Landscaping Business Valuation: 2026 Multiples Guide

Landscaping Business Valuation: 2026 Multiples by Operator Type

Quick Answer

Landscaping business valuations in 2026 range from 3x SDE for small residential mow-and-blow operators to 7x EBITDA for general-market commercial maintenance operators, with the wide range driven by four distinct business models that buyers value very differently. Peak Business Valuation reports average EBITDA multiples of 3.63x to 3.98x for the broad landscaping market. Commercial grounds maintenance commands the highest multiples at 6x to 9x EBITDA for quality operators per First Page Sage and BizBuySell 2025-2026 data, with 8x-9x outcomes typically reserved for multi-market PE-platform candidates with proven contract books, primarily based on contract book quality including customer tenure, renewal rates, and pricing escalators. The central valuation driver is contract durability and upsell potential rather than revenue size, making contract stability and year-round service offerings the key levers to lift your multiple before sale.

landscaping business valuation

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Buy-side M&A across 76+ active capital partners · Home services M&A: landscaping, lawn care, tree care, snow removal · Updated June 5, 2026

Landscaping business valuations span the widest range of any home services category, from 3x SDE for small residential mow-and-blow operators to 7x EBITDA general market for commercial maintenance operators, with PE-platform-quality multi-market players reaching 8x-9x. The reason is structural: “landscaping” is really four different businesses (residential maintenance, commercial maintenance, design/build installation, and specialty services), and buyers value them very differently. This guide maps the sub-categories, explains which signals buyers actually test, walks through a worked example, and identifies the pre-sale improvements that produce the most multiple lift. If you’re a landscaping founder evaluating your options, this is the valuation framework you need. A deeper read on football field valuation covers the same ground with the supporting data.

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Key takeaways

  • 2026 landscaping multiples span the widest range in home services: 3x SDE (residential mow-and-blow) to 9x EBITDA (premium commercial maintenance platforms with multi-market footprints; see CT Landscaping research for context).
  • Four distinct business models trade at very different multiples.
  • Commercial grounds maintenance is the platform-grade segment; 6.5x–9x for quality operators.
  • Contract book quality (tenure, renewal, escalators, upsell) is the central valuation exercise.
  • Seasonality management (snow, holiday lighting, year-round markets) smooths cash flow and lifts multiple.
  • H-2B labor is durable when properly managed; compliance gaps are material risks.

Table of contents

Methodology and data sources

CT Acquisitions · 2026 Buyer-Market Signal

What Landscaping PE Platforms Pay Premium For

Across our buy-side conversations with PE-backed landscaping platforms (BrightView, Yellowstone, Aspen Grove, etc.) and regional consolidators in 2026:

  • Snow removal mix is heavily rewarded. Year-round revenue de-risks the buyer model — operators with documented multi-winter snow contracts get 0.5x-1x premium.
  • Multi-year commercial maintenance contracts trump headline revenue. Even a smaller operator with 5+ year HOA / commercial contracts at 80%+ renewal trades up-tier.
  • Crew-leader bench depth is the operations gate. Without 2nd-line crew leaders, buyers discount operator credit because integration risk is concentrated in the seller-owner.

Multiple at a Glance · 2026

Landscaping Business Valuation Multiples · 2026

By operator type and contract mix.

Multi-state platform · $1M+ EBITDA6x-8x EBITDA
Commercial maintenance + snow removal5x-7x EBITDA
Residential mow-and-blow · owner-op3x-5x SDE

Source: CT Acquisitions analysis of landscaping M&A. Snow removal mix (year-round revenue) and multi-year commercial maintenance contracts drive top-of-range multiples.

CT Acquisitions · Seller Conversation Insight

What Landscaping Owners Tell Us in First Calls

Across our landscaping-business seller conversations, three patterns are unmissable:

  • A material share of landscaping owners have clean-books gaps — cash sales unrecorded, family-member salaries on the books, or tax-return-only financials without an internal monthly close. This is one of the highest clean-books gap rates across home services verticals.
  • Customer concentration concerns come up early. Owners with one or two large commercial accounts often underestimate how much that concentration drags on multiple compression.
  • Taxes are the first concern raised, before valuation, in roughly 8 out of 10 conversations. Tax planning should start 18-24 months before sale, not at LOI.

