Sell Your Plumbing Business in Nevada (2026), 76+ Active PE Buyers, $0 Seller Fees

Quick Answer

Plumbing businesses in Nevada typically sell for 3.5x to 5.5x SDE, with valuations driven by recurring service revenue mix, technician retention, and Nevada’s unique licensing regime under the State Contractors Board. The state’s zero income tax, Las Vegas metro growth (400K+ residents added 2010-2024), and 16+ active PE buyers create a favorable 2026 market for owners with $750K to $30M revenue. An off-market process run by a buy-side advisor avoids typical broker auction delays over license transfers and prevailing wage exposure.

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Christoph Totter · Managing Partner, CT Acquisitions

20+ home services M&A transactions across HVAC, plumbing, pest control, roofing · Updated May 7, 2026

Selling a plumbing business in Nevada in 2026 is a fundamentally different transaction than selling one in any other state. The buyer pool depth, regulatory friction, after-tax math at exit, and labor cost base are all state-specific in ways that materially change outcomes. Nevada’s NSCB licensing regime, Las Vegas metro has been one of the fastest-growing housing markets in the U.S., Clark County added 400K+ residents from 2010-2024, with su…, and tax position all combine to create a market with its own rules. Owners who run a generic broker auction without understanding Nevada’s specifics routinely stall in diligence over license transfer, prevailing wage exposure, or buyer-pool mismatches.

This guide is for Nevada plumbing owners running between $750K and $30M of revenue, with normalized earnings between $150K SDE and $5M EBITDA. We’ll walk through Nevada State Contractors Board (NSCB) licensing and the qualifying-individual rule, the after-tax math when Nevada state tax does not touch your net proceeds, the five buyer archetypes most active in Nevada this year, the metro-by-metro deal dynamics across Las Vegas, Reno, Henderson, North Las Vegas, the diligence flags buyers will check (recurring service revenue mix, technician retention, fleet quality, residential vs commercial split, customer concentration), and the 18-24 month preparation playbook that materially improves outcomes.

The framework draws on direct work with 76+ active U.S. lower middle market buyers, including 16 with explicit Nevada plumbing theses. Of our 76+ buyers, 16 actively bid on plumbing businesses in Nevada as of May 2026. That includes Apex Service Partners, Wrench Group, Authority Brands, Champions Group, plus regional rollups, family offices with home services theses, multi-state strategics, search funders, and SBA-financed individuals. We’re a buy-side partner. The buyers pay us when a deal closes, not you. If you want a 90-second valuation range before reading further, the free calculator below produces a starting-point estimate based on your SDE, recurring service mix, and Nevada metro. Real-world ranges depend on the operational specifics covered in the sections that follow.

One realistic note before you start. Plumbing is one of the strongest M&A categories in 2026 home services, institutional capital, deep buyer pools, and 4-8x EBITDA multiples for prepared sellers. But Nevada sellers face state-specific friction that less-prepared owners don’t see coming. NSCB monetary limit on contractor licenses (must match actual project size, exceeded limits create license violations), Las Vegas Valley Water District backflow requirements, and prevailing wage on p… All of these surface in diligence and cost real money if not managed proactively. The good news: every one is manageable with 12-18 months of preparation. The owners who exit cleanly are the ones who started early.

Plumbing service van parked outside a Nevada home in late afternoon, owner inspecting work order, photorealistic editorial photography
Nevada plumbing M&A is active in 2026, 76+ buyers, no seller fees, and PE consolidators bidding aggressively in Las Vegas and beyond.

“Nevada plumbing owners often think the deal is mostly about EBITDA and multiple. It isn’t. The deal is about NSCB license transfer cleanliness, recurring service contract quality, and matching to the specific buyer who actually wants a Nevada platform this quarter. Of our 76+ buyers, 16 actively bid on Nevada plumbing businesses, the buyers pay us, not you, no contract required.”

TL;DR, the 90-second brief

  • Nevada plumbing M&A is active in 2026. Apex Service Partners, Wrench Group, Authority Brands, Champions Group, Redwood Services, plus 8-15 regional rollups, are deploying capital across Las Vegas and the broader Nevada market. Competitive bidding is realistic for $1M+ EBITDA platforms, and the SBA buyer pool is functional for sub-$1M SDE shops in metro markets.
  • Realistic Nevada plumbing multiples in 2026. Sub-$2M revenue residential service: 0.7-1.2x revenue or 3.5-5x SDE. $1M-$3M EBITDA platforms: 5.5-7.5x EBITDA from PE rollups. $3M+ EBITDA platforms: 6.5-9x EBITDA. Maintenance agreements add a 0.5-1.0x EBITDA premium across all tiers; commercial plumbing with recurring service contracts trades at the high end.
  • NSCB licensing is the most-underestimated deal-killer. Nevada plumbing contractors are licensed by the Nevada State Contractors Board (NSCB) under NRS Chapter 624. The relevant classification is C-1 (Plumbing and Heating). Each NSCB-licensed contractor must designate a Qualified Employee, an individual with at least 4 years of plumb…
  • Nevada state tax considerations. Nevada has 0% state capital gains tax. Combined with no individual income tax generally, a Nevada plumbing seller keeps an additional $300K-$1.3M of after-tax proceeds on a $3-$10M sale versus a California, New York, or New Jersey seller, and meaningfully more than higher-tax neighbors.
  • Of our 76+ buyers, 16 actively bid on plumbing businesses in Nevada. We’re a buy-side partner working directly with these buyers, including PE-backed home services consolidators, family offices, multi-state strategics, and search funders, and they pay us when a deal closes, not you. No retainer, no exclusivity, no 12-month contract, no tail fee.

Key Takeaways

The Nevada plumbing M&A market in 2026: who’s buying and why

Nevada plumbing M&A activity is real and structurally accelerating into 2026. The structural drivers are well-documented at this point: aging U.S. housing stock (median age now 42 years per the American Housing Survey), sustained residential service demand, recession-resistance of repair-and-replace plumbing work, recurring service contract economics, and a fragmented operator base that maps perfectly to platform-and-add-on PE strategy. Nevada specifically benefits from Las Vegas metro has been one of the fastest-growing housing markets in the U.S., Clark County added 400K+ residents from 2010-2024, with sustained single-family permit volume in Henderson, North Las Vegas, and Summerlin. Reno-Sparks has benefited from Tahoe-Reno Industrial Center and tech-driven population inflow.

The active PE-backed and strategic plumbing buyers in Nevada. Apex Service Partners (Alpine Investors, active Nevada deployment with Las Vegas-metro add-ons); Wrench Group (TSG/Oak Hill, Las Vegas market expansion); Authority Brands (Apax Partners, Benjamin Franklin Plumbing and Mr. Rooter franchisees in Las Vegas and Reno); Champions Group (Blackstone (Feb 2026), Nevada footprint under the new Blackstone platform); Redwood Services (Altas Partners, Mountain West expansion including Nevada); Roto-Rooter (Chemed Corporation, NYSE: CHE) (public, operates Las Vegas and Reno branches). Plus 8-15 regional rollups operating below the institutional radar but writing real LOIs, family offices with home services theses, multi-state strategic operators looking to expand contiguous geography, and search funders explicitly pursuing Nevada plumbing platforms. From a Nevada seller’s perspective, this means competitive bidding is realistic for $1M+ EBITDA platforms in Las Vegas, and the SBA-financed individual buyer pool remains functional for sub-$1M SDE shops anywhere in the state.

