Restaurant Business Valuation: What Restaurants Actually Sell For
Restaurants are the highest-risk, most operator-dependent businesses in the SMB acquisition market. They sell for 1.5× to 3.0× SDE — lower multiples than most comparable service businesses — because of thin margins, high failure rates, labor intensity, and the critical dependency on a transferable location lease. The spread within that range is driven almost entirely by lease quality and whether the restaurant has a concept that outlasts the current owner.
Typical Valuation Range
| Multiple | Metric | Business profile |
|---|---|---|
| 1.5× – 2.0× | SDE | Short lease, owner-dependent concept, high turnover, no system |
| 2.0× – 2.5× | SDE | Established location, manager in place, 3+ years lease remaining |
| 2.5× – 3.0× | SDE | Strong brand, long transferable lease, management team, consistent revenue |
The Lease Is the Business
In a restaurant acquisition, the lease is often worth more than everything else combined. A great concept in a bad location, or on a lease with 18 months remaining, is nearly worthless to a buyer who can't be certain of continuity. Before any offer, verify:
- How many years remain on the current lease term plus options
- Whether the lease is transferable (no landlord approval required, or a reasonable approval process)
- The rent-to-revenue ratio (above 10% is a warning sign; above 15% is severe)
- Rent escalation clauses and what they mean for profitability over the lease term
- Whether the landlord knows about the sale and their posture toward a new tenant
What Drives the Multiple Up
- Long, transferable lease: 5+ years remaining plus options with favorable rent
- Manager-run operations: The restaurant functions when the owner is absent
- Catering or wholesale revenue: B2B revenue streams that don't depend on foot traffic
- Franchise: Established brand with corporate support (though franchises trade differently — see franchise-specific valuation rules)
- Strong online presence: 4.5+ stars, active delivery platforms, loyal review base
What Drives the Multiple Down
- Lease less than 3 years remaining with uncertain renewal
- Owner cooks, manages, and is the face of the restaurant
- Revenue heavily dependent on a specific chef whose departure would change the product
- Equipment in poor condition (commercial kitchen equipment is expensive to replace)
- Recent revenue decline or pandemic-era revenue that inflated a single year
Financing Restaurant Acquisitions
SBA loans are available for restaurant acquisitions but lenders are cautious — restaurants have one of the highest failure rates of any small business category. SBA lenders will scrutinize three years of tax returns, want to see stable or growing revenue, and may require more equity injection (15–20% rather than 10%) depending on the deal. Seller financing is common, which helps close the gap when SBA alone won't cover the purchase price.
Example: Valuing a Restaurant
A neighborhood bistro with $155,000 SDE, 7 years remaining on a favorable lease at 8% rent-to-revenue, a general manager in place, and consistent revenue over three years would likely trade at 2.25×–2.75× — a price of $349K–$426K. The lease and GM together justify pricing above the floor.
Related
- Retail — similar lease dependency issues
- Gym / fitness — similar high-labor, location-driven model
- All industry multiples