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Storage & Warehouse Business Valuation Benchmarks

Gain insights into the market for buying and selling storage and warehousing businesses with transaction trends, valuation multiple data, and financial benchmarks.

Business owners, prospective buyers, and industry investors rely on a diverse set of financial benchmarks to assess the value of a business. We have compiled data from current BizBuySell listings and sold businesses to provide insight into the business for sale market and important benchmarks for pricing and evaluating storage and warehousing companies relative to industry standards.

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Highlights of Storage & Warehouse Businesses Sold on BizBuySell

Storage and warehouse businesses listed and sold on BizBuySell are privately owned and operated companies that provide space for storing a range of items to both consumers and businesses. Common businesses include self-storage facilities, portable storage businesses, automobile/boat/RV storage, commercial storage services, and B2B warehousing and logistics companies.

Median Sale Price Median Asking Price
$970,000 $1,047,500
Average Sale/Ask Ratio Median Days on Market
0.92 166
Median Revenue Median Owner Earnings
$1,707,517 $369,231
Average Revenue Multiple Average Earnings Multiple
0.94 2.96

 

Storage & Warehouse Business Sale & Asking Prices

Sale prices of storage and warehouse businesses typically range from around $500k for smaller, simple self-storage businesses to $3MM and up for specialized storage or B2B focused warehousing and logistics businesses.

Storage & Warehouse Business Price Ranges
Bottom 25% Median Average Top 25%
Asking Price $633,750 $1,047,500 $1,771,814 $2,508,750
Sale Price $562,500 $970,000 $1,701,977 $2,525,000
Sale and asking prices based on storage and warehouse businesses reported sold during five years between 2020 and 2024.

 

Storage & Warehouse Business Valuation Multiples

Valuation, or pricing, multiples are financial tools that allow for comparisons between businesses that have different levels of sales and financial performance. They represent the sales price of a business relative to its revenue or earnings, and given enough individual business sales data, they represent what the market is willing to pay for a business given its revenue and earnings.

Valuation Ranges

Business values and associated multiples are influenced by a variety of macroeconomic factors such as interest rates, inflation, consumer spending, and overall economic growth. However, among businesses in a particular industry, size often matters most, with larger businesses fetching higher valuation multiples. Valuation multiples of storage and warehousing businesses generally fall between 2- and 4-times owner's earnings.

Revenue & Earnings Multiples

Earnings multiples represent the value of a business relative to its owner’s discretionary earnings or "cash flow". Arguably the most important valuation tool - as seller's discretionary earnings will often dictate how much a buyer is able to borrow to finance the business acquisition - business valuations tend to hinge on a reasonable earnings multiple.

Revenue multiples represent the value of a business relative to its overall sales or revenue. In conjunction with an earnings analysis, revenue multiples are often used as a secondary calculation to validate a valuation.

 

Storage & Warehouse Business Earnings & Revenue Multiples
Bottom 25% Median Average Top 25%
Earnings Multiple 2.20 2.93 2.96 3.69
Revenue Multiple 0.53 0.82 0.94 1.27
Valuation multiples based on reported financials and sale prices of storage and warehouse businesses reported sold during five years between 2020 and 2024.

 

How to Interpret These Multiples

We calculate and provide valuation multiples from our database of "comparable" businesses sold on BizBuySell. Multiples based on comparable businesses - "comps" in business broker parlance - are useful for valuing businesses for sale. They represent the values at which similar businesses sold, and provide a way to calculate prices based on market values. Business brokers and valuation professionals will always turn to local comps when pricing businesses for sale or evaluating businesses for acquisition.

Quartiles, Median, and Average

No two businesses are identical, and as such, valuation multiples exist in a range. We have carved out four common values within this range: Bottom 25% is the lower quartile, and represents the value under which the lowest 25% of valuation multiples fell. Top 25% is the upper quartile, and represents the value above which the highest 25% of multiples fell. Median is the middle of the range, and average is the mean of the set. Mean is almost always higher than the median, because a small number of high value businesses sold at multiples above the upper quartile will skew the average up.