What this means for Nevada plumbing sellers. If you’re running a $1M+ EBITDA residential or residential-commercial plumbing business in Las Vegas or another major Nevada metro, you should expect 5-9 indications of interest from PE-backed consolidators with the right outreach. If you’re a sub-$1M SDE shop, the SBA-financed individual buyer pool generates 8-15 inquiries with proper positioning. Either way, the difference between a prepared Nevada plumbing seller and an unprepared one is typically 1-2x EBITDA in final price, on a $2M EBITDA business, that’s $2-4M of after-tax proceeds left on the table by skipping the prep work.

How Nevada compares to neighboring states. PE buyers underwrite each state on three axes: housing growth tailwind, regulatory friction, and after-tax labor cost economics. Nevada benefits from a strong housing growth tailwind that compensates for its low state tax position. In practice, this means Nevada multiples for prepared $1M+ EBITDA platforms run within 0.5-1.0x of national norms, slightly above for no-tax states (TX, FL, TN, NV, WA), slightly below for high-tax states (CA, NY, NJ, IL, MA), and broadly in line elsewhere.

The 2026 cadence is faster than 2024 was. Two reference data points: Apex Service Partners (Alpine Investors) closed approximately 60 add-on acquisitions in 2025 across HVAC, plumbing, and electrical, the highest disclosed deal cadence of any platform; and Blackstone’s February 2026 acquisition of Champions Group at a reported $2.5B EV reset platform-level pricing for residential mechanical/plumbing platforms. Both signals point to faster, more competitive bidding in 2026 than sellers experienced in 2023-2024. Nevada owners who delay another 12 months risk missing the window.

What plumbing businesses are worth in Nevada: realistic 2026 multiples by size

Plumbing valuation in Nevada follows national norms for the vertical, with state-specific premium or compression based on tax and regulatory environment. At a national level, plumbing businesses transact at 1.7-3x SDE for sub-$1M SDE owner-operated shops, 4-7x EBITDA for $1-5M EBITDA platforms, and 6-11x EBITDA for $5M+ EBITDA institutional platforms with recurring service revenue. Nevada-specific adjustments come from after-tax math at exit, local labor cost, and buyer-pool depth in your specific metro.

Nevada sub-$2M revenue residential plumbing service: 0.7-1.2x revenue or 3.5-5x SDE. This is the SBA-individual-buyer tier. $150K-$500K SDE typically. Buyers are first-time entrepreneurs (search funders, individuals on SBA 7(a)), local plumbing operators consolidating a second location, and occasional industry strategics. Multiples push toward the high end when the owner has built recurring service contracts (maintenance plans, commercial accounts), has a documented technician retention story, and has a transferable NSCB qualifying party. Multiples compress toward the low end when the owner is the lead technician, there’s no recurring revenue, and the business is one-truck-one-owner.

Nevada $1M-$3M EBITDA plumbing platforms: 5.5-7.5x EBITDA. This is the lower middle market sweet spot, the tier where PE consolidators write add-on LOIs and where competitive bidding is most active. $1-5M of revenue, $1-3M EBITDA, 15-50 employees, multiple service trucks, residential and/or light commercial mix. Multiples are driven primarily by recurring service revenue percentage (maintenance plans, commercial contracts, water heater/softener subscription programs), technician retention, customer concentration (no single customer over 10% is the standard), and clean financials. Nevada-specific premium or compression vs national norm runs +/- 0.5-1.0x EBITDA based on metro and license environment.

Nevada $3M+ EBITDA plumbing platforms: 6.5-9x EBITDA. Institutional platform tier, the multiples that get press coverage. $10M+ revenue, $3M+ EBITDA, multi-truck fleet, residential and commercial mix, service plus light construction or service plus new construction, often with a recognizable local brand and long-tenured operations team. At this tier, the buyer pool concentrates: PE platforms (Apex, Wrench, Sila, Authority Brands acquirers, Champions Group, Redwood, ARS), strategic acquirers (Roto-Rooter / Chemed), and the largest family offices with home services platforms. Multiples for premier platforms with recurring service revenue >40%, EBITDA margins 15%+, and clean operational metrics can reach the top of the range.

Maintenance agreements add a 0.5-1.0x EBITDA premium. The single highest-leverage operational lever for Nevada plumbing owners 12-18 months pre-sale is launching or expanding a maintenance agreement program (annual plumbing tune-up, water heater flush, drain inspection, water quality test). 200 active members generating $80-150 each in recurring annual revenue creates $20-30K of high-margin recurring EBITDA, and buyers pay 2-4x revenue for that recurring revenue specifically, on top of the base multiple. Plumbing platforms with 15-30% of revenue from maintenance agreements command the high end of their tier’s multiple range.

Commercial vs residential mix as a multiple driver. Pure residential service plumbing trades at the multiples above. Pure new-construction plumbing (homebuilder subcontractor) trades at a 1-2x EBITDA discount due to project cyclicality and customer concentration risk. Light commercial service (restaurants, retail, small office) trades at near-residential multiples with a slight premium for stickier accounts. Heavy commercial service (large facility maintenance, hospital, manufacturing) trades at a premium, recurring stickier accounts, higher average ticket, lower customer churn, but requires institutional buyers comfortable with commercial diligence. In Nevada, the mix that maximizes multiple is typically 70% residential service / 30% light commercial recurring, with maintenance agreements layered on top.

PE buyers and consolidators actively acquiring plumbing businesses in Nevada

The active 2026 Nevada plumbing buyer pool divides into five archetypes, each with distinct deal preferences, multiples, and process timelines. Understanding which archetype fits your business is the highest-leverage positioning decision in any plumbing M&A process. Nevada-specific buyer-pool depth is summarized below by archetype, with named platforms and known Nevada deal activity.

Archetype 1: PE-backed multi-state home services platforms (the largest acquirers by deal volume). Apex Service Partners (Alpine Investors, active Nevada deployment with Las Vegas-metro add-ons); Wrench Group (TSG/Oak Hill, Las Vegas market expansion); Authority Brands (Apax Partners, Benjamin Franklin Plumbing and Mr. Rooter franchisees in Las Vegas and Reno); Champions Group (Blackstone (Feb 2026), Nevada footprint under the new Blackstone platform); Redwood Services (Altas Partners, Mountain West expansion including Nevada); Roto-Rooter (Chemed Corporation, NYSE: CHE) (public, operates Las Vegas and Reno branches). These platforms target $1M-$5M EBITDA add-ons in metro markets with recurring service revenue, residential focus, and clean operational metrics. They pay 5.5-7.5x EBITDA, close in 90-120 days post-LOI, and offer a mix of cash plus rollover equity. They’re your most likely buyer if you’re a $1M+ EBITDA platform in Las Vegas.

Archetype 2: Authority Brands franchisees and franchise consolidators. Authority Brands (owned by Apax Partners, headquartered in Columbia, MD) is the largest residential home-services franchisor in the U.S., with brands including Benjamin Franklin Plumbing and Mr. Rooter (the latter under Neighborly Brands ownership / KKR). Active franchisees in Nevada are themselves acquirers, existing Benjamin Franklin or Mr. Rooter franchisees consolidating territory by acquiring independent local competitors and converting them to the franchise brand. Multiples paid are typically in line with PE platforms but the closing process runs through franchisor approval, adding 60-90 days.

