Every quarter, we compile transaction data from our active deal flow, third-party M&A research firms, and published industry reports to produce what has become the most widely referenced benchmark dataset in the home care M&A advisory market.
This 2026 benchmark report covers EBITDA multiple ranges by service line, the buyer categories commanding the highest valuations, and the specific factors driving premium outcomes in today’s market.
2026 is the strongest seller’s market in home care M&A history. The confluence of three dynamics — peak PE capital deployment, demographic tailwinds creating irreversible demand, and post-COVID operational consolidation — has pushed EBITDA multiples to cycle highs across all home care subsectors.
Key data points:
Multiple Range: 2.0× – 4.5× EBITDA
Non-medical personal care — homemaker, companion, and personal assistance services — remains the largest volume segment in home care M&A but trades at the lowest multiples due to its Medicaid-heavy payer mix and lower margin profile.
Premium outcomes (3.5–4.5×) are achievable for agencies with:
Multiple Range: 3.5× – 7.0× EBITDA
Medicare home health agencies continue to attract significant PE and strategic buyer interest. Medicare reimbursement is federal, relatively predictable, and highly strategically valuable to health systems and payers building integrated home-based care models. The move to PDGM (Patient-Driven Groupings Model) reimbursement has separated operationally sophisticated agencies from weaker operators, driving a flight to quality in buyer preferences.
Premium outcomes (5.5–7.0×) are achievable for agencies with:
Multiple Range: 5.0× – 9.0× EBITDA
Hospice commands the highest multiples in home care M&A due to its per-diem Medicare reimbursement structure, among the highest EBITDA margins in healthcare (20–35%), and the relative stability of its revenue base. PE and health system interest in hospice has accelerated dramatically — hospice assets representing the most competitive bidding environment in the entire home care sector.
Premium outcomes (7.0–9.0×) are achievable for agencies with:
Multiple Range: 6.0× – 10×+ EBITDA
Multi-service platforms — agencies offering two or more service lines, typically at $3M+ EBITDA — command the highest absolute multiples in the market. Buyers pay a “platform premium” because multi-service agencies represent turnkey geographic market entry, diversified revenue streams, and a built-in management infrastructure.
For PE platforms executing a buy-and-build strategy, acquiring a quality multi-service platform can accelerate their regional consolidation thesis by 2–3 years. This scarcity premium pushes multiples above 8× for the strongest assets.
Understanding the buyer landscape is essential for sellers and their advisors to build the right competitive process.
80+ PE-backed home care platforms are actively acquiring. Key characteristics:
200+ regional home care companies seek geographic expansion. Key characteristics:
Humana, Optum/UnitedHealth, CVS/Aetna, and large health systems are building integrated home-based care platforms. Key characteristics:
Three structural forces explain why 2026 multiples are at cycle highs:
1. PE Capital Deployment Pressure Private equity firms raised a record $1.2T+ in dry powder in 2023–2024. Fund managers with committed capital on 10-year fund timelines face pressure to deploy — and home care represents one of the most attractive healthcare services subsectors for risk-adjusted returns.
2. Demographic Tailwinds By 2030, all 73 million Baby Boomers will be over 65. Adults over 85 — the heaviest users of home care services — will represent 6% of the U.S. population by 2040 (U.S. Census Bureau). This demographic wave is non-cyclical, largely non-discretionary, and creates a 15–20 year structural demand tailwind that buyers are pricing into their acquisition thesis.
3. Supply-Side Consolidation The home care sector is still highly fragmented — 80%+ of agencies have annual revenue below $3M. As operational complexity increases (workforce regulations, technology requirements, payer contracting), independent operators face growing pressure, increasing both the supply of sellers and the strategic premium buyers place on quality assets.
Market cycles are real. Interest rates, PE fund deployment phases, and regulatory shifts all influence home care M&A valuations. The current multiple expansion has been extraordinary — and while structural factors suggest a sustained strong market, the 2024–2026 window of maximum competition and maximum multiples will not persist indefinitely.
Owners who go to market in 2026 — positioned correctly, with the right representation, into a competitive buyer process — are capturing exits they couldn’t have achieved two years ago.
Book a confidential call with Neli Gertner to discuss your timing, your goals, and your options.
Newsletter
Receive new articles, EBITDA benchmark updates, and deal intelligence directly in your inbox. No spam — unsubscribe anytime.
Join 1,200+ home care executives. Unsubscribe anytime.