CT Acquisitions · Buyer Network Insight

What Buyers Pursuing Landscaping Acquisitions Actually Prioritize

Across the buyer mandates in our network that include landscaping or grounds maintenance in their thesis, the consistent diligence priorities are:

  • Multi-year commercial maintenance contracts. Recurring contract revenue with property managers, HOAs, or commercial properties is the single largest valuation lever buyers pay for.
  • Snow removal mix. Operators with year-round revenue (landscaping + snow) command premium multiples because PE buyers value the seasonal smoothing.
  • Route density and operations leverage. Tightly clustered service areas reduce drive time and lift gross margin. PE platforms consolidating the category pay for this efficiency.

PE platforms are the largest cohort in our active home-services buyer network and consistently pay the upper end of EBITDA multiple ranges for commercial-maintenance-focused landscapers above $1M EBITDA when these three levers are in place.

Multiple at a Glance · 2026

Landscaping Business Valuation Multiples

2026 multiples by operator type and revenue mix.

Commercial maintenance · multi-year contracts5x-7x EBITDA
Residential design-build · established3x-5x SDE
Residential mow-and-blow · owner-operator2x-3.5x SDE

Source: CT Acquisitions analysis of landscaping M&A transactions. Multi-year commercial contracts and snow-removal mix add 0.5-1.0x to recurring revenue value.

Related Cluster GuideSibling home-services benchmark: see how commercial plumbing worth compares in 2026, since plumbing and landscaping share many of the same buyer profiles.

This valuation guide follows CT Acquisitions’ 5-tier source hierarchy: T1 press releases for major sponsor / platform transactions, T2 SEC filings of public-company comparables, T3 sponsor portfolio pages, T4 industry-research publishers (Peak Business Valuation, Axial, First Page Sage, GF Data, BizBuySell, BMI Mergers, Capstone Partners), and T5 M&A trade press. Every numeric multiple range cited on this page is reconciled against at least two T4 sources plus CT Acquisitions’ internal VERIFIED_MULTIPLES benchmark.

Tier framing: Headline multiple ranges reflect broad-market mid-market transactions. Premium PE-platform-tier multiples (where cited) reflect institutional-buyer underwriting on businesses that clear specific scale, geography, recurring-revenue, and management-bench thresholds; they are not universally available and require platform-quality operator characteristics.

Verification window: All multiples and operator-tier figures verified May 25, 2026 against the named T4 publishers’ most-recent reports plus CT’s active-engagement data. Multiples by tier are sensitive to credit-market conditions, recurring-revenue mix, geography, and customer-concentration; the cited ranges are starting points for transaction-specific valuation, not deal-specific quotes.

Landscaping-specific industry-data sources: Peak Business Valuation landscaping, First Page Sage service-companies aggregate, Axial landscaping benchmark synthesis. BrightView Holdings (NYSE: BV) financial data is the public-company comparable; sellers should pull current SEC filings rather than investor-portal pages for verified figures. The CT VERIFIED_MULTIPLES landscaping lock is 3.6x-7x EBITDA broad market with 6x-9x for commercial-maintenance-led premium operators.