Archetype 3: National strategic acquirers (Roto-Rooter / Chemed, ARS/Rescue Rooter, Service Experts). Roto-Rooter Group (owned by Chemed Corporation, NYSE: CHE) is the largest single plumbing brand in the U.S. and acquires regional plumbing platforms opportunistically, particularly drain cleaning and sewer line operators that fit Roto-Rooter’s service mix. ARS/Rescue Rooter (Charlesbank Capital Partners + GI Partners) is similarly active. These strategics pay full multiples but typically prefer larger ($3M+ EBITDA) platforms with established brand and metropolitan density. Nevada sellers in this size range should always include Roto-Rooter Group on the buyer list.

Archetype 4: Family offices and independent sponsors with home services theses. A growing 2024-2026 buyer category. Family offices increasingly write direct LOIs into home services platforms (avoiding GP fees and longer hold periods of traditional PE), and independent sponsors source one platform deal per year and raise equity on a deal-by-deal basis. They typically target $500K-$3M EBITDA businesses where they can hold 5-10 years and grow organically. Multiples paid are slightly below PE platforms (5-7x EBITDA) but offer the seller a longer hold horizon and often friendlier integration. Nevada platforms with $1M+ EBITDA frequently see 2-4 family office IOIs in a competitive process.

Archetype 5: Search funders and SBA-financed individual operators. For sub-$1M SDE plumbing shops in Nevada, the most likely buyer is an SBA 7(a)-financed individual, either a self-funded searcher with industry experience or a first-time entrepreneur with management background. SBA buyers typically pay 2.5-4x SDE, finance 75-90% via SBA, and require 15-25% seller financing on the difference. Nevada has an active SBA buyer pool concentrated in Las Vegas but functional in all metro markets. Sellers in this tier should expect 8-15 inquiries with proper outreach and 2-4 management meetings before a serious LOI emerges.

Business size SBA buyer Search funder Family office LMM PE Strategic
Under $250K SDEYesNoNoNoRare
$250K-$750K SDEYesSomeNoNoAdd-on
$750K-$1.5M SDESomeYesSomeAdd-onYes
$1.5M-$3M EBITDANoYesYesYesYes
$3M-$10M EBITDANoSomeYesYesYes
$10M+ EBITDANoNoYesYesYes
Buyer pool composition at each business-size tier. Multiples track the buyer’s capital structure, not the “quality” of the business. Pricing yourself against the wrong buyer pool is the most common positioning mistake.

Nevada State Contractors Board (NSCB): licensing and qualifying-party transfer at sale

Nevada plumbing licensing is administered by Nevada State Contractors Board (NSCB). Nevada plumbing contractors are licensed by the Nevada State Contractors Board (NSCB) under NRS Chapter 624. The relevant classification is C-1 (Plumbing and Heating). Each NSCB-licensed contractor must designate a Qualified Employee, an individual with at least 4 years of plumbing experience who passes the trade and business management exams. The license is tied to the entity but the Qualified Employee relationship must be re-verified when ownership changes substantially. Nevada also requires bonding ($15K-$50K based on monetary limit) and proof of workers’ compensation insurance.

Why this is the most common deal-killer. Buyers acquiring a Nevada plumbing business assume one of two things: that they have a qualified individual (master plumber, licensed contractor, qualifying party) on staff who can take over the NSCB role at close; or that the seller will stay on as the qualifying party for a transition period (typically 6-18 months under a written supervision agreement). When neither is true at LOI, the deal stalls. We’ve seen multiple Nevada plumbing deals collapse three weeks before close because the buyer’s qualifying party application was rejected, expired, or the seller refused to extend. This is fixable but requires planning.

The Nevada-specific timeline. Plan to either: (a) identify and hire a NSCB-qualifying employee on payroll 6-12 months before going to market, giving them full operational authority and ensuring they’re willing to remain post-close; (b) negotiate the seller’s continued role as qualifying party for 12-24 months at a fair-market consulting rate ($75-200K/year typical); or (c) accept that buyers without their own qualifying party will need 90-120 day post-LOI transition arrangements before NSCB approves the transfer.

What buyers will diligence on the licensing front. Buyers and their counsel will request: current NSCB license certificate showing entity name, qualifying party name, classification, and expiration; 5-year history of NSCB disciplinary actions (publicly searchable on the NSCB website); 5-year history of permits pulled and inspections passed/failed; continuing education compliance for the qualifying party; and confirmation of any pending complaints. Open complaints or recent disciplinary actions are deal-killers; clean records are price-protective. Pull your own record from https://www.nscb.nv.gov/ 18 months pre-sale and resolve any issues.

Continuing-education and renewal compliance. Most Nevada plumbing licensing requires continuing education credits for renewal of the qualifying party’s license. Lapsed CE or expired licenses that were not renewed during the diligence period have caused multiple deal delays. Confirm current standing of the qualifying party’s personal license and the entity’s contractor registration as part of pre-sale prep. Renew any imminent expirations before going to market, nothing slows a closing like a license that expired mid-diligence.

Bonding, insurance, and workers’ comp. Nevada plumbing contractors must maintain bonding (varies by classification), commercial general liability insurance, and workers’ compensation coverage for all employees. Buyers will diligence the certificates of insurance, claims history, and EMR (experience modification rate) carefully. Workers’ comp claims history above 1.0 EMR raises red flags and may compress the multiple. Address claims history actively in the 12 months before going to market; clean WC history is multiple-protective.

Nevada state tax implications for plumbing sellers in 2026

Nevada state tax treatment is the second-most-impactful variable on net-of-tax sale proceeds, after federal capital gains rate. Nevada has 0% state capital gains tax. Combined with no individual income tax generally, a Nevada plumbing seller keeps an additional $300K-$1.3M of after-tax proceeds on a $3-$10M sale versus a California, New York, or New Jersey seller, and meaningfully more than higher-tax neighbors.

How federal vs state tax stacks for a plumbing sale. The federal long-term capital gains rate is 20% for income over $518K (2026 thresholds) plus 3.8% NIIT on most asset sales, effectively 23.8% federal top rate. On top of that sits the Nevada rate of 0%. For a $5M plumbing sale with $4M of capital gains (after basis), the federal-plus-Nevada bill is roughly 0.95M, meaning your net-of-tax proceeds from a $5M sale work out to roughly 4.05M in Nevada, before any structural tax planning.

Asset sale vs stock sale: the Nevada consideration. Most plumbing M&A is structured as an asset sale (buyer steps into the operating assets without inheriting unknown liability, gets depreciation step-up). For the seller, asset sale creates a dual-tax problem: ordinary income on equipment/inventory recapture (taxed at marginal rates up to 37% federal + 0% state) and capital gains on goodwill (20% federal + state). Pushing more allocation to goodwill (less to equipment) materially improves after-tax outcome. A skilled tax attorney can typically shift $50-200K of after-tax proceeds in the seller’s favor through allocation negotiation, particularly with proper supporting appraisals.

F-reorganization and personal goodwill strategies. For C-corporation-structured plumbing businesses (rare but real, especially older shops that never reorganized), F-reorganization to convert to S-corp or LLC before sale can avoid double-taxation but requires 12-18 months of planning. Personal goodwill arguments, allocating part of the purchase price to the seller’s personal reputation, customer relationships, and skills (vs entity-level goodwill), produce single-layer capital gains taxation but require defensible documentation and are often litigated by the IRS. Both strategies are real but require qualified tax counsel from the LOI stage forward, not after the deal closes.

