Hendon Partners
Valuation Insights

How to Value a Home Care Agency: The Complete Formula

Neli Gertner
#valuation#EBITDA#multiples#formula#home-care

If you ask a group of home care agency owners how their business would be valued, most would give you one of three answers: they have no idea, someone told them “a multiple of revenue,” or they’ve heard a specific number from another agency owner in their network.

None of these answers are reliable.

Home care agency valuation is a specific methodology — and understanding it is the most important financial education a home care owner can have before beginning a sale process. This guide explains exactly how buyers value home care agencies, with worked numerical examples, and what factors push your value up or down.


The Core Valuation Framework: Enterprise Value = Adjusted EBITDA × Multiple

The standard valuation methodology for private home care agencies is the EBITDA multiple method.

Enterprise Value = Adjusted EBITDA × Enterprise Value Multiple

The purchase price you receive — called “equity value” — is then calculated as:

Equity Value = Enterprise Value – Debt + Cash

(assuming you take out excess cash above a normalized working capital amount before closing)

Every home care agency transaction you will read about or discuss with a buyer will be anchored to this framework. Every other consideration — revenue, growth rate, geography, compliance history — ultimately flows into one of these two variables: either it adjusts the EBITDA figure or it adjusts the multiple applied to it.


Step 1: Calculate Your Adjusted EBITDA

EBITDA stands for Earnings Before Interest, Taxes, Depreciation, and Amortization. It is a proxy for operating cash flow from the business, stripping out the effects of your financing decisions (interest), tax structure (taxes), and non-cash accounting charges (D&A).

Raw EBITDA calculation:

Net Income
+ Interest Expense
+ Income Taxes
+ Depreciation
+ Amortization
= EBITDA

However, raw EBITDA is only the starting point. Buyers calculate Adjusted EBITDA (also called “normalized EBITDA”) to reflect what the business would earn under a typical owner.

Common EBITDA add-backs (items subtracted back to increase EBITDA):

  • Excess owner compensation: The difference between what you pay yourself and what a market-rate CEO/Administrator would cost
  • Owner personal expenses: Personal vehicle, personal insurance, family member salaries with no business function, personal travel
  • One-time items: Non-recurring legal fees, one-time consulting engagements, transition costs
  • Related party transactions: Above-market management fees to a related entity, non-market rent paid to or from an owner-related landlord

Worked Example:

ItemAmount
Net Income$320,000
+ Interest$18,000
+ Taxes$72,000
+ Depreciation$24,000
EBITDA$434,000
+ Excess Owner Comp ($300K salary → $180K market replacement)+$120,000
+ Personal Vehicle+$18,000
+ Non-Recurring Legal Fees+$45,000
Adjusted EBITDA$617,000

This agency’s reported net income was $320,000. The adjusted EBITDA presented to buyers is $617,000 — almost double.


Step 2: Determine the Applicable Multiple

The EBITDA multiple represents how many years of earnings a buyer is willing to pay for your business. A 5× multiple means the buyer is paying 5 years of normalized earnings assuming no change in performance.

Multiples are NOT fixed. They vary based on:

EBITDA Size (The Scale Premium)

This is the most powerful driver of multiple differences in home care.

Adjusted EBITDATypical Multiple Range
Under $300K2.5× – 3.5×
$300K – $750K3.5× – 4.5×
$750K – $1.5M4.5× – 5.5×
$1.5M – $3M5.0× – 6.5×
$3M – $5M5.5× – 7.5×
$5M+6.5× – 9.0×+

Why does size matter so much? Because larger businesses represent less risk — they have deeper management teams, more diversified referral sources, more stable revenue streams, and more attractive platforms for buyer expansion strategies.

A home care agency doing $5M in EBITDA is not just doing more of what a $500K EBITDA agency does — it has typically built systems, management, and client relationships that make it fundamentally less risky.

Service Type and Payer Mix

Service TypeTypical Multiple Premium/Discount
Medicare-Certified Skilled Home Health+0.5× to +1.5× above private pay
Medicaid Non-Skilled (HCBS waiver)+0.0× to +1.0× (state-dependent)
Private Pay Non-SkilledBase range
Private Duty Nursing+0.5× to +1.5× above private pay
Hospice+1.0× to +2.5× above private pay
Behavioral Health (HCBS)Varies widely

Medicare and Medicare Advantage revenue, clinical complexity, and established managed care contracts typically support higher multiples. Pure private pay businesses have lower multiples because they lack the contract stability of government and managed care payors.

Growth Rate

A business growing at 20%+ annually will command a premium to a flat or declining one. Buyers are purchasing future earnings, not just trailing earnings — a high-growth agency with $1M in current EBITDA may be worth more than a flat agency at $1.5M EBITDA if the buyer believes the growth trajectory continues.

Growth is typically most impactful through:

  • Revenue growth over the trailing 12 months vs. prior year
  • EBITDA margin expansion (growing without adding proportional costs)
  • Demonstrated forward pipeline (signed contracts, new referral relationships, geographic expansion underway)

Management Team Depth

If the business would decline meaningfully without you, buyers price that dependency risk into the multiple. Conversely, if you have a management team that can run the business independently:

  • Full-time administrator or Director of Operations who manages day-to-day
  • Established clinical management (DON, care coordinator)
  • Sales or business development staff managing referral relationships
  • Billing and compliance staff with institutional knowledge

…then the business is valued as an institutional asset rather than an owner-operated practice — and commands a significantly higher multiple.

