How to Sell an Electrical Contracting Business (and Transfer the License Problem)
The master license your business runs on is the first thing to solve before you sell; the commercial service-contract book is the multiple-mover. The two levers and the sequence.
The short version
- An owner-operated electrical contracting business sells at a low-single-digit SDE multiple, not the high EBITDA number quoted for platform roll-ups. Those are two different buyers.
- The gap between an owner-dependent and an owner-light service business is 1.65x versus 3.5x SDE: $555,000 on a $300,000-SDE business.
- Lever one: the master license the business legally operates under may be in your name, which makes license transferability the first sale-blocker to solve before you list.
- Lever two: a commercial service-contract book that transfers cleanly into the company's name is the biggest thing that lifts an electrical multiple.
- Below: the license problem to solve, the contract book that lifts the multiple, and the gap you can close before you list.
An electrical contractor doing $1.6M in revenue and roughly $330K SDE asks a broker what the business is worth and hears a number built on a high EBITDA multiple. That number is for a private-equity platform buying a roll-up, not for him.
His business will sell at a low-single-digit SDE multiple, because the company legally operates under the master license in his name. A buyer reads that as the risk that the business cannot legally run the day the owner walks out.
What an electrical business sells for, and what blocks the sale
To sell an electrical contracting business for the most, you solve the license transfer and close the owner-dependence discount before you list. The business sells at an SDE multiple, a buyer sets that multiple on whether it runs without you, and the master license and your commercial-contract book are the two levers that decide the deal.
Get the qualifying license off your personal name and move the commercial contracts into the company's name, and you move from the bottom of the range toward the top. That is the whole job.
The multiple is the part owners read wrong. Electrical businesses map to the Service bucket, where a typical $250K to $500K SDE business sells in the 2.4x to 3.2x range, against an all-industry median near 2.0x to 2.5x SDE.
Those are Main Street SDE multiples calibrated against a decade of closed transactions, not platform EBITDA multiples. The full picture of what an electrical business is worth and the decisions behind it is here.
The high multiple you have seen quoted is an EBITDA platform multiple for roll-ups. It is real, and it is not your number unless a consolidator is buying you for scale.
What decides where you land inside that range is not revenue. It is whether the license the business runs on, and the service relationships, belong to the company or to you.
That distinction is worth more than another $200,000 of revenue. It is also the only value driver entirely inside your control.
Whose license the business runs on is the first thing to solve
The qualifying master license the business legally operates under may be in your name, and that is the single biggest thing that can block the sale. A buyer cannot run a licensed electrical business the day you leave unless the qualifying license survives your exit.
This is not a closing-day item. It is the first thing a buyer or successor has to solve, and an unsolved license problem either stalls the sale or collapses the price.
There are three honest ways the license transfers. A qualifying electrician already on the payroll stays and holds the license for the company, the buyer holds a master license of their own, or a documented transition keeps you on as the qualifier for a defined window.
The version that lifts the multiple is the first one: a qualifying employee who is not you, contracted to stay, so the business is never one resignation away from losing its license to operate. A buyer underwrites that, and discounts a business whose legal right to work walks out with the owner.
This is the central idea in the electrical trade: the work that makes the business run without you is the same work that makes it sellable. Getting the license dependence off your personal name is one project with two payoffs.
That is what installing a manager around the qualifier role actually looks like.
The commercial service-contract book is the multiple-mover
A commercial service-contract book is the closest thing electrical has to recurring revenue, and a transferable book is the biggest lever on the multiple after the license. The direction is not in dispute: a real book of commercial service agreements lifts what a buyer will pay.
The word that matters is transferable. A book that transfers is contracts in the company's name, with renewal history, held by the business rather than by your personal relationships.
A book that does not transfer is a list of facility managers who keep calling because they know you. A buyer underwrites the first and discounts the second to near zero.
Pure project and new-construction work is lumpier and holds the multiple down, because the revenue ends when the job ends. The commercial maintenance and service agreement renews on a cadence the buyer can model.
See how recurring-revenue transferability moves the multiple in the seller-prep method.
