UAE SME valuation methods: EBITDA multiple — most common for profitable trading/services businesses (3–8x EBITDA); Revenue multiple — for early-stage or high-growth (0.5–3x revenue); DCF — discounted cash flow for stable businesses with predictable cash flows; Asset-based — for asset-heavy businesses (manufacturing, property). UAE-specific discount: non-audited accounts, key-person dependency, and cash-heavy operations reduce valuation multiples.
UAE business valuation methods
- EBITDA multiple: The most common method for UAE trading, professional services, and distribution businesses. A buyer pays a multiple of the normalised EBITDA (earnings adjusted for one-off items, owner salary adjustments, and non-recurring expenses). UAE SME multiples: 3–5x for small businesses (AED 1–5M EBITDA), 5–8x for mid-market (AED 5–20M). Higher multiples for recurring revenue, strong management, and diversified customer base.
- Revenue multiple: Used for early-stage or high-growth businesses with low/no profit — common for SaaS, fintech, and marketplace businesses. UAE tech businesses: 1–5x ARR (annual recurring revenue). Traditional trading: 0.3–0.8x revenue.
- Discounted Cash Flow (DCF): Projects future free cash flows and discounts them to present value using a discount rate (typically 10–20% for UAE SMEs). More defensible for stable businesses but requires a credible 3–5 year financial model. Common in PE and institutional investment contexts.
- Asset-based valuation: Sum of net assets — used for holding companies, property companies, and asset-heavy manufacturing. Net asset value = total assets minus total liabilities. Intangibles (brand, customer relationships) may not be captured unless separately valued.
What affects a UAE SME's valuation
- Audited financial statements: A business with 3 years of audited accounts achieves a 20–30% higher multiple than one with unaudited accounts. Buyers and investors pay for certainty — audit is the stamp of certainty.
- Revenue concentration: If one customer accounts for more than 20–30% of revenue, buyers apply a significant discount. Diversified customer base = lower risk = higher multiple.
- Key person dependency: If the business cannot operate without the founder, buyers discount heavily. Document processes, build a management team, and demonstrate that the business runs without you.
- Cash vs electronic payments: UAE businesses with significant cash revenues are harder to value (revenue is less verifiable) and attract AML scrutiny from buyers. Electronic payment businesses are preferred.
- UAE CT position: Since CT started in 2023, buyers analyse the historical CT compliance position. Unregistered businesses, VAT errors, and CT registration delays are liabilities that are deducted from enterprise value or structured as earn-outs.
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Frequently asked questions
What multiple do UAE businesses typically sell for?
Depends heavily on sector and size. General trading (import/export): 2–4x EBITDA. Professional services (consulting, marketing, accounting): 3–6x EBITDA. Retail (UAE-based): 2–4x EBITDA. Tech/SaaS: 3–10x revenue. Construction: 2–3x EBITDA with significant working capital adjustments. Free zone businesses with QFZP status (0% CT) typically achieve a premium of 0.5–1.5x EBITDA versus comparable mainland businesses, reflecting the tax benefit.
How do UAE buyers treat VAT and CT liabilities in an acquisition?
Buyers conduct tax due diligence and identify any historical VAT, CT, or WPS liabilities. These are either: (a) retained by the seller (the seller warrants that all tax is paid), (b) deducted from the purchase price (price adjustment), or (c) escrowed (a portion of the price is held back for 12–24 months pending FTA audit clearance). Buyers pay for certainty — a clean FTA compliance record is worth significant premium.
What is normalised EBITDA for UAE valuation purposes?
Normalised EBITDA is the company’s profit before interest, tax, depreciation, and amortisation, adjusted to remove one-off items (legal settlements, exceptional expenses) and owner-specific items (founder’s above-market salary, personal expenses run through the business). The goal is to show the true, sustainable earning power of the business as a going concern under a new owner. Buyers scrutinise these adjustments — overclaiming normalisation is a common source of deal friction.
Do I need an independent valuation to sell my UAE business?
Not legally — but practically yes. An independent valuation: (1) gives you a defensible starting price; (2) demonstrates professionalism to buyers/investors; (3) can be used as a negotiating anchor if the buyer’s offer is low; (4) is often required by UAE banks or investors as part of their own due diligence. Expect to pay AED 15,000–50,000 for a credible independent valuation from an accredited firm.