Geography and Market Position

Strong geographic positions in growing markets command premiums:

  • Low caregiver competition in your territory
  • Established hospital, SNF, or physician referral networks
  • First-mover or dominant market position in a specific county or metro area

Step 3: Apply the Formula

Using our example from Step 1:

Adjusted EBITDA: $617,000

This agency has a solid management team, consistent Medicare and private pay mix, and has grown 15% annually for the past 2 years. Based on comparable transactions, the applicable multiple range is 4.5× to 5.0×.

Enterprise Value:

  • Low: $617,000 × 4.5 = $2.78M
  • Mid: $617,000 × 4.75 = $2.93M
  • High: $617,000 × 5.0 = $3.09M

After subtracting $150,000 in outstanding business debt and adding $80,000 in normalized cash remaining in the business:

Equity Value Range: $2.71M – $3.02M

The owner would receive somewhere between $2.7M and $3.0M at closing, before transaction costs, taxes, and any escrow holdbacks.


Trailing Twelve Months (TTM) vs. Fiscal Year EBITDA

Buyers typically calculate Adjusted EBITDA on a trailing twelve months (TTM) basis — the most recent 12 calendar months — rather than the last completed fiscal year. This gives them the most current picture of business performance.

If your business has grown significantly, TTM will be higher than your last full fiscal year, which benefits you. If there has been recent softness, TTM will reflect that negatively.

For businesses with seasonal patterns (common in private pay home care, which often slows in winter months), buyers may also request a 3-year weighted average or apply a growth adjustment.


The Working Capital Peg

Buyers don’t just evaluate EBITDA — they also set a normalized working capital target. Working capital = current assets minus current liabilities (typically accounts receivable, prepaid expenses, and accrued liabilities).

At close, the actual working capital is compared to the target. If working capital delivered is below target, the purchase price is adjusted down. If above, the excess comes to you as a bonus.

Why this matters: Some sellers believe they can maximize cash out of the business in the 6–12 months before close (by accelerating collections and delaying payables), then pocket the proceeds. In a properly structured transaction, the working capital peg prevents this from increasing your net proceeds — the low working capital at close is simply subtracted from the equity value.


Common Valuation Mistakes Sellers Make

Mistake 1: Using revenue multiples instead of EBITDA multiples

“3× revenue” is sometimes cited in casual discussions, but it is not how sophisticated buyers value home care businesses. Revenue multiples are imprecise proxies that break down completely when comparing agencies with different margin profiles. EBITDA multiples are the standard.

Mistake 2: Using the highest comparable without accounting for your business’s characteristics

“I heard that agency sold for 7×” is common. But did that agency have $5M in EBITDA, a Medicare-skilled platform in a CON state, and a full management team? If your business has $400K in EBITDA and a single-owner-operator model, 7× does not apply.

Mistake 3: Neglecting EBITDA normalization

If you haven’t built a proper add-back schedule, you are leaving money on the table. The add-back analysis should be completed — with documentation — before you begin the sale process.

Mistake 4: Not understanding the enterprise vs. equity value distinction

Sellers often quote enterprise value and forget to subtract outstanding debt. If your business is valued at $3M enterprise value but you have $500K in bank debt and equipment loans, your net proceeds are $2.5M — before transaction costs.


Increasing Your Valuation Before You Sell

High-impact levers to increase value in the 12–24 months before a sale:

  1. Grow EBITDA — Every $100K increase in Adjusted EBITDA adds $450K–$650K+ in enterprise value at typical multiples
  2. Build management depth — Reduce owner dependency, add or develop a strong #2
  3. Clean up compliance — Resolve any open compliance issues, documentation concerns, or regulatory items
  4. Diversify referral sources — Reduce concentration in any single referral source below 25%
  5. Document processes — Standard operating procedures, training materials, and operational playbooks increase buyer confidence
  6. Reduce customer concentration — In private pay especially, no single client should represent >5–10% of revenue

Getting a Professional Valuation

Before beginning a formal sale process, it is worth getting a professional opinion of value. This is different from a formal certified business appraisal (which is primarily used for legal or tax purposes) — it is an informed market valuation based on current transaction comparables.

At Hendon Partners, we provide confidential preliminary valuations for home care agency owners who are considering a future sale. This process typically takes 1–2 weeks and requires your prior 2–3 years of financial statements.

Request a confidential preliminary valuation →


Hendon Partners is a specialized M&A advisory firm for home care agencies. Our advisors have deep experience with home care agency valuation, financial normalization, and transaction structuring across all payer types and service categories.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the formula to value a home care agency?
Enterprise Value = Adjusted EBITDA x Multiple. Adjusted EBITDA normalizes earnings by adding back owner-specific expenses. Multiples range from 3.5x for smaller agencies to 8x or more for premium platforms.
What is adjusted EBITDA in a home care agency sale?
Adjusted EBITDA normalizes the business's earnings to reflect true operating profit under a new owner. It adds back above-market owner compensation, personal expenses, and non-recurring items.
What is the difference between enterprise value and equity value in a home care sale?
Enterprise value is the total business value. Equity value (what you receive) equals enterprise value minus outstanding debt plus excess cash. A $4M business with $500K in debt yields $3.5M before taxes.
Can I use revenue instead of EBITDA to value my home care agency?
Revenue multiples are sometimes used for very early-stage businesses, but institutional buyers almost universally use EBITDA-based valuation. Revenue multiples typically undervalue profitable agencies.

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