Property Management Valuation Multiples: 2026 Guide

Current EBITDA and revenue multiples for property management companies across SFR, multifamily, HOA, commercial, and short-term rental segments – with analysis of the factors that separate a 6× outcome from a 12× outcome.
Published by Parkland Capital Partners · Updated 2026

5× – 12×

EBITDA Multiple Range

1.5× – 4.0×

Revenue Multiple Range

SFR

Highest-Multiple Segment

PE + Strategic

Most Active Buyer Types

How Property Management Companies Are Valued

Property management companies are valued primarily on a multiple of adjusted EBITDA – Earnings Before Interest, Taxes, Depreciation, and Amortization, normalized for owner compensation, personal expenses, one-time costs, and non-operating items.

Adjusted EBITDA reflects the true economic earnings a buyer would realize under normalized ownership. Common add-backs include above-market owner salary, personal vehicle and travel expenses, one-time legal or consulting fees, and compensation for family members in non-essential roles. A well-documented add-back schedule is critical – buyers will scrutinize every adjustment, and unsupported add-backs erode credibility.

Revenue multiples serve as a secondary benchmark, applied to recurring management fee income. They’re particularly useful for high-growth companies investing in scale at the expense of near-term profitability. Non-recurring revenue – leasing fees, maintenance markups, project management income – is typically valued at lower multiples or excluded from the calculation entirely.

Most institutional buyers and private equity platforms use both methodologies in combination, with EBITDA multiples driving the headline valuation and revenue multiples serving as a reasonableness check.

IN THIS GUIDE

Adjusted EBITDA

Net income + interest + taxes + depreciation + amortization, normalized for owner-specific and one-time items

Revenue Multiple

Applied to recurring management fee revenue; non-recurring income valued separately or excluded

Add-backs

Owner compensation, personal expenses, and non-recurring costs added back to arrive at normalized earnings

Enterprise Value

Total company value = EBITDA × multiple; equity value adjusts for debt and working capital

EBITDA & Revenue Multiples by Segment

Current valuation ranges for property management companies in the lower middle market, based on transactions and market intelligence as of 2026.

PM SegmentEBITDA MultipleRevenue MultipleTrend
SFR Management
Highest institutional demand; PE platforms aggressively consolidating
7× – 12×2.5× – 4.0×↑ Rising
Multifamily Management
Stable fundamentals; fee-based revenue increasingly valued over AUM
6× – 10×2.0× – 3.5×→ Stable
HOA / Community Association
Growing buyer interest driven by high contract stickiness and recurring dues
6× – 9×2.0× – 3.0×↑ Rising
Commercial Property Management
Multiples tied closely to lease administration capabilities and asset class mix
6× – 10×1.5× – 3.0×→ Stable
Short-Term Rental / Vacation
Revenue volatility caps multiples; tech-enabled operators command premiums
5× – 9×1.5× – 3.0×→ Stable

Ranges reflect lower middle market transactions ($1M – $20M EBITDA). Larger transactions may command higher multiples. Actual valuation depends on company-specific factors.

What Drives a Premium Multiple

Seven factors that determine where your company falls within the valuation range – and what you can influence before going to market.

Recurring Revenue Quality

Buyers pay premiums for predictable management fee income under long-term contracts with automatic renewals and limited termination provisions.

Organic Growth Rate

Consistent revenue growth of 10 – 20% annually attracts premium valuations. Buyers model forward earnings - a company growing at 15% is worth materially more than a flat-revenue peer, even at similar EBITDA.

Contract Quality & Duration

Long-term management agreements with automatic renewals, 60 – 90 day termination notice periods, and limited early-exit provisions directly increase multiple. Month-to-month contracts suppress valuation.

Client Concentration

No single property owner should exceed 10 – 15% of total revenue. High concentration introduces key-man risk that buyers discount, sometimes aggressively. Diversified portfolios trade at meaningfully higher multiples.

Management Independence

Companies where the founder can step away for weeks without operational impact are worth 1 – 2× more in EBITDA terms. A capable second-layer team - operations, accounting, business development - is a hard requirement for most institutional buyers.