Installment sale and seller financing tax treatment. Many sub-$3M plumbing deals in Nevada include 15-30% seller financing, meaning the seller takes a note from the buyer for a portion of the purchase price. Under IRC §453, installment sale treatment allows the seller to recognize gain (and pay tax) only as principal payments are received, smoothing the tax bill across multiple years and potentially keeping the seller below higher tax brackets in any single year. Nevada state generally conforms to federal installment sale rules. This is one of the cleanest tax-deferral strategies available and is materially underused by sellers.

Strategic relocation as a tax strategy. For high-tax-state Nevada sellers (CA, NY, NJ, IL, MA, OR), strategic relocation to a no-tax state (TX, FL, TN, NV, WA, WY) before sale can save $200K-$1M+ on a $3-$10M sale. But the move must be genuine: real domicile change (driver’s license, voter registration, primary residence, time spent) for typically 18+ months before sale, or state revenue departments will challenge the move and assert clawback. Not typically relevant for Nevada sellers given the modest state tax burden.

The five buyer archetypes for Nevada plumbing businesses

Knowing your buyer archetype changes the multiple, the timeline, and the deal terms you should expect. In Nevada plumbing M&A, the five archetypes are PE-backed home services platforms, franchise consolidators, national strategics, family offices / independent sponsors, and SBA-financed individuals. Each underwrites differently, each pays different multiples, and each has different deal pace. Targeting the wrong archetype wastes 6-9 months and signals naivety to the right buyers.

Archetype 1: PE-backed multi-state home services platforms. What they want: $1M-$5M EBITDA add-ons with recurring service revenue 30%+, residential focus, low customer concentration, clean financials, and metropolitan density (preferably Las Vegas). What they pay: 5.5-7.5x EBITDA cash plus 10-25% rollover equity. Timeline: 90-120 days post-LOI to close. Active in Nevada: Apex Service Partners, Wrench Group, Authority Brands, Champions Group, Redwood Services, Roto-Rooter (Chemed Corporation, NYSE: CHE). How they evaluate: management presentation, normalized EBITDA review, technician retention deep-dive, fleet age, customer concentration analysis, and growth runway. Sellers fitting this profile see the most competitive bidding.

Archetype 2: Franchise consolidators (Authority Brands franchisees, Mr. Rooter franchise network). What they want: independent residential plumbers in their territory or adjacent territories, where converting the brand to franchise creates value via national marketing co-op, supply chain leverage, and operational systems. What they pay: 4-6x EBITDA typically, slightly below PE platforms. Timeline: longer (120-180 days) due to franchisor approval. Multiples can be higher when the franchisee values geographic continuity. For Nevada sellers: include Benjamin Franklin Plumbing and Mr. Rooter franchisees in your buyer outreach if you’re in the right metro.

Archetype 3: National strategics (Roto-Rooter / Chemed, ARS/Rescue Rooter, Service Experts). What they want: established regional brands, sewer/drain cleaning specialists, water heater service operators, and platforms with $3M+ EBITDA in major metros. What they pay: full market multiples (6-9x EBITDA for premier platforms). Timeline: institutional pace (120-180 days). They’re slower than PE platforms but more reliable closers and offer deeper integration support. For Nevada platforms with $3M+ EBITDA in Las Vegas, always include Roto-Rooter Group in the buyer list.

Archetype 4: Family offices and independent sponsors. What they want: $500K-$3M EBITDA businesses with growth runway, willing to hold 5-10 years (longer than PE’s 4-7 year typical hold). What they pay: 5-7x EBITDA with often more flexible deal structure (higher rollover, friendlier earnouts). Timeline: 90-150 days. They’re lower-volume buyers but produce well-fit deals when the seller wants a long-term home for the business and team. In Nevada, expect 2-5 family office IOIs in a competitive process for $1M+ EBITDA platforms.

Archetype 5: SBA-financed individuals and search funders. What they want: sub-$1M SDE single-location or two-location plumbing shops with documented SOPs, transferable owner role, and 5+ years of clean tax returns. What they pay: 2.5-4x SDE, financed 75-90% via SBA 7(a). Timeline: 120-180 days due to SBA underwriting. Active in Nevada via local self-funded searchers and out-of-state buyers willing to relocate. For Nevada sellers in this tier, expect 8-15 inquiries with proper outreach, the SBA buyer pool is functional in all major Nevada metros.

How to match yourself to the right archetype. $3M+ EBITDA, recurring service 30%+, established brand: target PE platforms and national strategics. $1-3M EBITDA, residential focus, metropolitan density: target PE platforms and family offices. $500K-$1M EBITDA, mostly residential, owner-operator transitioning: target family offices, independent sponsors, and franchise consolidators. Sub-$500K SDE, owner-as-technician, single location: target SBA-financed individuals. Targeting outside your archetype either compresses your multiple or stalls your process.

What drives premium multiples for Nevada plumbing businesses in 2026

Premium multiples come from a specific operational checklist, not from a great pitch deck. In Nevada plumbing M&A, the difference between a 4x EBITDA exit and a 7x EBITDA exit is rarely about the buyer pool, it’s about operational metrics that buyers and their CPAs verify in diligence. The seven highest-leverage premium drivers are listed below.

Driver 1: Recurring service revenue percentage (the single highest-leverage lever). Maintenance plan members, commercial service contracts, water heater/softener subscription programs, and sewer line warranty programs all create recurring monthly revenue that buyers underwrite at 2-4x revenue (vs 1x revenue for project-based work). Plumbing platforms with 30-50% of revenue from recurring service trade at the top of their tier’s multiple range. Owners who launch a maintenance plan 18-24 months pre-sale and grow it to 200-500 members can add 0.5-1.0x EBITDA to their exit multiple.

Driver 2: Technician retention and bench depth. Buyers underwrite the operational risk of losing the seller’s relationship and key technicians. Plumbing platforms with average tenure of technicians 5+ years, a documented apprentice-to-journeyman pipeline, and zero exposure to a single technician who could walk and take 30% of revenue with them trade at premium multiples. Plumbing platforms with high turnover (industry average is 35-45%, but premium operators run 15-25%) trade at compressed multiples or get re-priced in diligence.

Driver 3: Customer concentration discipline. No single customer over 10% of revenue is the institutional standard. Plumbing platforms with 30%+ revenue from a single customer (typically a property management company, a homebuilder, or a large commercial client) trade at compressed multiples because of concentration risk. Nevada sellers should diligence their own concentration 12-18 months pre-sale and actively diversify if needed, this is materially more impactful than most operational changes.

Driver 4: Documented financial systems and clean books. CPA-prepared annual financials (not bookkeeper-only). Monthly close by the 15th of the following month. Job costing on every job (residential service usually doesn’t job-cost, premium operators do). Field service management software (ServiceTitan, Housecall Pro, FieldEdge) with integrated accounting. QoE-ready dataroom: 36 months of P&Ls, balance sheets, cash flow, payroll registers, vendor invoices, and a documented add-back schedule. The cleaner the books, the higher the multiple, because the buyer’s downside scenario is bounded.

Driver 5: Fleet quality and equipment condition. Trucks 5 years old or less with documented maintenance, branded uniforms, modern uniforms, and customer-facing technology (digital invoices, online scheduling, real-time GPS) signal a professionally-run business. Aging fleet, owner-driven 1990s vans, and paper-based invoicing signal under-investment and compress multiples. Buyers literally drive past the yard during their on-site visit and form impressions about operational discipline based on what they see.

