Tupelo Data Room

HVAC business for Sale in Indiana

Similar businesses sell at 1.2x to 5.3x SDE. Compare live listings and connect with sellers.

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Market Snapshot

National transaction benchmarks for hvac business businesses.

Under $500K

Median revenue$642k
Median cash flow$141k
Median sale price$250k
Multiple range1.2x - 2.4x

$500K to $2M

Median revenue$1.78m
Median cash flow$338k
Median sale price$850k
Multiple range2.2x - 3.4x

Over $2M

Median revenue$4.21m
Median cash flow$792k
Median sale price$3.25m
Multiple range3.4x - 5.3x

A variety of factors can cause businesses to trade outside this range, including earnings quality, operational transferability, key-person risk, growth trajectory, and geography, so a listing priced above or below the typical multiple usually reflects real differences in the underlying business.

What to know about HVAC business acquisitions

GW

By George Wellmer

Cofounder & CEO

Key diligence, valuation, financing, and transition considerations for buyers evaluating HVAC business acquisitions.

Maintenance Agreements Are the Real Asset

The most reliable indicator of HVAC business quality is the size and retention rate of its maintenance agreement (MA) base. Each MA typically generates $150-$300 in annual recurring revenue and produces 3-5x more replacement leads than non-agreement customers. Ask for MA count, renewal rate, and how long agreements have been in place. A business with 500+ active MAs and 80%+ renewal rate commands a significant premium over one without.

Flat-Rate vs Time-and-Material Pricing Matters

Businesses using flat-rate pricing are substantially more transferable than time-and-material shops. Flat-rate systems remove individual technician pricing discretion, making revenue more predictable, margins more consistent, and the business easier for a new owner to manage. When reviewing listings, flat-rate pricing is a positive signal. Time-and-material shops can be converted, but budget for a 6-12 month transition period.

License Portability Is a Deal-Critical Issue

Every state requires HVAC contractors to hold a valid license, and most are tied to a specific qualifying individual - typically the owner or a designated employee. When a business sells, the buyer must hold their own license, hire a licensed qualifier, or negotiate a transition period. Confirm the license situation early in diligence. Businesses where the owner is also the qualifier carry key-person risk that will directly affect valuation.

Residential vs Commercial Mix Changes Risk Profile

Residential HVAC businesses tend to be more transferable - customer relationships are distributed across thousands of households rather than concentrated in a few commercial accounts. Commercial-heavy businesses (50%+ commercial) warrant deeper diligence on contract terms, renewal dates, and whether contracts are assignable to a new owner. A residential business with a strong MA base and diversified customer geography is typically the most straightforward acquisition.

Understand the Seasonal Cash Flow Cycle

HVAC businesses are highly seasonal - revenue peaks in summer (cooling) and winter (heating), with shoulder months in spring and fall. Ask for monthly revenue breakdowns across at least two full years to understand the true seasonal pattern. Buyers who close during peak season may not see trough cash flow until months later. SDE calculations should normalize for seasonal working capital and owner compensation timing.

CRM and Systems Quality Signals Transferability

The presence of a modern field service CRM - ServiceTitan, FieldEdge, Housecall Pro - indicates the business has been run systematically rather than from the owner's memory. CRM-equipped businesses have documented customer histories, job costing data, and technician metrics that support a clean transition. Businesses without a CRM are not disqualified, but plan for 3-6 months of systems implementation post-close.

Frequently Asked Questions

Answers to common buyer questions for this market.

Usually not automatically. Every state requires a licensed HVAC contractor, and the license is typically tied to a specific qualifying individual — often the owner or a designated employee. When the business sells, the buyer must hold their own license, retain or hire a licensed qualifier, or negotiate a transition period with the seller. Resolve this before the LOI, not after — a license that walks out with the seller is the most common reason an otherwise clean HVAC deal stalls.