation report adds $1,000 more. That is $3,500 total, applied when BridgeBook sells your business.
Buyers reach your listing through an NDA-gated marketplace and communicate through the firm, not directly with you, until it makes sense. Your identity stays protected while unqualified tire-kickers get filtered out.
BridgeBook gives you an honest market range up front, even when it is lower than you hoped, because a deal that actually closes beats a flattering listing that never sells.
Most HVAC businesses typically sell for 2.5 to 4.0 times Seller's Discretionary Earnings (SDE). Larger companies with over $1,000,000 in EBITDA are usually valued on EBITDA instead, typically at 4.0 to 6.0 times. Maintenance-agreement revenue, technician retention, fleet condition, and your residential versus commercial mix are the biggest drivers within those ranges. Use our free valuation calculator for a personalized estimate.
You are not legally required to use a broker, but selling on your own means marketing the business publicly, screening buyers yourself, and negotiating against experienced acquirers. A broker runs a confidential process under NDA, qualifies buyers before they learn your company name, and creates competition among multiple offers. BridgeBook works on a success fee only, so there is no cost unless your business actually sells.
Typically 6 to 9 months from listing to close. Preparation takes 1 to 3 months, confidential marketing and buyer meetings take 1 to 3 months, and the period from signed letter of intent to closing usually runs 60 to 120 days. SBA-financed deals add lender underwriting time. Clean books and organized records are the single biggest factor in closing faster.
Not if the sale is run correctly. A confidential process markets the business with a blind profile that describes the company without naming it. Buyers must sign an NDA and show proof of funds before they learn your identity. Most owners tell key technicians only after a deal is certain, often at or just before closing, sometimes paired with stay bonuses.
Yes. HVAC businesses are strong candidates for SBA 7(a) acquisition loans up to $5,000,000 because they have steady cash flow and hard assets like vehicles and equipment. Buyers typically put 10 percent down, and lenders often ask the seller to carry a note of 10 to 15 percent, sometimes on standby. SBA eligibility widens your buyer pool well beyond all-cash acquirers.
Free. Confidential. Takes about 5 minutes. Requesting the report locks in a $1,000 exit credit.