Add-Backs, Defined
Add-backs are expenses added back to a business's net profit to calculate its true earning power, its SDE or Adjusted EBITDA. They exist because a business's reported profit often understates what it really earns for an owner, thanks to owner compensation, personal expenses, non-cash charges, and one-time costs. Legitimate add-backs reveal real value; aggressive or bogus ones inflate the price and collapse in due diligence.
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Common Legitimate Add-Backs
- Owner's compensation — salary, payroll taxes, and benefits (for SDE)
- Owner's personal expenses run through the business — personal vehicle, travel, phone, meals
- Non-cash charges — depreciation and amortization
- Interest — specific to the current owner's financing
- One-time / non-recurring costs — a lawsuit settlement, a one-time move, a discontinued project
- Above-market expenses that won't continue — e.g., a family member paid above market
Legitimate vs. Aggressive Add-Backs
The line matters enormously. A legitimate add-back is a cost that genuinely won't transfer to the buyer or isn't a true operating expense — the owner's salary, a one-time legal bill, personal expenses. An aggressive or improper add-back tries to remove real, ongoing operating costs to pump up earnings — adding back necessary staff, recurring "one-time" expenses that recur every year, or expenses with no documentation. Buyers and their accountants catch these, and they destroy trust.
How Add-Backs Affect Value
Because value is a multiple of earnings, every dollar of legitimate add-back is multiplied. At a 3x multiple, a $50,000 add-back adds $150,000 to the sale price. That's why proper add-backs are so valuable — and why buyers examine each one. Overlooking legitimate add-backs leaves money on the table; inflating them with improper ones blows up the deal. Accuracy is everything.
Documenting Add-Backs
Every add-back should be documented and defensible. In due diligence, the buyer's accountant will ask you to prove each one — a personal expense shown on the books, a one-time cost with an invoice, an owner salary on payroll records. Well-supported add-backs sail through; unsupported ones get stripped out, lowering the value. Preparing a clean, documented add-back schedule is a core part of preparing to sell. See also normalizing financial statements.
Frequently Asked Questions
What are add-backs in a business sale?
Add-backs are expenses added back to a business's net profit to calculate its true earning power (SDE or Adjusted EBITDA). Common ones include the owner's compensation, personal expenses run through the business, non-cash charges like depreciation, interest, and one-time or non-recurring costs. They exist because reported profit often understates what a business really earns.
What is the difference between legitimate and aggressive add-backs?
A legitimate add-back removes a cost that genuinely won't transfer to the buyer or isn't a true operating expense, like the owner's salary, a one-time legal bill, or personal expenses. An aggressive or improper add-back tries to remove real, ongoing operating costs to inflate earnings, such as necessary staff or recurring expenses labeled one-time. Buyers catch improper add-backs in due diligence.
How do add-backs affect a business's value?
Because value is a multiple of earnings, every dollar of legitimate add-back is multiplied. At a 3x multiple, a $50,000 add-back adds $150,000 to the sale price. Proper add-backs meaningfully increase value, while missing legitimate ones leaves money on the table and improper ones collapse the deal in diligence.
Do I need to document add-backs?
Yes. Every add-back should be documented and defensible, because the buyer's accountant will ask you to prove each one in due diligence, a personal expense on the books, a one-time cost with an invoice, an owner salary on payroll records. Well-supported add-backs hold up; unsupported ones get stripped out, lowering the value.
Are You Capturing Every Add-Back?
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