Catalog / Business / EBITDA Multiple
Business · Tool

EBITDA Multiple

Determine a company's implied value by multiplying EBITDA by an industry-comparable multiple — a standard M&A valuation shortcut.

Enterprise value
$
EBITDA
$
Industry
Company size
Enterprise value$0
EBITDA$0
Industry avg
vs industry
EV/EBITDA multiple
10.0x
PNG · made in your browser, nothing uploaded
Frequently asked questions
What is a good EV/EBITDA multiple?
A good multiple varies by industry and company size. Tech companies typically trade at 15-25x, utilities at 8-12x. Always compare against industry peers and historical averages.
How do you calculate implied enterprise value from EBITDA?
Multiply EBITDA by the EV/EBITDA multiple. For example, $10M EBITDA × 10x = $100M implied enterprise value. This is the standard M&A valuation shortcut.
What does a high EV/EBITDA multiple indicate?
A high multiple suggests growth expectations or market optimism. However, it may also signal overvaluation, so compare against industry peers and historical multiples.
Why do technology companies have higher EV/EBITDA multiples?
Growth-stage tech companies command higher multiples due to expected revenue and margin expansion. Mature industries like utilities have stable, predictable cash flows justifying lower multiples.
Does company size affect EV/EBITDA multiples?
Yes. Larger companies typically trade at 10-30% higher multiples than small caps due to lower risk, better liquidity, and greater financial stability.
Stay in the loop
New tools, in your inbox.

Get an occasional email when we ship new calculators and updates. No spam, unsubscribe anytime.

We respect your privacy. No spam, ever.