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Plumbing Business for Sale in Arizona

Nationally, 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 plumbing 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 buying Plumbing

GW

By George Wellmer

Cofounder & CEO

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

The License Dependency Problem

The single greatest operational risk in any plumbing business acquisition is this: does the master plumber license that allows the business to legally operate reside with the seller personally, and what happens to it at closing? In most states, plumbing licenses are issued to individuals, not to business entities. If the seller is the only licensed qualifier in the business and the license does not transfer with the acquisition, the business cannot legally perform licensed plumbing work until the buyer obtains their own license or hires a licensed qualifier. Confirm the license status, the state-specific transfer or endorsement process, and whether the buyer qualifies for expedited processing before signing a purchase agreement. Deals where the license situation is unresolved at closing are deals that either fail or create expensive post-closing operational crises.

How Plumbing Businesses Are Valued

Plumbing businesses are among the most actively acquired trade service categories in the SMB market, driven by strong fundamentals: essential services, recession-resistant demand, and fragmented market of independent operators that attracts both individual buyers and private equity roll-up platforms. Valuation nationally ranges from 2.5x to 5.3x SDE for well-run independent operations, with higher multiples commanded by businesses with strong recurring maintenance contract books, licensed technician depth, and operational independence from the owner. The private equity interest in plumbing has pushed valuations upward; operators generating $400K+ in SDE with stable technician teams will attract competitive buyer interest. Buyers who can demonstrate operational experience in field service businesses have a meaningful advantage in negotiations.

Service Agreements Are the Multiple Driver

The most reliable predictor of plumbing business valuation is the percentage of revenue derived from recurring maintenance agreements versus emergency service call work. Recurring maintenance contracts like annual drain cleaning, water heater maintenance programs, commercial service agreements with property managers provide predictable cash flow that buyers and lenders price at a premium. Emergency service call revenue is high-margin but volatile; recurring contract revenue is lower-margin but defensible and financeable. Businesses where 30–50% of revenue is contract-based command significantly higher multiples than dispatch-only operations. Review the contract book carefully: confirm that service agreements include assignment clauses that allow transfer to new ownership without requiring customer consent.

Technician Depth and the Labor Market Reality

Licensed plumbers are among the most constrained skilled trades workers in the U.S. labor market. The gap between demand and supply of licensed journeyman and master plumbers is structural; it is not closing on any foreseeable timeline. Any plumbing acquisition that depends on retaining two or three specific technicians should address this through employment agreements, retention bonuses, and equity participation prior to close. Technician departure in the first six months post-acquisition is the most common cause of post-closing revenue shortfalls in trade service acquisitions. Ask for technician tenure records, wage rates versus market, and whether any technicians have expressed interest in starting their own operations; this is material information.

Fleet, Equipment, and Environmental Considerations

Plumbing businesses are asset-intensive: service trucks, pipe cameras, hydrojetting equipment, excavation tools, and specialty diagnostic equipment represent significant capital. Request a full asset schedule with purchase dates, maintenance records, and current condition for every vehicle and major piece of equipment. Trucks past inspection, equipment requiring immediate replacement, and vehicles with undisclosed financing liens are among the most common post-closing surprises in trade service acquisitions. Budget conservatively for fleet and equipment replacement — a service truck fleet with an average age exceeding five years may require $50,000–$150,000 in near-term capital depending on fleet size. Commercial plumbing work that involves handling hazardous materials or working on municipal systems may carry additional environmental compliance requirements worth investigating.

Commercial vs. Residential Mix and Contract Assignability

Residential plumbing businesses are generally more transferable than commercial-heavy operations because residential customer relationships are distributed across hundreds of households rather than concentrated in a handful of commercial accounts. Commercial accounts that generate revenue from property management companies, restaurant groups, multi-family operators often represent significant recurring revenue but require review of contract assignability and change-of-ownership notification requirements. Some commercial service agreements include anti-assignment clauses that require customer consent to transfer to a new owner. Often consent is not always forthcoming. Map the concentration of revenue across customer accounts, and flag any commercial account representing more than 15% of total revenue as requiring specific attention in the purchase agreement.