HOA and community association management is in the middle of a consolidation wave, and founders are getting more inbound interest than ever. PE-backed platforms and national consolidators are acquiring regional community association management (CAM) companies aggressively, drawn by the recurring monthly fees, multi-year board contracts, and ancillary revenue that define the business. The question is no longer whether buyers are interested — it is whether you understand what your business is actually worth, how to run a process that protects your boards and staff, and how to avoid the earnout traps that catch unprepared sellers.
This guide walks through what you need to know before any conversation with an advisor, framed specifically for community association management founders. Parkland Capital Partners is a lower middle market M&A advisory firm with deep sector focus across property management and real estate services. HOA management M&A is one of our core practices.
SDE Range
EBITDA Range
Typical Cash at Close
Typical Timeline
The primary method. For owner-operated businesses generating less than approximately $1M in earnings, buyers apply a multiple to Seller’s Discretionary Earnings (SDE), typically 2.5× to 4.5×. For larger businesses with $1M+ in adjusted EBITDA and management depth, buyers apply an EBITDA multiple — typically 4× to 9× at lower middle market scale, with the strongest platforms (large door counts, low board churn, diversified ancillary revenue, modern technology, management depth) commanding the upper end.
Used as triangulation, particularly for recurring management fee revenue. Buyers apply a multiple to recurring management fees, valuing ancillary and episodic revenue separately. Larger, profitable CAM businesses command revenue multiples on the higher end.
Sometimes referenced as a shorthand, where buyers think in value per door under management. Per-door math is imprecise because it ignores fee levels, ancillary revenue, board churn, and profitability. A portfolio of large, high-fee associations with strong ancillary capture is worth far more per door than a portfolio of small, low-fee associations.
In practice, serious buyers underwrite normalized EBITDA grounded in recurring management and ancillary fee revenue, with the multiple driven by door count, board contract durability, ancillary revenue diversification, operational scalability, and management depth.
| Method | Typical Range | Best Fit |
|---|---|---|
| SDE Multiple | 2.5× – 4.5× SDE | Owner-operated; <$1M earnings |
| EBITDA Multiple | 4× – 9× EBITDA | $1M+ EBITDA; PE-backed buyers |
| Revenue Multiple | Multiple of recurring mgmt fees | Triangulation |
| Per Door | Varies widely | Shorthand; least reliable |
Door count is the headline metric, but these are the factors that move CAM multiples up or down.
Annual or multi-year agreements with strong historical renewal rates command premium multiples. Frequent board losses signal instability and compress valuations. Buyers underwrite how durable your agreements are and how much revenue could turn over.
CAM-specific provisions that give boards the right to review or terminate the agreement on acquisition. Buyers diligence these closely because they directly affect how much revenue is genuinely transferable. Understanding your exposure before going to market is essential.
Transfer fees, resale certificates, document and closing fees, violation processing, late fees, and special assessment management diversify revenue and lift profitability. Many CAM founders under-capture ancillary revenue and leave material value on the table.
Larger door counts support higher valuations, but mix matters. Master-planned communities, large condos, and high-rises generate more revenue per association than many small HOAs that require disproportionate administrative effort.
Community managers hold the board relationships, so manager turnover directly threatens board retention. Strong manager retention and stable staff support premium valuations and materially reduce transition risk for buyers.
Strong cost per door, healthy manager-to-door ratios, and centralized functions (accounting, compliance, violation processing) drive premium multiples. Modern CAM software (Vantaca, AppFolio, TOPS, CINC, Caliber) and clean data reduce transition risk.
Before going to market, evaluate your business honestly against the questions buyers will ask. If you answer “no” or “needs work” to several of these, your business is not fully ready — and that is the most useful insight you can have. 12 to 24 months of preparation materially improves outcomes.
Know your historical renewal rates and board retention metrics cold. High board churn compresses valuations and warrants explanation and remediation before going to market.
Essential in CAM specifically. Know how many of your agreements contain ownership-change provisions, what those provisions require, and how transferable your revenue genuinely is. Surprises during diligence damage deals.
Buyers want recurring management fee revenue separated from ancillary revenue (transfer fees, resale certificates, document fees) and from episodic revenue. CPA-prepared or audited financials add credibility and reduce diligence friction.
Many CAM founders under-capture ancillary revenue. Optimizing transfer fees, resale certificates, document fees, and other association-driven revenue before sale improves both earnings and the revenue mix buyers value.
Community managers hold the board relationships, so manager retention directly affects board retention and transition risk. Strong, stable staff supports premium valuations; high manager turnover is a red flag.
If you personally hold the key board relationships, you have founder dependency that compresses your multiple and lengthens your required transition. Building community manager and regional leadership depth below you materially improves outcomes.
Buyers value mature CAM technology (Vantaca, AppFolio, TOPS, CINC, Caliber) and clean, exportable data. Outdated systems or messy data increase transition risk and compress valuations.
A growing door count signals a healthy, competitive business. A shrinking count is a red flag. If you have lost boards, understand why and address it before going to market if possible.
Months 3-6
Post-close: CAM transitions center on retaining board relationships and management agreements through the ownership change — your role in board reassurance and handoff is negotiated as part of the deal.
Parkland Capital Partners provides confidential, no-obligation valuation assessments for HOA and community association management founders exploring their options.
Frequent questions from HOA and community association management founders considering a sale.
For most CAM founders, the highest-leverage work is improving board retention, optimizing ancillary revenue capture, building community manager and regional leadership depth (so board relationships do not depend entirely on you), and reviewing and understanding your ownership-change clauses. Each materially improves both the value buyers underwrite and your negotiating position.
Complimentary consultations are available for HOA and community association management founders. The first conversation is a candid read on your specific door economics, board contract durability, ancillary revenue, what your business would likely sell for today, the realistic buyer universe, and how to avoid the earnout traps that catch unprepared sellers.