Businesses with consistent financial performance, above average revenue and earnings, demonstrable growth potential, low owner involvement, unique competitive advantages, and a seller willing to finance will command a multiple at or above the upper quartile. Lower volume businesses with thin profit margins, full-time owner involvement, and many direct competitors will trade at or below the lower quartile. Most businesses will fall somewhere in the middle.

Based on this data, half of storage businesses are valued and sold between 2.2 and 3.7 times their annual seller discretionary earnings, with 25% of well-run, larger companies trading above this range, and 25% of smaller, less desirable businesses trading below.

 

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Financial Benchmarks

To determine how a business compares in terms of sales volume and financial performance relative to industry peers, it’s necessary to have some insight into industry standards. "Benchmarking" describes the practice of comparing a business’s financial performance to typical industry standards to determine where a business falls relative to other businesses in the same industry. These benchmarks can help guide business owners and buyers towards appropriate valuation multiples from the range above.

To that end, we have aggregated financial ranges of storage and warehouse business sold on BizBuySell that can be useful for comparing a given business to the market.

Discretionary earnings (used interchangeably with the terms "cash flow" and seller's discretionary earnings or SDE) is often the crux of business valuations, so it is important to benchmark it relative to other similar businesses traded on the business for sale market. Revenue volume plays a large role in business valuation, as it measures the size of the potential income opportunity for new ownership. It's not uncommon for buyers to select an earnings multiple range based on overall revenue volume.

The table and chart below include revenue and earnings ranges of storage and warehouse businesses sold over the past five years.

 

Storage & Warehouse Business Revenue & Earnings
Bottom 25% Median Average Top 25%
Revenue $735,483 $1,707,517 $2,214,452 $3,050,531
Discretionary Earnings $200,501 $369,231 $285,707 $389,162
Annual revenue and owner's discretionary earnings based on reported financials of storage and warehouse businesses sold on BizBuySell during five years between 2020 and 2024.

 

How Revenue and Earnings Level Affects Business Values

Obviously, higher levels of earnings lead to higher valuations, even given the same multiple. However, valuation multiples also tend to rise with business sales volume. Storage and warehousing companies that consistently generate higher sales (and maintain benchmark profit margins) tend to sell for earnings multiples on the higher end. So, a warehousing company generating over $3MM in revenue may sell for an earnings multiple approaching 4, while a self-storage business with sales below $700k may trade closer to 2.2 times its owner's discretionary earnings.

This tendency for higher sales volumes to fetch higher valuation multiples is largely driven by the economics of business acquisition financing. Businesses with greater revenue and earnings give buyers more cushion to cover debt service obligations and still have enough left over to pay the new owner a reasonable income.

 

Transport & Storage Sector Comparisons

For a more complete understanding of the market and valuation standards, consider comparisons within the broader transportation and storage category when benchmarking businesses. The chart and table below include key metrics from sales of select transportation and storage businesses on BizBuySell.

 

Transportation & Storage Business Valuation Benchmarks
Median Revenue Average Revenue Multiple Median Earnings Average Earnings Multiple Median Sale Price Median Asking Price Average Sale/Ask Ratio
Limo and Passenger Transportation $698,945 0.81 $216,000 2.50 $474,950 $531,000 0.91
Moving and Shipping Businesses $700,000 0.64 $167,962 2.45 $425,000 $449,000 0.93
Other Transportation and Storage Businesses $1,214,937 0.72 $230,000 2.68 $635,000 $699,000 0.94
Routes $343,528 0.61 $100,000 1.84 $120,0000 $123,570 0.97
Storage and Warehouse Businesses $1,707,517 0.94 $369,231 2.96 $970,000 $1,047,500 0.92
Trucking Companies $1,779,914 0.65 $338,911 3.01 $1,047,500 $1,129,750 0.93
Key financial metrics of transportation businesses sold on BizBuySell from 2020 through 2024.

 

Among businesses in the segment, storage and warehousing companies tend to generate higher sale, and so generally command higher earnings multiples. Buyers of these businesses will generally pay higher multiples for businesses that generate above average sales - the bigger the better.

 

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