Retail Business Valuation: What Brick-and-Mortar Stores Sell For and Why
Brick-and-mortar retail businesses sell at 1.5× to 2.5× SDE — some of the lowest multiples in the SMB acquisition market. The compression reflects structural headwinds: e-commerce competition, rising commercial rents, the need to carry inventory capital, and low barriers to entry. Despite the discount, retail acquisitions can make sense for buyers with operational expertise, a specific vision for the concept, or access to the right location.
Typical Valuation Range
| Multiple | Metric | Business profile |
|---|---|---|
| 1.5× – 2.0× | SDE | Commodity product, short lease, fully owner-dependent, declining revenue |
| 2.0× – 2.25× | SDE | Established location, growing or stable revenue, basic staff infrastructure |
| 2.25× – 2.5× | SDE | Differentiated niche, loyal customer base, strong e-commerce component, long lease |
Why Retail Multiples Are Low
The market prices in several structural risks that don't exist in service businesses:
- Amazon and e-commerce competition on commodity products is permanent, not cyclical
- Inventory capital requirement — buyers must fund working capital to stock shelves, which is real capital at risk
- Lease expiration risk — landlords can restructure rent at lease renewal in a way that eliminates current-owner margins
- Consumer preference shifts — retail concept relevance can erode faster than most service businesses
- High fixed cost base — rent and staffing continue even during slow periods
What Drives the Multiple Up
- Differentiation: A specialty niche (curated gifts, specialty food, local art) that Amazon can't replicate commands a premium over commodity retail
- E-commerce revenue: A retail store that also has a growing online channel is less location-dependent and more defensible
- Long favorable lease: 5+ years remaining at below-market rent with renewal options
- Loyal repeat customer base: Documented customer retention through loyalty programs or subscription
- B2B component: Corporate gifting, wholesale accounts, or institutional customers that don't depend on foot traffic
Inventory Valuation at Closing
Retail acquisitions typically include a separate inventory purchase at cost. The purchase agreement states the SDE-based business price plus inventory at a defined value (often net book value or a negotiated percentage). This is one of the most negotiated items in retail deals — buyers want to pay wholesale cost for saleable inventory only; sellers want full credit for everything on the shelves. Conduct a physical count before closing and exclude slow-moving or damaged stock.
Example: Valuing a Specialty Retail Store
A specialty kitchen goods store with $120,000 SDE, a differentiated local brand, active e-commerce representing 25% of revenue, and a 4-year remaining lease at market rent would likely trade at 2.0×–2.25× — a price of $240K–$270K, plus inventory at cost (say $65K), for a total acquisition cost of approximately $305K–$335K.
Related
- E-commerce — online retail commands significantly higher multiples
- Restaurant — similar location-dependency and lease risk
- All industry multiples