When buyers evaluate a home care agency, they care deeply about two numbers: EBITDA and payer mix. Of those two, payer mix is often the more important multiplier — because it tells buyers not just what you earned last year, but how stable, predictable, and defensible that income is.
Two home care agencies with identical revenue and identical EBITDA margins can trade at EBITDA multiples that differ by 2–4×. The primary reason, in most cases, is payer mix.
This guide explains exactly how each payer source is viewed by buyers, quantifies the valuation impact, and identifies what steps owners can take to improve their payer mix before going to market.
Why buyers love Medicare: Medicare home health and hospice reimburses under federally-set rates that are uniform, predictable, and not subject to state budget negotiations. Rates are established years in advance through the prospective payment system (PDGM for home health, per diem hospice rates). There is no state-by-state rate risk.
Additionally, Medicare home health has strong demand demographics — the population Medicare serves (65+) is the fastest-growing demographic in America, and the preference for home-based care over institutional settings is well-established.
How buyers model Medicare revenue: Medicare revenue is generally accepted at face value in QoE and financial analysis. Denials and ADR requests represent risk, but well-run agencies with clean documentation typically show consistent collection rates above 95%.
Valuation impact: Medicare-certified home health and hospice agencies command the highest multiples among home-based care service lines.
What it is: Medicare Advantage plans are private insurance plans that contract with CMS to provide Medicare-covered services. They are the fastest-growing segment of Medicare, now covering approximately 55% of all Medicare beneficiaries.
Why buyers are cautious:
Valuation impact: High MA exposure (>40% of Medicare revenue from MA plans) is generally viewed as a negative factor. Agencies dependent on MA are valued similarly to commercial insurance-dependent agencies — with a discount to pure traditional Medicare.
What it is: Clients who pay directly for services — typically personal care or companion services for affluent seniors — without government or insurance involvement.
Why buyers like it:
Private pay revenue is not exposed to any government program risk. In commercial real estate terms, it is the closest thing to “guaranteed” revenue in home care.
Valuation impact: High private pay concentration is a positive valuation signal, but buyers will assess sustainability — particularly whether the rates are genuine market rates (vs. artificially inflated one-time billings) and whether client relationships are transferable.
What it is: Commercial health insurance plans (employer-sponsored, ACA marketplace) and long-term care insurance policies covering home care services.
Why buyers assess carefully:
Valuation impact: Commercial insurance is viewed positively relative to Medicaid but discounted relative to Medicare. Revenue cycle quality (denial rates, DSO) matters significantly for commercial payers.
What it is: State-administered Medicaid programs fund the majority of non-skilled personal care, IDD services, and pediatric home nursing for lower-income populations.
Why buyers are cautious: Rate risk: Medicaid rates are set by each state legislature and state Medicaid agency. Rates can be reduced (often without notice) when state budgets are under pressure. Historically, Medicaid rate cuts during economic downturns have materially impaired agency financial performance.
Administrative complexity: Medicaid prior authorization, billing requirements, and audit exposure vary dramatically by state and wavier program. Agencies without strong billing infrastructure face higher denial rates and slower payment.
Waiver program stability: Many Medicaid home care programs operate through HCBS waivers with enrollment caps and waiting lists. Policy changes at the state level can alter program structures.
Geographic variation: Medicaid rates in Colorado may be three times those in Mississippi. A Medicaid-dominant agency in a high-rate state is valued very differently from one in a low-rate state.
Valuation impact: Medicaid-only agencies receive meaningfully lower EBITDA multiples than Medicare or private pay agencies. The discount reflects the rate uncertainty and program dependency embedded in their revenue.
The following illustrates how payer mix affects the EBITDA multiple for a personal care / light medical agency with $1M in EBITDA:
| Payer Mix Profile | Estimated EBITDA Multiple |
|---|---|
| 70%+ Medicare-certified home health | 5.5 – 7.5× |
| 50% Medicare / 30% Private Pay / 20% Medicaid | 4.5 – 6.5× |
| 40% Medicare / 40% Medicaid / 20% Private Pay | 4.0 – 5.5× |
| 70%+ Medicaid personal care | 2.5 – 4.0× |
| 90%+ Medicaid single program | 2.0 – 3.5× |
Source: Hendon Partners deal data and market benchmarks, Q1 2026
The difference between a predominantly Medicare-certified business and a predominantly Medicaid personal care business — at the same EBITDA level — is 2–4× in multiple, which translates to $2M–$4M in enterprise value on a $1M EBITDA agency.
One nuanced and increasingly important issue: Medicare Advantage payer concentration within a Medicare-certified agency.
As MA penetration increases — now above 55% of Medicare nationally and significantly higher in certain markets (Florida, California, Texas metro areas) — agencies that are “Medicare-certified” but predominantly serving MA patients face growing rate pressure.
MA plans:
Buyers underwriting MA-heavy agencies discount for the difference between listed Medicare rates and the effective MA payment received — and they model increasing MA penetration risk in the buyer’s home market.
Seller implication: If you operate in a high-MA-penetration market and your “Medicare” revenue is predominantly MA, disclose this clearly in your CIM and model it honestly. Buyers who discover significant MA exposure during due diligence — after pricing the agency on the assumption of traditional Medicare rates — will reduce price.
If you operate a non-skilled personal care agency that serves elderly clients, adding Medicare home health certification opens a new, higher-value payer. The process typically takes 4–6 months from application to first billing.
The investment: a Medicare-certified clinical team (at minimum, a Director of Clinical Services with RN license, a PT, OT, or SLP, and medical director engagement), compliance infrastructure, and billing capability. The return: a payer tier change that may increase your EBITDA multiple by 1.5–2×.
Adding private pay service lines — private duty companion, concierge home health, private pay personal care — to an existing Medicaid or Medicare-focused agency improves payer mix over 12–24 months. Private pay clients also typically skew toward better neighborhoods and markets.
An agency with 90% revenue from a single Medicaid waiver program is vulnerable to that program’s policy and rate changes. Diversifying across waiver types (community-based residential, in-home support, day habilitation for IDD agencies) reduces concentration risk.
Agencies with leverage (meaningful census volume, specialty capabilities) can negotiate better MA rates at contract renewal. Even a 5–10% improvement in MA rates relative to the MA contract baseline can improve EBITDA and support higher valuation.
Before engaging in any M&A process, your advisor should produce a payer mix analysis that includes:
This analysis tells you — and potential buyers — exactly what you are selling. The agencies that achieve premium valuations are the ones that tell this story clearly and honestly, and that have made payer mix improvements that buyers can model in their forward projections.
Contact Hendon Partners for a payer mix analysis and valuation assessment →
Hendon Partners advises home care owners exclusively. Our valuations are based on real closed transaction data in current market conditions.
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