How Buyers Value Mechanical, Electrical and Plumbing Engineering Businesses
By Published On: February 6, 2026

How Buyers Value Mechanical, Electrical and Plumbing Engineering Businesses

Business owners often ask, “What is my company worth?”
The more important question is: “How would a buyer actually value my business?”

For owners of mechanical, electrical, and plumbing (MEP) engineering and specialty contracting firms, valuation is rarely as simple as applying a multiple to last year’s earnings. Buyers—whether private equity groups or strategic acquirers—look at a combination of financial performance, risk profile, and future scalability.

Here’s how valuation is really determined.

EBITDA Is the Starting Point – NOT the Answer

Most buyers anchor valuation to EBITDA, but reported EBITDA is almost never the final number used in a transaction.

Buyers will normalize earnings by adjusting for:

  • Owner compensation above or below market
  • One-time or non-recurring expenses
  • Personal expenses run through the business
  • Temporary margin compression or expansion

For many MEP firms, this “adjusted EBITDA” can differ meaningfully from what shows up on tax returns.  Additional elements will factor into their valuation like backlog, recurring revenue vs. project based work, owner dependence and customer concentration.

Backlog Quality Matters as Much as Backlog Size

Backlog provides visibility, but buyers focus on quality, not just dollars.

They look closely at:

  • Margin consistency across backlog
  • Change order discipline
  • Customer concentration within backlog
  • Historical margin fade on completed projects

A $50 million backlog with unpredictable margins may be valued less favorably than a smaller, well-controlled backlog with consistent execution.

Recurring Revenue Commands a Premium

Service, maintenance, inspection, and recurring repair revenue typically receive higher valuation multiples than pure project-based work.

Why?

  • Predictability
  • Lower cyclicality
  • Reduced reliance on bidding environments

Even a modest percentage of recurring revenue can materially improve how buyers underwrite risk.

Owner Dependence Can Reduce Value

If the owner is the primary estimator, relationship holder, or project problem-solver, buyers will factor in transition risk.

Firms with:

  • Delegated project management
  • Independent estimating functions
  • Customer relationships spread across the organization are generally viewed as lower risk and more scalable.

Valuation is Ultimately About Risk and Repeatability

Two firms with identical revenue and EBITDA can trade at very different multiples depending on:

  • Financial reporting quality
  • Management depth
  • Customer diversification
  • Labor stability

Understanding these factors early gives owners time to influence outcomes—which need to be addressed years before you go to market.  Working with M&A advisors that understand the buyers in the market is imperative for a successful outcome.  Contact Anna White at FOCUS Investment Banking to discuss your future exit plans and how we can help prepare you for the buying market.

Anna Brumby White, a FOCUS Managing Director, has over 25 years of experience as an influential business leader working with Fortune 500 companies and small businesses on multiple continents. Mrs. White has broad industry experience in mergers and acquisitions, business development, and transaction execution. Prior to joining FOCUS, Mrs. White served as a Principal at Walden Businesses, where she participated and closed on middle market sell-side and buy-side engagements in the businesses services, manufacturing, retail, e-commerce, and food and beverage industries. Mrs. White has consulted with hundreds of small businesses and secured over $30 million in funding while working for the University of Georgia’s Small Business Development Center. For 10 years, Mrs. White worked for TSYS, the largest credit processing company in the world, on global expansion strategies including business development, mergers and acquisitions, company integrations, and lead origination. During her tenure working for TSYS in Europe and the U.S., she led a high growth sales team to secure millions of dollars in new business in domestic and international markets to expand the company’s prepaid and loyalty footprint with large global banking institutions and businesses including Bank of America, Wells Fargo, Santander, HSBC, Mercedes-Benz, and Harley-Davidson. While serving as president and CEO of The Brumby Chair Company, Mrs. White secured strategic business alliances, positioned an experienced management team, streamlined operations, and developed an e-commerce platform launching the family-owned company into a new era of prosperity. While maintaining ownership of The Brumby Chair Company, Mrs. White is recognized as a trusted business strategist. She has been a frequent public speaker at international conferences, universities, and professional business organizations. As an ongoing advocate for small business owners, Mrs. White is a frequent guest on Fox Business News, 11-Alive, and WSB Atlanta. She holds a dual Bachelor of Science degree in both Political Science and Accounting from Presbyterian College and an MBA in Marketing from the University of Georgia’s Terry College of Business. In addition, she attended the Certified Mergers & Acquisitions Professional Program at the Coles College of Business’s Executive Education Program at Kennesaw State University.