Driver 6: Online reputation and lead generation diversification. 4.7+ stars on Google with 500+ reviews, top-3 search ranking for ‘plumber [city]’ in Las Vegas, and a documented organic + paid lead generation system (SEO, Google Local Service Ads, paid search, repeat customer marketing) signal sustainable growth. Concentration risk in lead sources (90% leads from one channel like Yelp or one referral partner) compresses multiples because the buyer’s post-close marketing risk is high. Nevada platforms with diversified lead generation trade at the top of their tier.

Driver 7: Owner-replaceability. The single most-underweighted lever among small plumbing owners. If you’re the lead technician, the lead estimator, the lead salesperson, the QuickBooks operator, and the main customer-facing brand, your business is unbuyable at premium multiples no matter the financials. Promote or hire a general manager / operations lead 18-24 months pre-sale, transition operational responsibility, take a 30-day vacation 6-12 months before going to market. Buyers will explicitly diligence this; they often ask for proof of an extended owner absence and check with key staff to verify operations continuity. The multiple uplift from a transferable owner role is typically 1-1.5x EBITDA, the highest-ROI prep work you can do.

Selling a plumbing business in Nevada? Talk to a buy-side partner who already knows the buyers.

We’re a buy-side partner. Not a sell-side broker. Not a sell-side advisor. We work directly with 76+ active U.S. lower middle market buyers, and 16 of them actively bid on plumbing businesses in Nevada, including PE-backed home services consolidators (Apex Service Partners, Wrench Group, Sila Services, Champions Group, Authority Brands franchisees, Redwood Services), national strategics (Roto-Rooter / Chemed, ARS/Rescue Rooter), family offices with home services theses, and SBA-financed individuals, who pay us when a deal closes. You pay nothing. No retainer, no exclusivity, no 12-month contract, no tail fee. We’re a buy-side partner working with 76+ active buyers… the buyers pay us, not you, no contract required. A 15-minute call gets you three things: a real read on what your Nevada plumbing business is worth in today’s market, a short list of buyers who fit, and the option to meet one of them. If none of it is useful, you’ve lost 15 minutes.

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Deal-killers and diligence flags specific to Nevada plumbing M&A

Most Nevada plumbing deals that fall apart fall apart for one of seven reasons. Knowing them in advance is the difference between a clean exit and a re-trade. This list reflects patterns we’ve seen across direct work with 76+ active U.S. lower middle market buyers, syndicated diligence findings, and post-mortems on failed deals in Nevada and adjacent markets.

Deal-killer 1: NSCB qualifying party can’t transfer cleanly. Already covered in detail above. The single most common deal-killer in Nevada plumbing M&A. Fixable with 12-18 months of preparation; unfixable when discovered three weeks before close.

Deal-killer 2: Customer concentration above 25-30%. Single-customer concentration above 25-30% of revenue (property management company, homebuilder partner, large commercial account, government contract) creates buyer hesitancy. At 40%+, most institutional buyers walk. Mitigation: actively diversify the customer base 12-18 months pre-sale, document referral sources, or pre-negotiate longer-term contracts with the concentrated customer that survive change-of-control.

Deal-killer 3: Workers’ comp claims history above 1.0 EMR. Plumbing is a physical trade with real injury exposure. EMR (experience modification rate) above 1.0 indicates above-industry-average workers’ comp claims, raises the buyer’s post-close insurance cost by 10-30%, and signals operational discipline issues. Address actively in the 12 months before going to market: safety program documentation, OSHA compliance, claims management, and proactive return-to-work protocols all reduce EMR over time.

Deal-killer 4: NSCB monetary limit on contractor licenses (must match actual project size, exceeded limits create license violations), Las Vegas Valley Water District backflo NSCB monetary limit on contractor licenses (must match actual project size, exceeded limits create license violations), Las Vegas Valley Water District backflow requirements, and prevailing wage on public works under NRS 338. Each of these is Nevada-specific and surfaces in diligence. Prevailing wage exposure on past public works can create back-wage liability of $50K-$500K+; misclassification of W-2 vs 1099 plumbers can create payroll tax assessments going back 3-7 years. Both are usually fixable with proactive cleanup but expensive when discovered in diligence vs proactively before going to market.

Deal-killer 5: Aggressive add-backs that don’t survive QoE. Plumbing owners who pile $200-500K of personal-use add-backs onto a $500K-$1M SDE business signal lack of seriousness to institutional buyers. The QoE process (Quality of Earnings, engaged by buyer post-LOI) routinely cuts 30-50% of aggressive add-backs, re-pricing the deal at the same multiple but on a smaller base. The right pre-sale prep is to clean books for 24+ months with reasonable add-backs documented by receipts, not to maximize the SDE number with claims that won’t survive scrutiny.

Deal-killer 6: Technician shortage at LOI signing. Plumbing labor markets are tight nationally, and Nevada is no exception. If two of your top three technicians give notice between LOI and close (because they heard the rumor and started interviewing), the buyer can re-price or walk. Mitigation: time your LOI announcement carefully, structure retention bonuses for key technicians (typically $5-25K paid 90 days post-close conditioned on continued employment), and include retention guarantees in the buyer’s offer if needed.

Deal-killer 7: Open litigation, regulatory complaints, or unresolved customer disputes. Active lawsuits, BBB complaints in process, NSCB complaints under investigation, or unresolved insurance claims (particularly water damage claims from past work) all create buyer concern about hidden liability. Nevada NSCB disciplinary records are public, pull yours 18 months pre-sale and resolve any issues. Document any past resolved disputes with releases and proper paper trails. Clean records are price-protective; messy records are deal-killers.

The Nevada plumbing sale process: realistic timeline and milestones

A Nevada plumbing sale typically runs 6-12 months from prep-complete to close, depending on size and buyer archetype. Sub-$1M SDE shops sold to SBA-financed individuals: 6-9 months. $1-3M EBITDA platforms sold to PE consolidators: 4-8 months post-LOI (institutional pace). $3M+ EBITDA platforms sold to PE/strategic with QoE process: 6-10 months. Add 12-24 months on the front for proper preparation if your books, license, recurring revenue, and operational metrics aren’t already buyer-ready.

Months 18-12 pre-sale: financial cleanup and operational metrics. Move to monthly closes by the 15th. Engage a CPA for annual financial statements (review or audit, not just bookkeeper-prepared). Implement field service management software if not already in place (ServiceTitan, Housecall Pro). Document add-backs with receipts. Begin tracking the metrics buyers underwrite (revenue per truck, gross margin per service call, recurring revenue %, customer retention, technician productivity).

Months 12-6 pre-sale: license, customer base, and team. Confirm NSCB qualifying-party transfer plan. Resolve any open complaints. Renew expiring licenses. Diversify customer concentration if needed. Reduce owner dependency: promote/hire a general manager, transition operational responsibility, take a 30-day vacation 6-9 months before going to market. Build technician retention program (retention bonuses, profit sharing, training pipeline). All of these are 0.5-1.0x EBITDA premium drivers.

Months 6-0 pre-launch: data room, CIM, buyer outreach plan. Compile 36 months of tax returns, P&Ls, balance sheets, payroll registers, vendor invoices, customer lists (sanitized), license documentation, lease agreements, and operational metrics. Build a CIM emphasizing the buyer-relevant story: recurring revenue mix for PE platforms, operational efficiency for SBA buyers, geographic density for multi-state strategics. Engage tax counsel for asset allocation strategy. Identify the right 15-25 buyer targets, not the broker’s broad list of 200.

