HVAC Business Valuation: What HVAC Companies Sell For
HVAC businesses are among the most attractive in the home services sector — essential, recurring, and increasingly in demand as aging residential and commercial systems require replacement. The typical HVAC company sells for 2.5× to 4.5× SDE, with the spread driven primarily by the mix of maintenance contract revenue vs. one-time installation work.
Typical Valuation Range
| Multiple | Metric | Business profile |
|---|---|---|
| 2.5× – 3.0× | SDE | Install-heavy, low recurring revenue, strong owner dependency |
| 3.0× – 3.75× | SDE | Mix of service and install, some maintenance contracts, stable team |
| 3.75× – 4.5× | SDE | Strong maintenance contract base, documented processes, multiple technicians |
What Drives the Multiple Up
- Maintenance/service agreements (MSAs): Recurring annual contracts for filter changes, tune-ups, and priority service are the single biggest value driver. A book of 300+ MSAs at $150–$300/year is defensible, transferable revenue that commands a premium multiple.
- Multiple licensed technicians: A business where two or three NATE-certified technicians can operate without the owner present has much lower key man risk than one where the owner is the only licensed tech.
- Commercial contracts: Long-term commercial maintenance agreements (with apartment complexes, office buildings, or property managers) provide consistent work and are contract-backed.
- Established brand and reviews: 4.5+ star Google rating with 100+ reviews, years of neighborhood presence, and name recognition reduce customer acquisition cost for the buyer.
- Fleet and equipment: Well-maintained vehicles and tools (not due for replacement) reduce the capital the buyer needs to inject post-close.
What Drives the Multiple Down
- Owner is the only licensed technician — regulatory and operational key man risk
- Revenue is purely project-based with no recurring contracts
- Aging fleet requiring near-term replacement
- Significant seasonality without commercial accounts to balance residential swings
- Single-geography operation in a highly competitive market with low barriers to entry
Deal Structure Considerations
SBA 7(a) loans are commonly used for HVAC acquisitions. Equipment (vans, tools) provides collateral. Lenders focus on trailing 12-month SDE and whether the business can service debt without the current owner. Seller transition periods of 6–12 months are typical, helping the buyer inherit technician relationships and key commercial accounts.
If the owner holds the contractor's license, the buyer must either obtain one or hire a licensed replacement before or at closing — this is a timing risk that should be addressed in the purchase agreement.
Example: Valuing an HVAC Business
An HVAC company with $280,000 SDE, 220 active maintenance agreements, 3 technicians, and a reliable commercial account representing 25% of revenue would likely trade in the 3.5×–4.0× range — a purchase price of $980K–$1.12M. Model the financing in the AcquireCalc calculator to confirm DSCR at various price points.
Related
- Plumbing — similar structure, slightly lower multiples
- Cleaning service — recurring contract comparison
- All industry multiples
Sources & Further Reading
- IBBA Market Pulse — quarterly transaction data by industry
- BizBuySell Insight Report — home services transaction data