Why Recurring Revenue Is the Single Fastest Way to Raise Your Multiple

By Ryan Williams March 31, 2026 8 min read

Two businesses. Same industry. Same revenue. Same EBITDA. One sells at 3.5x. The other sells at 5.5x. The difference, almost every time, is recurring revenue. Buyers don't pay a premium for recurring revenue because it makes the numbers look better — they pay it because recurring revenue fundamentally reduces the risk of the acquisition. Understanding that logic tells you exactly how to use it.


Why buyers pay more for predictable revenue

When a buyer writes you a check at closing, they're making a bet about the future: that the revenue will continue, that the margins will hold, and that they'll earn a return on their investment over time. Every piece of evidence that supports that bet is worth money.

Recurring revenue is the most compelling evidence that future revenue is real. A business where 60% of next year's revenue is already contracted — service agreements signed, renewals confirmed, route customers on autopay — is not a guess. It's a known quantity. Buyers price that certainty.

Project-based revenue, by contrast, has to be re-won continuously. Even if a project business has excellent customer relationships and strong historical repeat rates, there is no contract guaranteeing that revenue in the buyer's hands. The same customers who stayed for you may behave differently with a new owner. That uncertainty costs money.


The multiple premium by the numbers

Across service industries, the premium for high recurring revenue content is consistently observed in comparable transactions. Some examples from the market:

The pattern is consistent: the higher the percentage of contracted, recurring revenue, the higher the multiple — across industries, deal sizes, and market conditions.


What counts as recurring revenue

Not all recurring revenue is equal. Buyers think about it on a spectrum:

When thinking about how to improve your recurring revenue percentage, the priority is moving revenue up this spectrum — from habitual to contracted, from project to habitual, from one-time to annual agreement.


How to convert project revenue to recurring before going to market

For most service businesses, the path to more recurring revenue runs through existing customers — not new ones.

Step 1: Identify your highest-retention customers

Start with customers who've been with you 3+ years and spend consistently. These are the relationships most likely to accept a formal service agreement because the relationship is already there — you're just adding a contract to something that's already recurring in practice.

Step 2: Build a simple service agreement

A recurring service agreement doesn't have to be complex. A one-page document specifying the scope of service, annual fee, and auto-renewal terms is sufficient for most small business relationships. The goal is to move the revenue from implicit to contractual — not to create a legal weapon.

Step 3: Price the agreement to make it easy to say yes

Customers accept service agreements most readily when there's a clear value proposition: priority scheduling, locked-in pricing, a discount versus time-and-materials rates, or included annual service calls. The annual agreement should feel like a benefit to the customer, not a commitment you're extracting.

Step 4: Track renewal rates

Buyers will ask about your service agreement renewal rate. A business with 85% annual renewal rates on service contracts is compelling; one that doesn't track this metric can't make the claim credibly. Start tracking it now, even if the number is modest — the trend over 12–18 months tells a story.


The compound effect of recurring revenue on enterprise value

The math on this is worth running explicitly. Consider a commercial landscaping business with $800K in EBITDA:

Current state: 20% recurring (maintenance contracts), 80% project/installation
Market multiple: 3.5x
Estimated value: $2,800,000
After conversion: 55% recurring (maintenance contracts), 45% project/installation
Market multiple: 4.5x (higher due to improved revenue quality)
EBITDA: $820K (slightly higher from maintenance pricing)
Estimated value: $3,690,000

A $890,000 increase in enterprise value from converting roughly a third of project revenue to maintenance contracts. The EBITDA barely moved. The multiple — driven by the change in revenue quality — did most of the work.


The time investment is front-loaded

Converting project revenue to recurring requires effort — sales conversations, contract drafting, customer communication, and operational changes to deliver on recurring service commitments. That investment happens once. The valuation premium compounds every year you hold the business afterward.

If you're planning to sell in 2–3 years, building recurring revenue now means you'll have 24–36 months of renewal history to demonstrate — not just a contract book assembled six months before going to market. Buyers can tell the difference.

Find out what your recurring revenue mix is worth today

The valuation quiz asks specifically about your recurring revenue percentage and factors it into your estimated multiple range.

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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