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The Short Answer

Assisted living facilities are valued on a combination of operating profit and real estate — typically a multiple of EBITDA (roughly 4x to 6x) or a capitalization rate applied to net operating income, plus the value of the property, and often cross-checked on a price-per-bed basis. Smaller residential care facilities for the elderly (RCFEs, often six-bed homes) frequently trade on a blend of business value and residential real estate.

Occupancy is the number that moves everything. A facility running at 95% occupancy with a strong private-pay mix is worth dramatically more than the same building at 70% — both because of current cash flow and because buyers pay for stability and headroom.

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How Assisted Living Facilities Are Valued

Larger facilities are valued much like commercial real estate with an operating business attached: buyers apply a cap rate to stabilized net operating income or an EBITDA multiple, then account for the real estate and any deferred capital needs. Smaller RCFEs are often valued on a blend of SDE/EBITDA and the home's residential value, with a per-bed sanity check.

Buyers underwrite occupancy, average monthly rate, payer mix (private-pay vs. subsidized), care levels, and staffing. Higher-acuity care such as memory care commands premium rates and can raise value, provided the facility is licensed and staffed to deliver it safely.

Assisted Living Valuation Benchmarks

Facility profileTypical basisWhy
Small RCFE (6-bed), owner-runBusiness value + residential real estateBlended; per-bed cross-check
Mid-size, stabilized occupancy4x–6x EBITDA or cap rate on NOIOperating business + property
Larger, high private-pay, memory carePremium multiple / lower cap rateHigher, more stable cash flow
Under-occupied or distressedDiscounted / near real-estate valueTurnaround risk priced in

What Drives an Assisted Living Facility's Value Up or Down

What pushes the value up

What drags the value down

Assisted Living Values in Southern California

In California, assisted living communities are licensed as Residential Care Facilities for the Elderly (RCFEs) by the Department of Social Services Community Care Licensing Division, and buyers scrutinize the license, capacity, and inspection history closely. Southern California's aging population and high demand for senior care support strong valuations, while expensive real estate means the property itself is a major component of value. Because these are health-and-safety-sensitive, licensed businesses, transactions require careful structuring around the license transfer and a smooth operational handoff — planning this early protects both price and continuity of care.

Example: Occupancy and Payer Mix

A facility generates $600,000 in NOI at 95% occupancy with mostly private-pay residents; at a 10% cap rate the operating value is about $6M, plus real estate considerations. Drop occupancy to 72% with a heavier subsidized mix, and NOI falls to $350,000 — and buyers apply a higher cap rate for the turnaround risk, pushing value toward $3.5M or less. Occupancy and payer mix drive both the cash flow and the multiple.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much is an assisted living facility worth?

Assisted living facilities are valued on a combination of operating profit and real estate, typically 4x to 6x EBITDA or a capitalization rate applied to net operating income, plus the property value, and often cross-checked on a price-per-bed basis. Occupancy and payer mix are the biggest drivers of value.

How is a small RCFE valued?

Smaller residential care facilities for the elderly, often six-bed homes, are usually valued on a blend of business value (SDE or EBITDA) and the residential real estate, with a per-bed cross-check. Occupancy, monthly rates, and licensing status heavily influence the figure.

What makes an assisted living facility more valuable?

High, stabilized occupancy with a waitlist, a strong private-pay mix and healthy monthly rates, licensed capacity and the ability to provide higher-acuity care such as memory care, a clean licensing and inspection record, a qualified administrator, stable staff, and well-maintained real estate.

How does RCFE licensing affect a sale in California?

California assisted living communities are licensed as RCFEs by the Department of Social Services, and buyers examine the license, capacity, and inspection history closely. The transaction must be structured around a proper license transfer and a smooth operational handoff, and citations or deficiencies can lower the price or delay closing.

Martin Navarro, Business Broker and M&A Advisor in Los Angeles
Martin Navarro · Business Broker & M&A Advisor

Martin Navarro advises business owners across Los Angeles, Ventura, and Southern California on selling, buying, and valuing privately held companies. A U.S. Marine Corps veteran with dual CSUN degrees in Business Management and Accounting, he brings hands-on transaction experience and a straight-talking, numbers-first approach to every engagement. Bilingual in English and Spanish.

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