Free EBITDA calculator. Compute earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation & amortization. Show EBITDA margin, compare industry multiples, and value your business.
EBITDA — Earnings Before Interest, Taxes, Depreciation, and Amortization — is the most widely used profitability metric for business valuation, M&A, and comparing companies across industries. It strips out financing decisions, tax strategies, and accounting methods to reveal core operating earnings.
Investors and acquirers frequently value businesses as a multiple of EBITDA (e.g., 6× EBITDA). Understanding your EBITDA helps you set realistic valuation expectations and identify operational improvements.
This calculator computes EBITDA two ways (bottom-up from net income and top-down from revenue), calculates the EBITDA margin, and estimates enterprise value using industry-specific multiples. EBITDA is especially useful in mergers and acquisitions, where buyers often value businesses at a multiple of EBITDA, typically 4x to 12x depending on the industry and growth profile. By stripping out non-operating influences, EBITDA reveals the core cash-generating power of a business and makes it possible to compare companies with very different tax situations, asset bases, or financing choices. This makes it the go-to metric for investors, lenders, and business owners evaluating performance.
EBITDA is the language of business valuation and M&A. Banks use it to assess lending capacity (e.g., debt/EBITDA covenants), investors use it with multiples for quick valuation, and managers use it to benchmark operating performance. If you ever plan to raise capital, sell, or borrow, you need to know your EBITDA.
EBITDA = Net Income + Interest + Taxes + Depreciation + Amortization EBITDA Margin = (EBITDA / Revenue) × 100 Enterprise Value = EBITDA × Industry Multiple Adjusted EBITDA = EBITDA + One-time/Non-recurring Items
Result: EBITDA: $150,000 | EBITDA Margin: 30.0%
Net income $80K + interest $15K + taxes $30K + depreciation $20K + amortization $5K = $150K EBITDA. Margin = $150K / $500K = 30%. At a 6× multiple, enterprise value would be $900,000.
Bottom-up: Start with net income, add back I, T, D, A. This is the standard approach using income statement data. Top-down: Start with revenue, subtract only operating costs (excluding I, T, D, A). Both methods should yield the same result — verify as an accuracy check.
In mergers and acquisitions, EBITDA is the foundation for enterprise value. The buyer establishes "normalized" EBITDA by adjusting for one-time items and owner-specific expenses, then applies an industry multiple. Sellers should maximize EBITDA by eliminating unnecessary expenses 1-2 years before a sale.
EBITDA does not account for capital expenditures (CapEx), changes in working capital, or debt service. A business with $500K EBITDA but $400K annual CapEx has only $100K of free cash flow. Always analyze EBITDA alongside free cash flow for a complete picture.
EBITDA measures earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization. It matters because it isolates operating performance from capital structure, tax jurisdiction, and accounting policies. This makes it the standard metric for comparing businesses across industries and for M&A pricing.
Net income is after all expenses. EBITDA adds back interest (financing), taxes (jurisdiction/strategy), and D&A (accounting/asset age). A company with heavy debt or old assets may have low net income but healthy EBITDA, indicating the core business is profitable.
Multiples vary by industry, growth rate, and risk. SaaS with high growth: 10-20×. Professional services: 4-8×. Manufacturing: 5-8×. Retail: 4-7×. Small businesses (<$5M revenue): often 2-4×. Consult a business appraiser for precision.
Legitimate add-backs include owner's excess compensation (above market salary), one-time legal costs, non-recurring professional fees, personal expenses run through the business, and restructuring charges. Be transparent — buyers will scrutinize add-backs.
Warren Buffett famously called it "meaningless" because it ignores real costs. Capital expenditures must be made, interest must be paid, taxes are real. EBITDA can make heavily indebted companies look healthier than they are. Always pair EBITDA analysis with free cash flow.
Software/SaaS: 25-45%. Telecom: 30-40%. Healthcare: 15-25%. Manufacturing: 10-20%. Retail: 5-12%. Restaurants: 10-18%. Higher margins generally command higher valuation multiples because they indicate pricing power and scalability.