How to Sell a Pest Control Business — The Recurring Revenue Play That Commands a Premium

By Ryan Williams March 31, 2026 8 min read

How to Sell a Pest Control Business — The Recurring Revenue Play That Commands a Premium

Pest control is the recurring revenue model of service businesses — and the M&A market treats it that way. Route-based pest control businesses with high renewal rates and commercial client density consistently achieve the highest multiples in the grounds services sector. If you own a pest control business and are thinking about an exit, you're probably sitting on more value than you realize.


Pest control valuation ranges

Pest control businesses trade at 4x–8x Adjusted EBITDA — one of the widest and highest ranges in service M&A:

For context, 8x EBITDA in pest control compares favorably to many technology businesses — because the recurring revenue quality and retention dynamics in route-based pest control rival SaaS businesses in predictability.


Why pest control commands premium multiples

Route economics

A pest control route is a geographic cluster of customers receiving regular service — typically monthly, bi-monthly, or quarterly. Routes are highly efficient: the same technician serves the same customers in a defined area, reducing drive time and increasing service density. Buyers understand and value route economics intuitively.

High retention rates

Pest control customers — especially commercial accounts — churn at very low rates. Once a commercial account (restaurant, warehouse, office building) establishes a pest control program, they rarely cancel. This produces retention rates that buyers find compelling: 85–90% annual retention in commercial pest control is not unusual for well-run businesses.

The commercial premium

Commercial pest control — food service, healthcare, property management, institutional accounts — commands higher multiples than residential for the same reasons it does in HVAC and landscaping: commercial clients sign contracts, renew consistently, and generate higher average revenue per account.


What pest control buyers scrutinize


Preparing for a pest control exit

  1. Convert one-time customers to recurring agreements. Any customer receiving episodic treatments is a conversion opportunity. Annual pest management programs with quarterly service visits are easy to pitch on value (consistent protection, priority scheduling, locked pricing).
  2. Develop commercial accounts systematically. Restaurants, warehouses, hotels, office buildings, healthcare facilities — these are the highest-value recurring accounts in pest control. Even adding 10–15 commercial accounts in the year before sale can meaningfully shift your commercial percentage.
  3. Track your retention rate formally. Buyers will ask. Being able to say "our 12-month commercial retention is 87% over the last 3 years" is a compelling data point. Not being able to answer is a credibility gap.
  4. Ensure technician licensing is employee-level, not owner-only. If you're the only licensed applicator in the business, that's an operational dependency buyers will price into the deal. Sponsor licensing for your lead technicians.

Find out what your pest control business is worth

Get an estimated value range that accounts for your recurring revenue percentage and current market multiples in pest control.

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Ryan Williams

Ryan Williams

Founder, bzwrth

Ryan helps owners of $1M–$50M service businesses understand what their company is worth and prepare for a successful exit. Learn more

Last updated April 2026