The short answer: typical landscaping valuations in 2026

Landscaping valuation by operator quality tier, $1M EBITDA (2026) Landscaping: outcome at $1M EBITDA by quality tier Multiple range: 3.0x to 10.0x EBITDA · 2026 market conditions Founder-led, weak recurring3.0x$3.0M Adequate systems, some recurring5.1x$5.1M Strong recurring, documented ops7.2x$7.2M Commercial maintenance platform10.0x$10.0M Bars show indicative valuation at $1M EBITDA. Actual outcomes vary with deal structure, geography, and buyer fit.
Illustrative valuation tiers based on CT Acquisitions analysis of 2026 home services M&A market.
Business profileTypical multipleExample: $1M EBITDA
Residential mow-and-blow, small scale3.0–4.0x SDE$3M–$4M (SDE basis)
Residential maintenance + some commercial4.0–5.5x$4M–$5.5M
Commercial maintenance-led, founder-dependent5.0–6.5x$5M–$6.5M
Commercial-led, documented ops, 90%+ contract renewal6.0–8.0x$6M–$8M
Multi-market commercial platform or strategic anchor7.5–9.0x*$7.5M–$9.0M*
Design/build only (project-based)4.0–5.5x$4M–$5.5M
Specialty (irrigation service, tree care, lighting)5.0–8.0x$5M–$8M

*Multi-market platform tier reflects publicly disclosed PE-backed landscaping transactions; see BrightView Holdings (NYSE: BV), Yellowstone Landscape, and Monarch Landscape Holdings public deal histories. These multiples apply only to platform-quality operators (multi-market footprint, proven contract book, professional management). On valuation specifically, our deeper look at Landscaping Company Valuation: What Drives the Price covers the methodology buyers actually use.

The four landscaping business models

Before any valuation analysis, identify which of these models describes your business.

1. Residential mow-and-blow

Weekly or bi-weekly lawn service for homeowners. High volume, low ticket ($40–$90 per visit), seasonal in most of the country. Margins: 15–22% EBITDA. Customer acquisition is expensive and retention depends on route density and technician stability. Most commoditized sub-category; valuations 3–4.5x SDE.

2. Commercial grounds maintenance

Multi-year contracts with office buildings, HOAs, retail centers, hotels, municipal and industrial properties. Contract values: $10K–$500K+ annually. Recurring revenue 90%+ by definition. Margins: 14–20% EBITDA. Platform-grade sub-category. Valuations 6–9x EBITDA for quality operators. PE platforms (BrightView, Yellowstone, Ruppert, Monarch, many regional) specifically target this segment.

3. Design/build installation

Landscape installation projects for residential customers: hardscape, patios, plantings, lighting, irrigation install, pool surrounds. Project-based, average ticket $15K–$150K. Gross margins strong (30–45%), but seasonality and weather create cash flow volatility. Valuations 4–5.5x EBITDA. Lower than commercial maintenance because of project-business risk.

4. Specialty services

Irrigation service, tree care, landscape lighting, outdoor pest, holiday lighting, snow plowing. Higher-margin than core landscape work. Irrigation service in particular (30–40% gross margins, recurring maintenance contracts) is underrated. Valuations vary: 5–8x depending on recurring mix and specialty defensibility.

Most landscaping businesses combine two or three of these models. The valuation approach depends on the mix. A business that is 70% commercial maintenance + 30% design/build is valued primarily as a commercial maintenance business. Flip the mix and the valuation calculus flips with it.

Where the real value lives: commercial grounds maintenance

Commercial grounds maintenance is the only sub-category where landscaping operators routinely command 7–9x EBITDA multiples. Understanding why matters:

  • Contract revenue is subscription-like. Multi-year agreements with annual escalators provide predictable cash flow, the same quality that lets PE pay premium multiples in pest control.
  • Route density compounds. Additional contracts in existing service corridors are margin-accretive. Two commercial operators in the same market combined produce more than the sum of the parts.
  • Customer acquisition cost is lower. Commercial customers are reached through property manager and facilities manager relationships (B2B sales) rather than paid digital. Returns on sales investment are durable.
  • Upsell is structural. Base maintenance contracts naturally generate tree care, irrigation, enhancement, holiday lighting, and snow revenue. Mature commercial accounts produce 40–60% of revenue from upsell beyond the base contract.
  • Defensible against consumer disruption. The commercial B2B sales cycle shields the segment from direct-to-consumer platforms that have started compressing residential mow-and-blow margins.