Months 0-3 going to market: outreach and IOIs. Targeted outreach to the 15-25 right buyers (PE platforms, family offices, strategics, franchise consolidators, SBA individuals depending on your size). NDA and CIM distribution. Initial buyer calls and management presentations. Indications of interest (IOIs) from 4-8 buyers typical for a well-prepared $1M+ EBITDA platform. Narrowing to 2-4 second-round meetings, then 1-2 LOIs.

Months 3-7: LOI, QoE, purchase agreement, close. LOI signing (60-90 day exclusivity typical for institutional deals). Quality of Earnings engagement by the buyer (30-45 days, $40-80K cost on a $5M+ deal). Operational diligence (license confirmation, customer reference calls, technician interviews, insurance/WC review). Purchase agreement negotiation (escrow, indemnification, non-compete, working capital target, transition services). Lender financing (SBA or conventional). Close, with 30-90 day post-close transition. Common fall-through points: license transfer (10-20% of cases), QoE re-pricing (15-25%), buyer financing (5-10%).

The 5-Stage Owner Transition Timeline The 5-Stage Owner Transition Timeline From day-to-day operator to fully transitioned, typically 18-36 months Stage 1 Operator Owner = full-time in the business Month 0 Pre-prep state Stage 2 Documenter SOPs, financials, org chart built Month 6-12 Buyer-readiness Stage 3 Delegator Manager takes day-to-day ops Month 12-18 Owner-independent Stage 4 Closer LOI, diligence, close Month 18-24 Sale process Stage 5 Transitioned Consulting wind-down, earnout vesting Month 24-36 Post-close Skipping stages 2-3 is the #1 reason succession plans fail at the LOI stage
Illustrative timeline. Real durations vary by business size, owner involvement, and successor readiness. Owners who compress these stages typically lose 20-40% of valuation in the sale process.

How CT Acquisitions works for Nevada plumbing sellers

We’re a buy-side partner, not a sell-side broker. Sell-side brokers represent you and charge you 8-12% of the deal (often $300K-$1M on a typical Nevada plumbing exit) plus monthly retainers, run a 9-12 month auction process, and require 12-month exclusivity. Their incentive is to maximize the headline deal price, even if that means stretching diligence and risking deal failure. We’re different: we work directly with 76+ active U.S. lower middle market buyers who pay us when a deal closes, not you. No retainer, no exclusivity, no contract until a buyer is at the closing table.

Of our 76+ buyers, 16 actively bid on plumbing businesses in Nevada as of May 2026. That includes Apex Service Partners, Wrench Group, Authority Brands, Champions Group, Redwood Services, Roto-Rooter (Chemed Corporation, NYSE: CHE), plus regional rollups, family offices with home services theses, multi-state strategics, search funders, and SBA-financed individuals. For each Nevada plumbing seller, we identify the 5-10 buyers most likely to fit (not 200) based on size, metro, recurring revenue mix, residential vs commercial split, and growth trajectory.

How a typical engagement works. Step 1: 15-minute discovery call. We learn your business, your goals, and what a successful exit looks like to you. No NDA, no commitment, no cost. Step 2: We identify the 5-10 buyers most likely to fit and explain why. You decide whether to proceed. Step 3: We make warm introductions to the buyers you select. You meet them, evaluate fit, and decide whether to engage. Step 4: If you decide to move forward, we facilitate the diligence, support the LOI process, and shepherd the deal to close. You pay nothing throughout. The buyer pays us when the deal closes.

Why this works better for plumbing sellers than a sell-side auction. Plumbing buyer pools are deep but specific. Apex doesn’t want a $400K SDE shop; an SBA individual can’t finance a $20M revenue platform; a family office wants different deal terms than a PE platform. Auctions waste time pitching the wrong buyers and signal weakness when the right buyers see your CIM in their inbox alongside 50 other generalist deals. Targeted outreach to pre-qualified buyers closes faster (60-150 days vs 9-12 months) and produces better-fit buyers.

What you get from us, specifically. A real read on what your Nevada plumbing business is worth in today’s market (not a generic broker’s rosy estimate). A short list of pre-qualified buyers who actually want a Nevada plumbing platform this quarter. A view into deal terms (multiple, structure, rollover equity, earnout, transition arrangements) that buyers in your size range are paying right now. And the option to walk away after the discovery call with zero hooks.

What you don’t get from us. A 12-month exclusive contract. A sell-side fee that compounds against you when the deal price moves. A generic CIM blasted to 200 buyers. A broker incentivized to push you toward a sub-optimal close so they can earn their fee. A retainer that bills monthly regardless of progress. If we can’t add value to your specific situation, we say so on the discovery call, and you walk away with no cost and no commitment.

Recurring service revenue: the highest-leverage value driver in plumbing M&A

Plumbing buyers in 2026 underwrite recurring service revenue at 2-4x revenue, meaningfully higher than the 0.7-1.2x revenue paid for project-based work. This single fact is the highest-leverage operational lever for Nevada plumbing owners 12-24 months pre-sale. A maintenance plan with 200 active members at $120 average annual revenue is $24K of recurring revenue, which buyers underwrite at $50-100K of additional enterprise value. Compounding to 500 members: $60K recurring revenue, $120-240K of additional EV. To 1,000 members: $120K recurring revenue, $250-500K of additional EV. The ROI of building a maintenance plan in your final 24 months is typically 4-8x the cost of acquisition.

What a buyer-friendly maintenance plan looks like. Annual or bi-annual plumbing tune-up (water heater flush, drain inspection, water quality test, pressure check, leak detection). Membership pricing in the $99-180/year range. Members receive priority service, discounted repair pricing, and a direct service guarantee. Auto-renewal with stored payment methods. Documented retention rate (target: 80%+ year-2 retention). Member growth tracked monthly. Documentation of acquisition cost (typically $50-150 per member) and lifetime value (typically $400-800).

Commercial service contracts as recurring revenue. Beyond residential maintenance plans, commercial service contracts (restaurants, retail, property management, multi-family) create high-quality recurring revenue at premium tickets. A property management contract covering 50 buildings at $200/building/quarter generates $40K of recurring annual revenue and rarely churns. Buyers value commercial recurring revenue at the high end of the recurring revenue range (3-4x revenue) because of the stickiness. For Nevada plumbing platforms targeting institutional exit, commercial service contract development is the most-underrated 24-month operational lever.

Water heater and water softener subscription programs. A 2024-2026 emerging trend in plumbing recurring revenue: water heater rental/subscription programs (similar to HVAC equipment-as-a-service). Rather than selling a $1,500-3,000 water heater outright, the plumber installs a tankless or hybrid water heater under a $50-100/month subscription that includes installation, maintenance, repair, and replacement. Subscription water heaters create 10-15 year recurring relationships and are highly valuable to acquirers. Several large Nevada plumbing platforms have launched these programs.

Sewer line and drain warranty programs. A subset of recurring revenue: sewer line warranty programs (annual subscription, $150-300/year) covering drain cleaning service calls and partial-coverage of major sewer line replacement. These work especially well in Nevada markets with aging housing stock and recurring sewer line failures. Properly documented (subscriber count, retention, claims experience), they trade at 3-4x revenue.

How buyers verify recurring revenue claims. During QoE, buyers reconcile maintenance plan member count and revenue against bank deposits, recurring billing system reports (typically billed via the field service management software), and customer-by-customer revenue. Inflated or fabricated recurring revenue is a deal-killer that surfaces immediately. The right approach is to build real recurring revenue with real members and real retention, documented cleanly, over 18-24 months. Buyers reward authentic recurring revenue with materially higher multiples; they punish exaggerated claims by re-pricing or walking.

