Estimate your business value using multiple valuation methods: EBITDA multiple, Revenue multiple, Discounted Cash Flow (DCF), and Book Value. Compare all four approaches.
Business Financials
Enter your business performance data
📊 Income Statement
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$
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%
📋 Balance Sheet
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⚙️ Valuation Parameters
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Estimated Business Value
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Average of all methods
Value Range
$— — $—
EBITDA Multiple
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Revenue Multiple
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DCF Value
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Book Value
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Annual Revenue
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EBITDA
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EBITDA Margin
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Revenue Multiple Used
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EBITDA Multiple Used
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EBITDA Multiple Value
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Revenue Multiple Value
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DCF Value
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Book Value (Equity)
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Average Valuation
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FAQ
What is business valuation?
Business valuation is the process of determining the economic value of a business. It's needed for M&A transactions, equity fundraising, partnership buyouts, estate planning, and business loans. There is no single "correct" valuation — context and method selection matter.
Discounted Cash Flow (DCF) values a business by projecting future cash flows and discounting them to present value at your required rate of return (discount rate). More accurate but highly sensitive to assumptions about growth and terminal value.
Which valuation method is most reliable?
No single method is definitive. Investment bankers typically use a "football field" analysis showing all methods. EBITDA multiples are most commonly used in M&A. Buyers pay for earnings potential; sellers argue based on revenue multiples in high-growth stages.