If you’re primarily a residential operator considering a sale, the highest-leverage 2–4 year investment is building a commercial maintenance book. It’s slow and requires dedicated B2B sales capability, but produces durable multiple expansion.

Commercial landscape crew on property
Commercial landscape crew on property.

How landscaping buyers actually calculate the number

  1. Normalize the EBITDA. Adjust for owner compensation, related-party transactions, personal expenses, and equipment depreciation accounting.
  2. Decompose the revenue. Split by sub-category (residential maintenance, commercial maintenance, design/build, specialty, snow) and within commercial, by customer type (office, HOA, retail, industrial, hospitality).
  3. Analyze the commercial contract book. Line-by-line review: customer, contract value, tenure, renewal history, escalator terms. This is the most intensive part of landscaping diligence.
  4. Model forward cash flow. Project forward revenue with explicit churn and upsell assumptions by customer cohort.
  5. Compare to comparables. Adjust for geography, seasonality patterns, labor model (H-2B vs. domestic), equipment intensity.
  6. Apply the concluding multiple.

The six factors that move landscaping multiples

1. Commercial maintenance contract mix

The single largest valuation driver. A commercial maintenance-led business at 70%+ commercial revenue with documented operations and strong renewal rates trades at 6.5–8x. A primarily residential operator trades at 3–4.5x. This is a 2–3 turn differential, worth $2M–$4M on a $1M EBITDA business.

2. Contract book quality

Within commercial maintenance, quality of the contract book matters:

  • Premium book: weighted average contract tenure >3 years, 90%+ annual renewal, price escalators written into contracts, <20% concentration from any single customer, 35%+ upsell revenue beyond base contract.
  • Good book: 2–3 year tenure, 85–90% renewal, some escalators, moderate concentration, 25–35% upsell.
  • Average book: Mixed tenure, 80–85% renewal, limited escalators, 15–25% upsell.
  • Weak book: Short tenure, <80% renewal, no escalators, heavy concentration, minimal upsell.

Buyers will rebuild this analysis in diligence. Detailed, accurate contract documentation is non-negotiable for platform-grade pricing.

3. Seasonality management

Landscaping is seasonal in most of the country. Operators that smooth seasonality are more valuable:

  • Snow revenue in northern climates (30–50% of winter revenue can come from snow).
  • Holiday lighting for commercial customers (Nov–Jan revenue).
  • Year-round service in southern markets (Florida, Arizona, southern California, south Texas).
  • Winter labor deployment (tree work, irrigation repair, hardscape).

A northern-climate operator without snow or holiday revenue carries 4–5 months of negative operating margin annually. Buyers price that in.

4. Labor model (workforce composition)

Landscape labor is 40–55% of operating cost. The workforce model matters:

  • H-2B seasonal workforce: common for larger operators. Cost-effective but depends on visa policy, housing logistics, and compliance. Properly managed, it’s a durable advantage.
  • Year-round domestic workforce: higher labor cost, but simpler and lower regulatory risk.
  • Mixed: core supervisors and drivers year-round, seasonal laborers as needed.

Buyers evaluate the labor model for sustainability, compliance, and cost structure. Neither approach is inherently better; clean execution of either is what matters.

5. Equipment and fleet condition

Landscaping is capital-intensive. Mower fleet age, truck and trailer condition, specialty equipment (stump grinders, spray trucks, chipper trucks, aerial lifts) all factor in.

  • Well-maintained with replacement schedule: acceptable. Buyer can underwrite ongoing capex.
  • Deferred maintenance or aging fleet: capex cliff. Buyer deducts estimated cost from purchase price.

A 3-year forward capex schedule is standard diligence. Be prepared to show it.

6. Technology and operational systems

  • Premium: Aspire (purpose-built landscape ERP), LMN (similar), or equivalent with 2+ years of clean data. Documented service protocols, GPS routing, job-costing visibility.
  • Standard: basic CRM and dispatch tools.
  • Discount: spreadsheets and phone-based dispatch. Post-close technology implementation costs $100K–$300K and takes 6–12 months.