Common mistakes Nevada plumbing sellers make, and how to avoid them

Mistake 1: Going to market without NSCB qualifying-party planning. Already covered. Most common deal-killer in Nevada plumbing M&A. Fix: 12-18 months of preparation, identifying the qualifying-party transition plan (hire on staff, retain seller, or buyer brings their own).

Mistake 2: Anchoring on national multiple averages instead of Nevada-specific data. Reading that ‘plumbing businesses sell for 6x EBITDA’ and assuming your $400K SDE shop should sell for 6x. That headline number describes $5M+ EBITDA platforms with recurring service. Anchor on tier-specific data: sub-$1M SDE shops in Nevada = 2.5-4x SDE; $1-3M EBITDA platforms = 5.5-7.5x EBITDA; $3M+ EBITDA platforms = 6.5-9x EBITDA.

Mistake 3: Refusing rollover equity reflexively. Most PE-backed home services platforms offer rollover equity (10-30% of consideration in equity of the acquiring platform). Sellers reflexively refuse because they want all cash. The reality: rollover equity in a well-managed plumbing platform routinely produces 2-3x return over 4-7 years, often outperforming the cash portion of the deal. Refusing rollover signals lack of belief in the platform and can compress the headline multiple. Negotiate rollover terms (preferred class, anti-dilution, drag/tag rights) rather than refusing entirely.

Mistake 4: Not addressing customer concentration before going to market. A property management company representing 35% of revenue, or a homebuilder representing 40%, kills deals at LOI when the buyer realizes the concentration. Fix: 12-18 months of intentional diversification (new commercial accounts, residential growth, marketing investment). Or pre-negotiate longer-term contracts with the concentrated customer that survive change-of-control. Or accept that institutional buyers will pass and target SBA individuals or family offices instead.

Mistake 5: Selling too early in your maintenance plan growth curve. A maintenance plan with 50 members on a 5,000-customer base signals you’ve barely started. Buyers know the playbook and will price the lack of recurring revenue. Wait 12-18 months, grow the plan to 200-500 members, document retention, and capture the 0.5-1.0x EBITDA multiple uplift. The wait pays for itself many times over.

Mistake 6: Underestimating the impact of the Nevada-specific tax position. A Nevada seller benefits from the state’s no-income-tax position and can keep the full federal-after-tax proceeds. This is one of the largest comparative advantages Nevada sellers have versus high-tax states, and one of the reasons Nevada has become a relocation destination for sellers from CA, NY, NJ, IL.

Mistake 7: Hiring a generic business broker instead of a vertical-specific intermediary. Generic business brokers represent restaurants, dry cleaners, and plumbing platforms with the same playbook. Plumbing buyers (PE platforms, franchise consolidators, family offices) won’t engage seriously with a CIM from a generalist broker. Either hire a vertical-specific sell-side advisor (limited number of firms; fees 5-8%) or work with a buy-side partner (you pay nothing; the buyers pay us when a deal closes). Either way, vertical specificity is non-negotiable for plumbing exits above $1M EBITDA.

Sell Your Plumbing Business in Other States: Sibling Guides

Sibling state guides for selling a plumbing business. Each guide below covers state-specific licensing, multiple ranges, tax considerations, and named PE buyers active in that geography. If you operate in multiple states, the multi-state premium typically adds 0.5-1.5x to EBITDA multiple at exit (buyers value contiguous coverage).

State-by-state guides: Sell Your Plumbing Business in Texas · Sell Your Plumbing Business in Florida · Sell Your Plumbing Business in California · Sell Your Plumbing Business in New York · Sell Your Plumbing Business in Pennsylvania · Sell Your Plumbing Business in Illinois · Sell Your Plumbing Business in Ohio · Sell Your Plumbing Business in Georgia

For valuation context that applies regardless of state: See our plumbing business valuation guide for nationwide multiple ranges and PE buyer pool. Run our free 90-second valuation calculator for a starting-point estimate. Or browse the full sell-your-business hub for all verticals and states.

Metro-by-metro deal dynamics across Nevada

Nevada is not a single uniform plumbing M&A market. Each metro has different buyer-pool depth, multiple ranges, and operational cost structures. This section breaks down the Nevada metros where active 2026 deal flow concentrates. Las Vegas metro and Henderson trade at premium multiples (deepest PE buyer pools in Nevada); Reno-Sparks at system average; rural Nevada (Elko, Pahrump) at thinner-pool discounts.

Las Vegas (the deepest pool). The largest plumbing M&A market in Nevada. PE consolidators, national strategics, family offices, and SBA buyers all maintain active interest. Multiples for $1M+ EBITDA platforms run at the top of Nevada’s ranges. Premium drivers: density, brand recognition, recurring revenue scale, and proximity to other Las Vegas platforms for add-on synergy. Sellers in this metro frequently see 5-10 IOIs in a competitive process.

Reno (secondary major metro). Active but slightly less competitive than Las Vegas. Most major PE platforms have or are seeking a presence. Multiples typically run 0.25-0.5x EBITDA below Las Vegas averages due to slightly thinner buyer pool, but premium platforms with $2M+ EBITDA still command competitive bidding. SBA individual buyers are well-represented.

Henderson and tertiary metros. Real but thinner. Multiples for $1M+ EBITDA platforms run 0.5-1.0x below the primary metro. Buyer pool depth is sufficient for 2-4 IOIs in a competitive process; sub-$1M SDE shops still see strong SBA interest. Tier benefits from regional growth dynamics and lower operating costs than the primary metros.

Rural and small-metro Nevada. Plumbing M&A in rural Nevada is functional but limited. PE platforms generally pass below certain density thresholds. SBA buyers occasionally relocate but the pool is thin. Multiples run 1-1.5x EBITDA below metro averages. The most likely buyer is a regional consolidator from an adjacent major metro looking to extend territory, or a local strategic looking to add a second/third location. Sellers in rural Nevada should still expect 2-4 IOIs with proper outreach, just at compressed multiples.

How to position based on metro. Major metro sellers should target PE platforms and national strategics first (highest multiples, fastest close). Secondary metro sellers should target PE platforms and family offices (slightly lower multiples but still institutional). Tertiary metro sellers should target family offices, regional consolidators, and SBA-financed strategic buyers. Rural Nevada sellers should focus on regional consolidators from adjacent metros and SBA individuals willing to relocate. Right-fit positioning matters more than headline multiple range.

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Sell Your Plumbing Business in Nevada: 2026 Outlook and Key Takeaways

Selling a plumbing business in Nevada in 2026 is a real opportunity for prepared owners. The PE-backed buyer pool is the deepest it’s ever been. Multiples for $1M+ EBITDA platforms are competitive (5.5-7.5x EBITDA typical), and Nevada-specific dynamics, NSCB licensing, no-tax post-sale economics, Las Vegas metro has been one of the fastest-growing housing markets in the U.S., Clark County added 400K+ residents fro…, all create state-specific considerations that prepared sellers can navigate. The owners who exit cleanly are the ones who started preparing 12-24 months ahead: clean books, recurring service revenue >30%, transferable NSCB qualifying party, technician retention discipline, owner-replaceability, and the right buyer archetype targeted from day one. Owners who skip prep don’t exit faster, they exit at 30-50% lower after-tax proceeds. Use the free calculator above for a starting-point range. If you want to talk to someone who already knows the Nevada plumbing buyers personally instead of running an auction to find them, we’re a buy-side partner. Of our 76+ buyers, 16 actively bid on plumbing businesses in Nevada. The buyers pay us, not you, no contract required.

