How Distribution (General) Businesses Are Valued

Distribution businesses are valued on Seller's Discretionary Earnings (SDE) or EBITDA. The valuation depends on customer concentration, vendor exclusivity, and gross margins. Distributors with exclusive territory rights, value-add services, and diversified customer bases command premium multiples. The key question buyers ask: how defensible is this revenue, and would customers easily switch to a competitor?

SDE = Net Profit + Owner’s Salary + Owner Benefits + Discretionary Expenses

They then multiply your SDE by an industry-specific multiple derived from comparable transactions. For Distribution (General) businesses, that multiple currently ranges from 2.5x to 4.5x.

Quick Example

A Distribution (General) business with $300K in SDE at a 3.5x multiple would have an estimated value of $1.05M. At the full range of 2.5x–4.5x, the estimated value is $750K–$1.35M.

Current Distribution (General) Multiples

These ranges reflect recent transaction data for general distribution businesses. Companies with exclusive vendor agreements and diversified customer bases consistently trade at the upper end.

Revenue Range Typical SDE Multiple What This Means
Under $1M 2.0x – 2.8x Small distributor, limited accounts
$1M – $3M 2.5x – 3.5x Established accounts, vendor relationships
$3M – $10M 3.0x – 4.5x Exclusive agreements, management team
$10M+ 4x–7x EBITDA Regional or national platforms

Want to understand how these multiples work and what EBITDA vs. SDE means for your business? Read our full guide: How Service Businesses Are Valued.

What Drives Your Number Up (or Down)

Two Distribution (General) businesses with the same revenue can be worth very different amounts. Here are the factors that separate high-multiple from low-multiple businesses:

Drives Multiple Up

Drives Multiple Down

If you’re not sure where you stand on these factors, our Exit Readiness Assessment scores you across all of them in about 3 minutes.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the average distribution business worth?

Distribution businesses typically sell for 2.5x to 4.5x their Seller's Discretionary Earnings (SDE). For a business with $300K in SDE, that translates to an estimated value of $750K to $1.35M. Companies with exclusive vendor agreements and diversified customer bases trade at the higher end.

What SDE multiples do distributors trade at?

Based on recent transaction data, distribution businesses trade at SDE multiples of 2.5x to 4.5x. The defensibility of revenue — exclusive agreements, switching costs, value-add services — is the primary valuation driver.

How can I increase the value of my distribution business before selling?

Secure exclusive territory or vendor agreements, add value-add services that justify pricing, diversify your customer base, build a sales team so relationships extend beyond you, and develop e-commerce capabilities for efficient ordering.

Get Your Free Distribution (General) Valuation Estimate

Our free valuation tool uses real Distribution (General) SDE multiples and adjusts for your specific value drivers. It takes about 3 minutes.

What’s Your Distribution (General) Business Worth?

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Planning your exit? Read our 12-Month Exit Timeline for a step-by-step preparation guide.

Related Industry Valuations

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