Other factors buyers evaluate

Customer concentration

For commercial-led operators, top 10 customers <40% of revenue is healthy. >60% concentration is a material risk. Losing one large HOA or commercial contract can wipe out deal thesis.

Chemical and license compliance

Pesticide applicator licenses, fertilizer handling certifications, state-specific chemical regulations. Clean compliance is expected.

Real estate and yard operations

Landscape businesses often own or lease a yard (equipment storage, dispatch base, mulch inventory). Real estate terms negotiated separately; long-term lease arrangements often serve both seller and buyer well.

Design/build margin consistency

For operators with design/build revenue, margin consistency matters. Strong gross margins with reasonable project management discipline are valued; lumpy margins suggest bidding and execution problems.

Geographic footprint

Single-metro focus vs. multi-region. For commercial platforms, multi-region is an asset. For residential or small commercial, single-metro focus with density is preferred.

Landscape equipment and fleet
Landscape equipment and fleet.

Worked example: $1M EBITDA landscaping business valuation

Business profile:

  • $6M revenue, $1M reported EBITDA (17% margin)
  • Mix: 55% commercial maintenance contracts, 25% residential maintenance, 15% design/build, 5% snow (seasonal)
  • Commercial contract book: 40 active contracts, weighted average tenure 3.5 years, 89% annual renewal, 22% upsell beyond base
  • Top commercial customer (large HOA): 11% of revenue
  • Operations manager in place, founder handles commercial sales and top-10 customer relationships
  • H-2B workforce for peak season; year-round core crew
  • Aspire ERP in use 2 years with clean data
  • Fleet average age 4 years, well-maintained
  • Northern climate; snow revenue smooths Jan–Mar
  • Owner comp $180K, replacement GM $140K. Personal expenses $40K. One-time costs $25K.

EBITDA normalization:

  • Reported EBITDA: $1M
  • Owner compensation adjustment: +$40K
  • Personal expenses: +$40K
  • One-time costs: +$25K
  • Normalized EBITDA: $1.105M

Multiple assessment:

  • Starting benchmark for 55% commercial maintenance + quality contract book: 6.5x
  • +0.3x for Aspire + documented operations
  • +0.2x for snow revenue smoothing seasonality
  • −0.3x for customer concentration (top customer 11%)
  • −0.4x for founder-dependent commercial relationships
  • Concluding multiple: 6.3x

Indicative valuation: $1.105M × 6.3x = $6.96M

18-month improvement path:

  • Transition commercial relationships to dedicated account manager: multiple to 6.7x. Outcome: $7.4M.
  • Grow commercial maintenance from 55% to 70% of revenue: multiple to 7.0x. Outcome: $7.74M.
  • Reduce customer concentration: multiple to 6.8x. Outcome: $7.51M.
  • Combined: plausible multiple 7.3x. Outcome: $8.07M.

$1.1M delta over 18 months of preparation.

Landscape design and installation
Landscape design and installation.

How to increase your landscaping business value before selling

Highest ROI

  • Grow commercial maintenance contract mix. If below 50%, hire a dedicated B2B sales rep 18+ months before sale. Target property management companies, HOAs, industrial facilities, retail centers.
  • Reprice existing contracts. Most commercial contracts are underpriced by 5–10% (annual cost inflation not fully passed through). Implement a structured reprice program.
  • Transition founder-led commercial relationships. Dedicated account managers 12–18 months before sale.
  • Build upsell capability. Train commercial account managers on tree care, irrigation, enhancement upsell. Target 35%+ upsell revenue.
  • Hire a GM. 18–24 months runway.

Medium ROI

  • Implement Aspire or LMN if not on landscape-specific ERP.
  • Diversify customer concentration.
  • Document H-2B program compliance and housing arrangements.
  • Build snow or holiday lighting revenue to smooth seasonality.
  • Equipment fleet refresh program.

Lower ROI

  • Website redesign.
  • Social media.
  • Minor residential service additions.

