đ Just released: Our Fitness Centers & Gyms Valuation Checklist for SBA lenders Includes:â Owner-labor replacement logicâ Recurring vs. one-time revenue sanity checksâ CapEx cycles for key equipmentâ Addbacks to question (personal trainer, meal prep, phone)â SBA guidance for member-based businesses đŠ Click here to grab your copy.
How To Value A Business
â ď¸ Red Flag Case Study: Strong on Paper, Weak on Infrastructure
This boutique gym priced at $795K based on $215K SDE. But: â 72% of clients joined after a Groupon campaignâ Owner taught 80% of classesâno replacements lined upâ No CapEx for equipment or softwareâ Addbacks included personal training certifications + phone Adjusted cash flow: ~$110KFinal valuation: ~$435K đ Valuing sweat equity without infrastructure? Thatâs a … Continue reading â ď¸ Red Flag Case Study: Strong on Paper, Weak on Infrastructure
đ§ Valuation Insight: Revenue May Be Ripped, But Is It Real?
 đŞ Gym and fitness studio valuations often flex the wrong muscle: Membership spikes arenât sustained post-New Year Owner is the head trainer, brand, and salesperson Equipment is outdated, leased, or seller-retained Addbacks assume all labor is variable (itâs not) đ Normalize for reality, not January optimism.
đ Resource Drop: Daycare Valuation Checklist
đ Just released: Our Daycare & Childcare Center Valuation Checklist Includes:â Owner/operator role normalizationâ Licensing, staff ratios, and facility reviewâ Enrollment risk & age group breakdownâ Addback challenges in family-owned centersâ SBA tips for valuing regulated service businesses đŠ Click here to grab your copy.
â ď¸ Red Flag Case Study: All Smiles, No Structure
A center priced at $725K claimed $185K in cash flow. But: â Owner taught, ran the office, and handled enrollmentsâ Facility at capacityâbut underlicensedâ No employee handbook, SOPs, or backup staffâ Addbacks included child snacks, family wages, and lease perks Adjusted FCF: ~$75KTrue value: ~$410K with seller support + licensing review đ Lenders saved the … Continue reading â ď¸ Red Flag Case Study: All Smiles, No Structure
đ§ Valuation Insight: Hugs Arenât Cash Flow
 𧸠Childcare centers often reflect strong demandâbut valuations fall apart when: The owner is the lead teacher AND director Licensing doesnât transfer or isn't disclosed Staff-to-child ratios donât support enrollment numbers Goodwill is tied entirely to the ownerâs personal brand đ If the kids stay for the teacher, not the businessâitâs not enterprise value.
đ Resource Drop: Home Health Valuation Checklist
đ§ž Now available: Our Home Health Care Services Valuation Checklist Covers:â Owner vs. staff production reviewâ Labor compliance (W-2 vs. 1099)â Client relationship & goodwill transferabilityâ Staff retention + capacity riskâ SBA SOP alignment đŠ Click here to grab your copy.
â ď¸ Red Flag Case Study: All Heart, No Infrastructure
A home care provider was priced at $950K based on $140K in cash flow. But: â Owner was a full-time caregiverâ No W-2 staffâjust part-time 1099sâ No formalized client contractsâ High goodwill assigned to owner-driven reputation Adjusted free cash flow: ~$60KRevised value: ~$465K with seller support for transition đ Lender avoided over-financing.
đ§ Valuation Insight: Cash Flow â Capacity
 đĽ Home health care companies often report strong marginsâbut do they have the staff to deliver that revenue? Top red flags in valuations and underwriting: Owner is a caregiver, scheduler, and marketer No long-term staff contracts or retention strategy Non-compliant labor practices (1099 caregivers vs. W-2) Goodwill assigned to client relationships tied only to owner … Continue reading đ§ Valuation Insight: Cash Flow â Capacity
đ Resource Drop: Auto Body Valuation Checklist
đ§ž Just released: Our Auto Body & Collision Repair Valuation Checklist for SBA lenders Covers:â DRP & insurance contract concentrationâ Owner/tech comp normalizationâ CapEx for paint booths, lifts, frame machinesâ Labor + material margin breakdownâ SBA tips for valuing repair shops đŠ Click here to grab your copy.
