
What Is Your Scale Business Worth? A 2026 Valuation Update on the Private Equity Invasion
New money is entering the industrial scale market, the platforms already in it are buying everything they can reach, and even seasoned private equity buyers can’t agree on what these companies are worth. For owners of scale service and distribution businesses, that uncertainty is very good news.
Even the Buyers Can’t Agree on What Your Scale Business Is Worth
Recently I spent an hour comparing notes with a partner at a prominent, industrial-focused private equity firm. He is seasoned, he is successful, and he is currently researching his firm’s first platform acquisition in the industrial scale and weighing sector — the kind of fragmented, service-heavy market that private equity loves to consolidate.
We compared notes on valuation. And here is what stopped me: his working assumption for what scale companies cost was nearly double what they are actually selling for.
Sit with that for a moment. A sophisticated buyer, preparing to deploy serious capital into this space, carried a price expectation almost twice the real clearing price. Part of his skepticism about the sector came from that very assumption — in his mind, these companies were expensive. In reality, they trade for far less than he believed.
If a seasoned private equity professional — and the new entrants writing checks alongside him — don’t have a fixed read on what scale companies are worth, that pricing uncertainty cuts in the seller’s favor. Buyers are anchoring their internal models high. They are competing for a scarce set of quality targets. And the owner who walks in knowing the real numbers holds the advantage.
This is a 2026 valuation update for owners of industrial-scale service and distribution businesses: what the private equity invasion actually means for the value of your company, and the factors that drive that value up or down.
Is Now a Good Time to Sell a Scale Business?
Yes — and the window is open wider than most owners realize.
Two forces are converging at once. New money is entering the sector: private equity firms that have never owned a scale company are building investment theses and hunting for a platform to anchor a roll-up. At the same time, the platforms that already exist are acquiring everything they can reach — and moving fast to do it.
National dealmaking forecasts back this up. Private-equity-led consolidation in recurring, technology-enabled service businesses is expected to remain strong through 2026, with sponsors focused on professionalizing and expanding the platforms they have already built. Scale service companies — with their recurring revenue from calibration, certification, repair, and preventive maintenance — fit that profile almost perfectly. They are exactly the kind of sticky, fragmented, aftermarket-rich business the smart money is chasing.
For a seller, the math is simple. More buyers, especially more motivated ones, create greater competitive tension. The same recurring service revenue and technician dependence that make your business demanding to run are precisely what make it valuable to an acquirer.
What Is My Scale Business Worth? The 2026 Valuation Update
Here is the number owners actually want. Based on the transactions we have worked on with our seller clients and our independent research, scale companies with EBITDA under $5 million are selling in the 6.5x to 9x EBITDA range.
That is a strong number, and it sits at a premium to the broader industrial service middle market, which generally clears in the mid-single digits of EBITDA. The premium is not an accident. It is the recurring service and calibration revenue, the embedded technician relationships, and the sticky aftermarket that buyers are willing to pay up for. When a business produces predictable, contracted revenue year after year, acquirers underwrite it more like an annuity and less like a one-time equipment sale — and they price it accordingly.
Two further market realities push that range around, and both reward a prepared seller:
- Size is rewarded. Within the same sector, larger businesses command meaningfully higher multiples than smaller ones. The gap between a sub-$2 million and a $5 million EBITDA company can be several turns of EBITDA — which means disciplined growth in the year or two before a sale can pay for itself many times over at closing.
- Process is rewarded. Owners who run a competitive, advisor-led sale process consistently realize materially higher prices than owners who sell quietly to the first buyer who knocks on the door. The difference is routinely a double-digit percentage of the purchase price. Selling to the unsolicited caller is the single most expensive convenience an owner can buy.
The takeaway: the 6.5x to 9x band is real, but where you land inside it — and whether you push beyond it — is largely within your control.
Size of Scale Companies |
2026 Valuation Multiple |
| EBITDA $2M to $5M | 6.5x to 9.0x |
| EBITDA <$2M | 5.0x to 7.0x |
What Factors Affect My Valuation?
Two scale companies with identical EBITDA can sell for very different prices. These are the factors that move the number, in roughly ascending order of importance:
- The scale of the operation — your overall revenue and earnings, and the size premium that comes with them.
- The number of technicians — your field-service capacity, and how much of it stays in place if the owner steps away. Scarce, retained technical talent is an asset; an owner-dependent service operation is a discount.
- The number of locations — your geographic footprint and the regional density a buyer can build on or plug into an existing platform.
- Profit margin — clean, healthy margins signal a well-run business and lower a buyer’s perceived risk.
- Service contracts and recurring revenue as a percentage of total revenue — and this is the big one. The higher and stickier your recurring base, the higher your multiple. No single factor does more to move valuation. If you want to raise the value of your business before a sale, this is where the leverage lives.
Who’s Buying — and Who’s the New Money?
The buyer pool is deepening quickly, which is the single best thing that can happen to a seller.
The clearest example is Michelli Weighing & Measurement, backed by private equity firm Summit Park. Since Summit Park’s investment, Michelli has been acquiring aggressively — buying Greenville Scale, Total Scale Service, Houston-based Industrial Scale & Measurement, and Florida Industrial Scale in just the opening months of 2026, building a service network that now spans roughly 50 service areas across 18 states.
Investcorp’s acquisition of Kanawha Scales & Systems, the Carlton platform, Cross Precision Measurement, and J.A. King round out a field of active, well-capitalized consolidators all competing for the same finite set of quality targets.
And now add the new entrant — the private equity firm I opened with, researching its first scale platform with capital ready to deploy. When a brand-new buyer steps into a market where the incumbents are already buying everything in sight, the owners of quality businesses are the ones who win.
What This Means for You
The most useful thing I took from that hour with the private equity partner was not a number. It was the confirmation that the buyers themselves are still working out what scale companies are worth — and that they are bracing to pay more than today’s sellers are receiving.
If you own a scale service or distribution business, you are sitting in a rare position: a deepening pool of motivated, well-funded buyers, a recurring-revenue model those buyers prize, and a market where the price expectations of the people writing the checks run ahead of where deals are actually clearing. The owners who capture that premium will be the ones who understand their real value — and run a real process — before a buyer ever calls.
We advised the seller of a scale business acquired into the Carlton platform, and we work with scale service and distribution owners across North America on valuation and exit strategy. If you are wondering what your business is worth in today’s market, that is a conversation worth having now, while the buyers are this hungry.
About Jackim Woods & Company
Jackim Woods & Company is a boutique mergers and acquisitions firm specializing in lower-middle-market transactions, with deep experience in the industrial scale and weighing sector. The firm provides valuation, exit planning, targeted buyer outreach, and hands-on advisory throughout the sale process. For more information or a free consultation to explore your options, contact

Paul Fackler, Managing Director; pfackler@jackimwoods.com
OR

Rich Jackim, Managing Partner; rjackim@jackimwoods.com
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