Common mistakes that destroy landscaping valuations

  • Below-market commercial contracts not repriced in 2+ years. Margin erosion from input cost inflation is a latent issue buyers will quantify.
  • Aggressive classification of one-time work as recurring. Enhancement projects don’t count as recurring; buyers will rebuild the classification.
  • H-2B compliance gaps. Visa, housing, or wage compliance issues can materially impact valuation.
  • Poor equipment fleet condition. Deferred capex is a direct purchase price deduction.
  • Founder selling every large commercial account. Post-close retention is a real risk.
  • Residential-heavy mix without a commercial build plan. Limits multiple ceiling severely.
  • Seasonal cash flow not transparently modeled. Buyers need to see full-year cycle with reasonable detail.

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CT Acquisitions offers confidential valuations for landscaping founders. We specialize in commercial maintenance-led operators in the $500K–$5M EBITDA range. CT Acquisitions is paid by the buyer at close, founders pay nothing. Book a 15-minute conversation.

Christoph Totter, Founder of CT Acquisitions

About the Author

Christoph Totter is the founder of CT Acquisitions, a buy-side partner headquartered in Sheridan, Wyoming. We work directly with 100+ buyers, search funders, family offices, lower middle-market PE, and strategic consolidators, including direct mandates with the largest consolidators that other intermediaries cannot access. The buyers pay us when a deal closes, not the seller. No retainer, no exclusivity, no contract until close. Connect on LinkedIn · Get in touch

Sources and references

Every multiple range, operator-tier figure, and industry-data citation on this page is sourced to a published industry-research publisher or to CT Acquisitions’ internal benchmark dataset.

Last verified: May 25, 2026. Next refresh: quarterly (target 2026-08-25).

Disclaimer: This guide is general valuation framework intelligence, not legal, tax, accounting, or transaction advice. CT Acquisitions is a buy-side advisor.

Landscaping Business Valuation Multiples

Landscaping business valuation multiples typically run 2.5x to 4.5x SDE for owner-operated companies and 4x to 7x EBITDA for established commercial landscaping and maintenance businesses. The single biggest driver is recurring maintenance contract revenue: a company built on recurring commercial maintenance trades far higher than one reliant on one-off design and install jobs. A deeper read on business valuation expert covers the same ground with the supporting data.

Landscaping profileTypical multipleWhat drives it
Owner-operator, install-heavy2.5x to 3.5x SDESeasonal, project-based
Maintenance mix, some recurring3.5x to 5x EBITDARepeat commercial accounts
Commercial maintenance, contracted5x to 7x EBITDARecurring contracts, route density

The factors that move a landscaping valuation most are the share of recurring maintenance revenue, commercial versus residential mix, route density, equipment ownership, and crew and management depth. Converting one-off work into recurring maintenance contracts is the most reliable way to lift the multiple.

Frequently asked questions about landscaping business valuation

What’s the average landscaping business multiple in 2026?

Across all transactions, simple average is 4.5x–5.5x EBITDA. Commercial maintenance-led operators trade at 6–8x. Residential mow-and-blow trades at 3–4x SDE. Design/build-only operators trade at 4–5.5x. The sub-category matters more than the size.

Is residential landscaping worth acquiring?

Depends on thesis. Pure residential mow-and-blow is commoditized and low-margin. Residential with strong specialty (tree care, organic programs) or residential as a feeder to commercial is more valuable. Pure residential at sub-scale is not a platform play.

How much does commercial maintenance really add to my valuation?

A lot. Shifting from 30% commercial to 70% commercial can expand the multiple from 4.5x to 7x, producing a 55%+ increase in valuation at constant EBITDA. This is the single most impactful pre-sale improvement available to most landscape operators.

Do I add back owner salary to EBITDA?

Partially. Normalize to a market-rate replacement cost. For a $1M EBITDA landscape business, the add-back is typically $40K–$80K on owner compensation, plus add-backs for personal expenses and related-party transactions.

Should I invest in snow revenue before selling?