This is why the contract book is seller-prep work, not a listing-week task. Moving agreements into the company's name and showing clean renewal history takes runway, and it is the same work that makes the business run without you.
The independence discount, in dollars
The discount has a number, and it is large. Owner-dependent service businesses transact near 1.65x SDE and owner-light ones near 3.5x, which is a $555,000 spread on a $300,000-SDE business.
Service businesses sit at the low-risk end of the SBA charge-off ordering, which lifts a lender's and a buyer's confidence in the earnings. That confidence never raises your value on its own; what closes the discount is the operational design below.
The two states are concrete. Picture the same electrical business twice.
Owner-dependent, near 1.65x: the master license is in the owner's name, the commercial relationships are personal, and the owner is the qualifier the whole company legally depends on. A buyer sees a job they are buying, not a business.
Owner-light, near 3.5x: a qualifying electrician on staff holds the license under contract, the commercial book is in the company's name and renewing, and a manager runs the day. A buyer sees an asset that keeps producing without the owner in the room.
Same earnings, same trade, same revenue. The only difference is operational design, and 86% of owners never see this discount because they have no professional valuation or only a rough estimate.
The sequence to sell an electrical business for more
The order matters. Close the discount first, then list. Selling into the discount locks in the lower multiple.
Get your real SDE number: know your SDE and where you sit on the 1.65x to 3.5x spread before any broker conversation, from a real number rather than a memory of what someone said once. Start with an honest electrical valuation before you list.
Solve the license transfer and document it: secure a qualifying electrician who stays, or confirm the buyer holds the license, and put the arrangement in writing. This is the sale-blocker, so it goes first or the rest does not matter.
Move the commercial service contracts into the company's name: shift agreements off your personal relationships and into company contracts with documented renewal history. This is the biggest single lift on the multiple after the license, and the slowest to build.
Route the qualifier role to a manager who is not you: a license held by you and a quoting standard nobody else owns both drift back to the owner, so put the qualifier and the daily calls in a manager's hands. That is what running the business without you looks like.
Clean the SDE story for diligence: get the financials to where a buyer can underwrite the earnings without taking your word for the add-backs, which protects the multiple the first four steps earned. The valuation method behind a defensible number is here.
Then list: with the license transferable, the contract book in the company's name, a manager in place, and the financials clean, you list a business that runs without you, and the multiple reflects it.
How to start: see your number and close the gap
The first move costs nothing and takes four minutes. The free Keystone diagnostic gives you three scores and an estimated sale price, so you can see where this electrical business sits on the 1.65x to 3.5x spread before you talk to a broker: app.trykeystone.io
The diagnostic shows the gap, and Keystone Core tracks it month to month as you close it. The Systems Sprint installs the systems that do the closing.
The Sprint is a 30-day engagement, and its four deliverables map directly onto the two electrical levers. The Decision Routing Framework and Manager Accountability Structure put the qualifier role and the daily calls in a manager's hands; the documented SOPs capture the operating standard; the Owner Dashboard tracks the commercial book and the renewal cadence.
That is the work that gets the license dependence off you and transfers the commercial book before you list, which is the same work that makes the business worth the most when you sell.
FAQ
Can you sell an electrical business if the license is in your name?
Yes, but you have to solve the license transfer first, because a buyer cannot legally run the business the day you leave without a qualifying license in place. The clean version is a qualifying electrician who stays on under contract, or a buyer who holds their own master license.
What do buyers look for in an electrical contracting business?
Whether it runs without the owner. A buyer pays the higher multiple for a qualifying license that survives your exit and a commercial service-contract book in the company's name, not for relationships and a license that walk out with you.
Do you need a master electrician to buy an electrical business?
The business needs a qualifying license-holder, but it does not have to be the buyer. A buyer who is not a master electrician can acquire the business if a qualifying electrician on staff holds the license, which is exactly why securing that person before you list protects the sale.
How long does it take to sell an electrical business for more?
Plan in years, not weeks, because the levers take runway. Solving the license transfer and moving the commercial book into the company's name with documented renewal history is seller-prep work you start well before you list.
You cannot close a gap you have not measured.
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