Technology & Automation

Integrated property management platforms, automated owner reporting, online maintenance portals, and data-driven operations are now baseline expectations. Companies with proprietary technology or advanced analytics command additional premiums.

Geographic Market

Companies in high-growth markets - Texas, Florida, the Southeast, and Mountain West - attract more buyer interest and stronger multiples. Multi-market presence further reduces geographic concentration risk.

Where Does Your Company Fall?

Parkland Capital Partners provides confidential valuation assessments for property management company owners. No cost, no obligation – just a clear picture of where the market values your business.

2026 Market Trends Shaping Valuations

Five macro dynamics influencing property management M&A activity and valuation multiples in the current market.

PE Consolidation Accelerating

Private equity platforms continue to aggressively acquire in the $1M – $5M EBITDA range, executing buy-and-build strategies that create regional and national scale. This sustained demand supports strong multiples across all segments.

SFR Remains the Premium Segment

Single-family rental management commands the highest multiples in the sector, driven by institutional capital flows into the SFR asset class and the scalability of third-party management platforms.

Technology as a Valuation Lever

Tech-enabled operators - those with integrated platforms, automation, and data capabilities - command 1 – 2× EBITDA premiums over manual-process peers. AI and predictive analytics are emerging as additional differentiators.

Interest Rate Normalization

Rate stabilization through 2025 – 2026 has improved deal activity and buyer confidence relative to the disrupted 2023 – 2024 period. Financing availability for acquisitions has improved across the lower middle market.

Cross-Market Buyers Reducing Geographic Discount

Buyers with national mandates are increasingly willing to acquire in secondary and tertiary markets, reducing the geographic discount that previously suppressed multiples outside major metros.

Frequently Asked Questions

Common questions about property management company valuation and M&A multiples.
What EBITDA multiple can I expect for my property management company?
Most property management companies in the lower middle market trade at 6× to 12× adjusted EBITDA. Where your company falls within that range depends on revenue size, growth rate, contract quality, customer concentration, management depth, and technology infrastructure. SFR management tends to command the highest multiples; short-term rental management generally trades at the lower end.
Common add-backs include above-market owner compensation, personal expenses run through the business (vehicles, travel, insurance), one-time legal or consulting fees, non-recurring costs, and salaries for family members in non-essential roles. The goal is to arrive at a normalized, run-rate earnings figure that reflects what a buyer would earn under typical ownership.
EBITDA multiples value a company based on profitability – earnings after operating expenses. Revenue multiples value a company based on top-line income, regardless of margins. EBITDA multiples are the primary valuation methodology for most institutional buyers; revenue multiples serve as a secondary check, particularly for high-growth companies investing heavily in scale.
SFR management benefits from strong institutional demand as investors pour capital into the single-family rental asset class. SFR portfolios tend to have high contract stickiness, lower property owner turnover, and predictable fee structures. The scalability of SFR operations – adding doors without proportional cost increases – also appeals to PE platforms building national portfolios.
Significant concentration – where one property owner represents more than 15 – 20% of revenue – introduces key-man risk that buyers will discount. In severe cases, buyers may apply a 1 – 2× EBITDA discount or structure a portion of the purchase price as an earnout tied to client retention. Diversification is one of the most impactful value-creation levers available to sellers.
Yes. Month-to-month management agreements introduce revenue uncertainty that buyers penalize. Converting key clients to annual or multi-year contracts – ideally with automatic renewals and 60 – 90 day termination notice – is one of the most effective pre-market preparation steps a seller can take.
Parkland Capital Partners provides confidential, no-obligation valuation assessments for property management company owners. We analyze your financials, contract base, growth trajectory, operational structure, and market position to arrive at a defensible valuation range based on current market comps.

Related Guides

Property Management M&A Trends: 2026 Market Outlook

M&A Market Trends: 2026 Outlook

How to Sell Your Short-Term Rental / Vacation Rental Management Company

How to Sell Your Commercial Property Management Company

Valuation Multiples Guide

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