How to Maximize Your EBITDA Before Selling

A practical guide to EBITDA optimization for founders planning an exit – covering add-back documentation, expense normalization, revenue quality improvement, and margin levers that directly impact your valuation.
Published by Parkland Capital Partners · Updated 2026

Understanding and Documenting Add-Backs

Add-backs are the foundation of EBITDA normalization. They represent expenses a buyer would not continue to incur – above-market owner compensation, personal vehicle and travel costs, family member salaries for non-essential roles, one-time legal or consulting fees, and charitable contributions run through the business.

Every add-back must be defensible and documented. Buyers and their quality-of-earnings advisors will scrutinize each adjustment. Unsupported add-backs erode credibility and can lead to price reductions or retrades during due diligence.

The goal is to present a normalized earnings picture that accurately reflects what a new owner would earn. Work with your CPA and M&A advisor to build an add-back schedule at least 12 months before going to market.

Action Items

Expense Normalization and Cost Reduction

Beyond add-backs, genuine expense reduction directly increases EBITDA and your valuation multiple applies to a larger base. Focus on sustainable savings – not temporary cuts that a buyer will see through.

Common areas include renegotiating software licenses and vendor contracts, consolidating redundant technology platforms, optimizing staffing levels, reviewing insurance coverage, and eliminating unprofitable service lines or customers.

Implement these changes 12 – 24 months before going to market so improved margins appear in your trailing financials. Buyers value demonstrated profitability, not projected savings.

Action Items

Revenue Quality Improvement

Not all revenue is created equal. Buyers assign significantly higher value to recurring, contracted revenue than to one-time or transactional income. A dollar of management fee revenue under a long-term contract is worth substantially more than a dollar of project revenue.

Focus on increasing the proportion of recurring revenue, implementing annual price escalators in management agreements, extending contract terms, and diversifying your customer base to reduce concentration risk.

Revenue quality improvements often have a compounding effect on valuation – they increase both the revenue base and the multiple applied to it.

Action Items

Margin Improvement Levers

Margin improvement directly increases EBITDA and drives premium valuation outcomes. The most effective levers include technology adoption to reduce labor costs per unit, maintenance coordination efficiency, ancillary revenue development, geographic density optimization, and centralization of back-office functions.

For property management companies, key metrics include revenue per door, cost per door, and the ratio of doors to field staff. Buyers benchmark these metrics against industry standards and competitors in their portfolio.

Aim for EBITDA margins above 20% – this signals operational efficiency and gives buyers confidence in the scalability of the platform.

Action Items

Understand Your Valuation

See how EBITDA optimization would impact your company’s valuation range.

Frequently Asked Questions

How far in advance should I start maximizing EBITDA?

Ideally 12 – 24 months before going to market. Buyers value demonstrated profitability over projected improvements. Changes implemented well before a sale process show up in trailing financials and are viewed as sustainable.

Above-market owner compensation, personal vehicle and travel expenses, family member salaries for non-essential roles, one-time legal or consulting fees, charitable contributions, and non-recurring repair or capital expenditures.
 
Temporary cost-cutting is transparent to experienced buyers and can actually reduce confidence in the business. Focus on sustainable improvements that genuinely improve the operating model rather than cosmetic cuts.
 
Significantly. If your company trades at a 7× EBITDA multiple, every $100K of sustainable EBITDA improvement adds $700K to enterprise value. This makes EBITDA optimization one of the highest-return activities available to founders planning an exit.
 

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Discuss your EBITDA optimization strategy with our team.