If you’re in a snow-capable market and don’t have it, adding snow plowing capability for your existing commercial customer base is a valuable investment. It smooths seasonality, which buyers value, and generates meaningful incremental EBITDA.

How do buyers evaluate my commercial contract book?

They rebuild it. Every active contract is reviewed for customer, contract value, tenure, renewal history, and escalator terms. Aggregate metrics (weighted average tenure, renewal rate, upsell percentage) are calculated and compared to industry benchmarks. Clean documentation of your contract book is non-negotiable.

Is H-2B labor a valuation issue?

Not if properly managed. H-2B programs with compliance histories, reliable housing, and strong worker relationships are durable assets. H-2B dependency with compliance gaps or housing issues is a material risk. Document the program thoroughly.

How long does it take to sell a landscaping business?

90–150 days from LOI to close for a well-prepared commercial-led business. Preparation runway is 6–24 months depending on starting position. Commercial contract diligence can extend timelines.

How much will I pay in taxes on the sale?

Federal long-term capital gains plus 3.8% NIIT on goodwill portion. State taxes vary. Structural planning can reduce effective rate. See our complete selling playbook.

What’s the best time of year to sell a landscaping business?

Most owners prefer to close after the busy season (fall or early winter in most climates). Buyers prefer to have a clean trailing 12 months that includes a full growing season. LOI timing typically aligns with late summer or fall; close in winter or early spring.

What is the typical multiple for a landscaping business?

2026 multiples range from 3x SDE for residential mow-and-blow to 7x EBITDA general market for commercial maintenance, with PE-platform-quality multi-market players reaching 8x-9x (deal-specific support required); per Peak Business Valuation, First Page Sage and BizBuySell 2025-2026 data. Most transactions fall between 4.5x and 7x. Commercial-led operators command 6–8x; residential-led operators trade at 3–5x.

How is a landscaping business valued?

Revenue decomposition by sub-category (residential maintenance, commercial maintenance, design/build, specialty, snow), commercial contract book rebuild, seasonality analysis, equipment condition review, and labor compliance check (H-2B and domestic workforce).

What’s the most valuable type of landscaping business?

Commercial grounds maintenance with multi-year contracts, 90%+ annual renewal, customer diversification, 35%+ upsell revenue, and route density in target metros. This segment trades at 7x–9x for quality operators.

How much is a landscaping business with $1M EBITDA worth?

Commercial-led with quality contract book: $6M–$8M. Mixed residential/commercial: $4.5M–$6M. Pure residential mow-and-blow at this size is unusual; typically valued on SDE at 3–4x.

Do H-2B seasonal workers affect landscaping business value?

Well-managed H-2B programs are durable competitive advantages and valued positively. Programs with compliance gaps, housing issues, or worker retention problems are material risks that compress multiples.

Is residential or commercial landscaping more valuable?

Commercial maintenance contract revenue is premium. Residential mow-and-blow is commoditized and low-margin. Design/build is project-based and more cyclical. Specialty services (tree care, irrigation service) can command strong multiples when well-positioned.

How do I increase my landscaping business value before selling?

Build the commercial maintenance contract book, reprice under-market commercial contracts, grow upsell capability (tree care, enhancement, irrigation), diversify customer concentration, and hire dedicated commercial account managers to transition founder-led relationships.

How does snow revenue affect landscaping valuation?

For northern-climate operators, snow revenue smooths seasonality and adds to multiple. A business with 15%+ winter revenue from snow plowing trades meaningfully higher than one without. The downside: snow revenue is weather-dependent; buyers normalize over a 10–20 year climate average.

Related reading: How to sell landscaping business, a deeper look at this topic for owners and buyers thinking through the same questions.

Related reading: Landscaping business valuation guide, a deeper look at this topic for owners and buyers thinking through the same questions.

Limitations of this analysis

Sources and further reading

The multiple ranges and business-model tier figures in this guide draw on the following published 2025-2026 industry sources and CT Acquisitions internal benchmarks.

Last verified: May 2026. Next refresh: quarterly.

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