Key Takeaways
- HVAC owners with annual revenue under $5M usually expect a sale price tied to revenue, but buyers value service businesses on adjusted EBITDA, not top-line sales.
- Most owners walk into the conversation with messy add-backs, undocumented owner dependency, and no growth story, which keeps the multiple stuck near the 2x baseline instead of pushing toward the 4x top of the range.
- A direct strategic buyer like Core Growth Group, a broker, or a private equity rollup will each price the same business differently, so understanding the EBITDA formula before any conversation prevents leaving cash on the table.
- On $652,000 of adjusted EBITDA, the difference between a 2x and a 4x multiple is roughly $1.3M in proceeds, which is what 12 months of focused preparation can be worth.
- Core Growth Group acquires HVAC and plumbing companies directly across Dallas-Fort Worth, Houston, Austin, and San Antonio, and works with sellers on a 12-month runway to clean up financials, reduce owner dependency, and defend a higher multiple at exit.
What Most HVAC Owners Get Wrong About Their Business Value
For HVAC owners with annual revenue under $5M, the sale price is set by adjusted EBITDA multiplied by an industry multiple, typically 2x as a baseline, rising to 3x–5x for well-positioned businesses with strong growth, recurring revenue, and a real management team. Buyers in this segment fall into three categories: direct strategic acquirers like Core Growth Group, brokers who list the business publicly, and private equity rollups, and each one prices the same financials differently. Which path fits depends on how clean your books are, how much owner dependency the business carries, and how much time you have before you want to exit. HVAC is one of the most consolidation-heavy service categories in Texas right now, and at this revenue tier the spread between a poorly prepared 2x sale and a well-prepared 4x sale is often the difference between a comfortable retirement and a missed one. If you’re a Texas operator weighing your options, this guide walks through how EBITDA is calculated, what moves your multiple, a worked calculator example, and the real costs of getting a deal closed.Core Growth Group: Skip the Broker. Sell Direct to a Strategic Buyer.
Operator-Led Acquisitions | Texas Triangle Focus
Built by an Operator, for Operators: Core Growth Group acquires HVAC and plumbing service businesses across Dallas-Fort Worth, Houston, Austin, and San Antonio. Founder Clint runs his own service business (Hill Country Plumber) and buys directly, so qualified sellers skip the listing process entirely and avoid the 89% of brokered businesses that never close.
Why Sellers Choose Core Growth Group:- ✓Direct strategic buyer, not a broker or private equity firm
- ✓High-level consulting to prepare your business for maximum valuation
- ✓Grow, Prepare, or Exit framework tailored to your stage
- ✓Texas-based operator who understands service business realities
Your business deserves a buyer who gets it.
Start the Conversation →What Is EBITDA and Why Do Buyers Use It for HVAC?

The HVAC EBITDA Valuation Formula
The core formula is simple: Business Value = Adjusted EBITDA × Industry Multiple Adjusted EBITDA is rarely the number on your tax return. It requires “normalizing” the books to show a buyer what the business really earns. Common add-backs include the owner’s above-market salary, personal vehicles run through the company, family members on payroll who don’t work in the business, one-time legal or repair costs, and discretionary travel. A clean, defensible add-back schedule is one of the highest-impact things a seller can prepare before going to market. The multiple is where market conditions, business quality, and buyer type collide.HVAC EBITDA Multiples in the Current Market

HVAC Valuation Calculator: Worked Example
Here is how the math plays out for a representative Texas HVAC business:| Input | Value |
| Annual Revenue | $4,500,000 |
| Reported Net Profit | $360,000 |
| Add-back: Owner Salary (above market) | $120,000 |
| Add-back: Personal Vehicles & Insurance | $24,000 |
| Add-back: One-time Legal Fees | $18,000 |
| Add-back: Depreciation & Amortization | $95,000 |
| Add-back: Interest Expense | $35,000 |
| Adjusted EBITDA | $652,000 |
- At 2.0x (baseline): $1,304,000
- At 3.0x (clean books, modest growth): $1,956,000
- At 4.0x (well-positioned: mature management, low owner dependency, 40%+ recurring revenue, defensible growth story): $2,608,000
What Factors Move Your HVAC Multiple Up or Down?
Five things consistently separate a 2x business from a 4x business:- Recurring revenue. Maintenance agreements and service contracts produce predictable cash flow. Buyers pay premium multiples for predictability.
- Owner dependency. If the business stops without you, buyers will heavily discount it. A bench of trained techs, a real ops manager, and documented SOPs all compress this risk.
- Customer concentration. A book where no single customer is more than 5 to 10% of revenue is far more valuable than one where two builders drive half the work.
- Financial cleanliness. Three to five years of tax returns, P&Ls, and add-back schedules that match. Without that, the buyer’s first offer reflects their uncertainty.
- Growth trajectory. Flat is fine. Declining is heavily penalized. A clear, documented growth pattern is what unlocks the 4x conversation.
Don’t Forget the Real Costs of Selling

