The Short Answer
Most construction and contracting companies sell for roughly 2x to 4x Seller's Discretionary Earnings (SDE), or 3x to 5x EBITDA for larger firms — with adjustments for equipment value and signed backlog. A specialty contractor earning $500,000 in SDE typically sells for $1M–$2M. Recurring or repeat-client work, a transferable license, strong bonding capacity, and a management team that isn't just the owner all push toward the top of the range.
Construction is valued more cautiously than recurring-revenue businesses because earnings are project-based and cyclical. Buyers discount for that volatility unless you can show durable, repeatable demand.
Get a confidential, no-obligation valuation of your construction company based on your real numbers — not a generic online estimate.
How Construction Companies Are Valued
Contractors are valued on a multiple of SDE or EBITDA, then adjusted for the balance sheet. Because many construction firms carry significant equipment, vehicles, and work-in-process, asset value and backlog factor in more than they do for a service business. A signed, profitable backlog gives a buyer near-term visibility and supports a higher price; a thin or unsigned pipeline does the opposite.
Working capital is also negotiated carefully — buyers need enough retention, receivables, and cash to fund ongoing jobs, so the amount of working capital left in the business affects the net price a seller walks away with.
Construction Valuation Multiples by Profile
| Company profile | Typical multiple | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Owner-run, project-to-project | 2x–2.5x SDE | Cyclical, owner holds the license and relationships |
| Established specialty contractor | 2.5x–3.5x SDE | Repeat clients, crews, some backlog |
| Strong backlog + management + bonding | 3.5x–4x SDE | Visibility, transferability, capacity |
| Mid-market, $1M+ EBITDA | 3x–5x EBITDA | Team, systems, scale (plus assets) |
What Drives a Construction Company's Value Up or Down
What pushes the multiple up
- Signed, profitable backlog — near-term revenue a buyer can see
- Repeat and recurring clients (property managers, GCs, service contracts) over one-off projects
- A license and bonding capacity that transfer — often the gating issue in a contractor sale
- An estimator and project managers who stay, so the owner isn't the only one who can bid and run work
- Owned, well-maintained equipment and clean job-costing
What drags the multiple down
- Owner holds the license and personally wins and runs every job
- Feast-or-famine revenue with no backlog
- Customer concentration in one developer or GC
- Weak bonding, thin working capital, or messy WIP accounting
Construction Company Values in Southern California
In California, the Contractors State License Board (CSLB) license is the pivot point of any contractor sale. A license generally cannot simply be handed to a buyer — the qualifying individual and license number tie to specific people, so the transaction has to be structured (entity purchase, adding a qualifier, or a transition period) to keep the license and bonding intact. Prevailing-wage, workers' comp, and 1099-vs-employee compliance also get close scrutiny. Southern California's construction demand is strong, but a deal only closes cleanly when the licensing and bonding path is worked out early. Plan this before you go to market.
Example: Backlog and Bonding Move the Number
A specialty contractor earns $500,000 in SDE. With the owner holding the license, no backlog, and one developer supplying 60% of revenue, buyers offer about 2x — $1M. The same profit, but with $2M of signed backlog, a qualifying employee who will stay, $3M of bonding capacity, and diversified clients, supports 3.5x — $1.75M plus equipment. Visibility and transferability are worth real money in construction.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much is a construction company worth?
Most construction companies sell for 2x to 4x Seller's Discretionary Earnings (SDE), or 3x to 5x EBITDA for larger firms, with adjustments for equipment value and signed backlog. A specialty contractor earning $500,000 in SDE typically sells for $1M to $2M.
How does backlog affect a construction company's value?
Signed, profitable backlog gives a buyer visibility into near-term revenue and supports a higher multiple. A thin or unsigned pipeline increases perceived risk and lowers the price, because the buyer is essentially betting on future work they cannot yet see.
Can you transfer a contractor's license when selling in California?
Not automatically. A California CSLB license ties to a specific qualifying individual and number, so the sale must be structured, through an entity purchase, adding a qualifier, or a transition period, to keep the license and bonding in place. This should be planned before going to market.
What lowers the value of a construction company?
An owner who holds the license and personally wins and runs every job, feast-or-famine revenue with no backlog, concentration in one developer or general contractor, weak bonding capacity, and messy work-in-process accounting all reduce the multiple.
What Is Your Construction Company Worth?
Get a confidential valuation from a broker who understands CSLB licensing, bonding, and backlog. Know your number and your options before you plan an exit.
Request a Confidential Valuation Call or text: 818-633-3254 · 365navarro.martin@gmail.com