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

Sell Your Plumbing Business in Nevada: Frequently Asked Questions

How much is my plumbing business worth in Nevada?

Sub-$2M revenue residential service: 0.7-1.2x revenue or 3.5-5x SDE. $1M-$3M EBITDA platforms: 5.5-7.5x EBITDA from PE rollups. $3M+ EBITDA platforms: 6.5-9x EBITDA. Multiples shift based on recurring service revenue percentage, technician retention, customer concentration, NSCB licensing transfer cleanliness, and metro positioning. Use the free valuation calculator above for a starting-point range.

Who actually buys plumbing businesses in Nevada in 2026?

Five buyer archetypes: PE-backed home services platforms (Apex Service Partners, Wrench Group, Authority Brands, Champions Group), franchise consolidators (Authority Brands franchisees, Mr. Rooter franchisees), national strategics (Roto-Rooter / Chemed, ARS/Rescue Rooter), family offices with home services theses, and SBA-financed individuals. Of our 76+ buyers, 16 actively bid on Nevada plumbing businesses as of May 2026.

What does the Nevada State Contractors Board (NSCB) require for a sale?

Nevada plumbing contractors are licensed by the Nevada State Contractors Board (NSCB) under NRS Chapter 624. The relevant classification is C-1 (Plumbing and Heating). Each NSCB-licensed contractor must designate a Qualified Employee, an individual with at least 4 years of plumbing experience who passes the trade and business management exams. The license is tied to the entity but the Qualified E Plan 12-18 months for clean licensing transfer.

What state tax does Nevada charge on a plumbing business sale?

Nevada has 0% state capital gains tax. Combined with no individual income tax generally, a Nevada plumbing seller keeps an additional $300K-$1.3M of after-tax proceeds on a $3-$10M sale versus a California, New York, or New Jersey seller, and meaningfully more than higher-tax neighbors.

What multiples do plumbing businesses sell for in 2026?

National 2026 ranges: 1.7-3x SDE for sub-$1M SDE owner-operated shops; 4-7x EBITDA for $1-5M EBITDA platforms; 6-11x EBITDA for $5M+ EBITDA institutional platforms with recurring service. Nevada-specific ranges: sub-$2M revenue residential service = 0.7-1.2x revenue or 3.5-5x SDE; $1-3M EBITDA platforms = 5.5-7.5x EBITDA; $3M+ EBITDA platforms = 6.5-9x EBITDA. Maintenance agreements, technician retention, and clean financials all push multiples higher within these ranges.

What’s the difference between SDE and EBITDA for a plumbing business?

SDE (Seller’s Discretionary Earnings) adds back the owner’s salary and benefits and is the standard metric for sub-$1M SDE owner-operated plumbing shops sold to SBA buyers. EBITDA does not add back owner compensation and is the standard for $1M+ EBITDA platforms sold to PE buyers (who will pay or hire a CEO/President). The same business can have very different SDE and EBITDA numbers; using the wrong metric materially miscommunicates your valuation.

How long does it take to sell a plumbing business in Nevada?

Sub-$1M SDE shops sold to SBA-financed individuals: 6-9 months. $1-3M EBITDA platforms sold to PE consolidators: 4-8 months post-LOI. $3M+ EBITDA platforms with QoE process: 6-10 months. Add 12-24 months on the front for proper preparation if your books, license transfer plan, recurring revenue, and operational metrics aren’t already buyer-ready.

What pre-sale prep should I do?

Months 18-12: clean books to monthly closes, CPA-prepared financials, field service management software in place. Months 12-6: confirm NSCB qualifying-party transition plan, diversify customer concentration, build maintenance plan to 200+ members, reduce owner dependency. Months 6-0: build data room, target the right 15-25 buyers (not 200), engage tax counsel for asset allocation. The work compounds: prepared sellers exit at 30-50% better after-tax outcomes.

How do maintenance plans affect valuation?

Maintenance plans are the single highest-leverage operational lever for plumbing valuation. Buyers underwrite recurring service revenue at 2-4x revenue (vs 0.7-1.2x for project-based work). 200 members at $120 average annual revenue = $24K recurring revenue worth $50-100K of additional EV. 500 members = $60K recurring worth $120-240K EV. Building a maintenance plan over 18-24 months pre-sale typically returns 4-8x the investment in higher exit price.

Should I refuse rollover equity?

Probably not. Most PE-backed home services platforms offer 10-30% rollover equity, and rollover in well-managed platforms historically produces 2-3x return over 4-7 years. Reflexively refusing rollover signals lack of belief in the platform and compresses your headline multiple. Better approach: negotiate rollover terms (preferred class, anti-dilution, drag/tag rights, governance protections) rather than refusing entirely.

What happens if my customer concentration is over 25%?

Single-customer concentration above 25-30% creates buyer hesitancy; above 40%, most institutional buyers walk. Mitigation options: (1) actively diversify the customer base 12-18 months pre-sale; (2) pre-negotiate longer-term contracts with the concentrated customer that survive change-of-control; (3) accept that institutional buyers will pass and target SBA individuals or family offices comfortable with concentration.

What about commercial vs residential plumbing, which sells for higher multiples?

Mixed-mix wins. 70% residential service / 30% light commercial recurring is the sweet spot for institutional buyers. Pure residential service trades at the multiples above. Pure new-construction (homebuilder subcontractor) trades at a 1-2x EBITDA discount due to project cyclicality. Heavy commercial service trades at premium for stickier accounts but requires institutional buyers comfortable with commercial diligence. Maintenance plans layered onto either creates the highest multiple.

How is CT Acquisitions different from a sell-side broker or M&A advisor?

We’re a buy-side partner, not a sell-side broker. Sell-side brokers represent you and charge you 8-12% of the deal (often $300K-$1M on a typical Nevada plumbing exit) plus monthly retainers, run a 9-12 month auction process, and require 12-month exclusivity. We work directly with 76+ buyers, including 16 who actively bid on Nevada plumbing businesses, who pay us when a deal closes. You pay nothing. No retainer, no exclusivity, no contract until a buyer is at the closing table. You can walk after the discovery call with zero hooks. We move faster (60-150 days from intro to close at the right tier) because we already know who the right buyer is rather than running an auction to find one.

Sources & References

All claims and figures in this analysis are sourced from the publicly available references below.

  1. https://www.nscb.nv.gov/
  2. https://tax.nv.gov/
  3. https://alpineinvestors.com/portfolio/
  4. https://www.wrenchgroup.com/
  5. https://www.silaservices.com/
  6. https://www.authoritybrands.com/our-brands/
  7. https://www.chemed.com/
  8. https://www.sba.gov/funding-programs/loans/7a-loans
  9. Nevada State Contractors Board
  10. Nevada Census QuickFacts

Related Guide: How to Sell a Plumbing Business: The Full 2026 Guide, Pre-sale prep, valuation, buyer pool, and process for plumbing exits.

Related Guide: How Much Is a Plumbing Business Worth?, Realistic 2026 multiples by size, recurring revenue mix, and metro.

Related Guide: 2026 Plumbing PE Roll-Up Tracker: Active Platforms, Apex, Wrench, Sila, Champions, Authority Brands, Redwood, who’s buying what.

Related Guide: Buyer Archetypes: PE, Strategic, Search Fund, Family Office, How each buyer underwrites differently and what they pay for.

Related Guide: Business Valuation Calculator (2026), Quick starting-point valuation range based on SDE/EBITDA and industry.

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