In small businesses, the accounting net profit from your profit & loss statement is almost never the same as the business profit for valuation purposes. This is because of things like depreciation, which legally reduces your tax bill but doesn’t result in cash leaving your bank account.
You also need to add back the cost of any non-business-related expenses that the business paid. Typically, this might include the owner’s car, mobile phone expenses and travel.
Accurately depicting your wages is another important component that requires attention. Use benchmarked wages to adjust your wage line to normalize to what a new owner would be paying themselves and the staff.
Finally, you need to remove any income that wasn’t generated by the business operations, things like insurance recoveries, sale of assets or COVID subsidies.
To save time if you’ve got an accountant just send them an email and ask for your “normalised EBITDA”.
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How optometric practices are typically valued in Australia.There are several ways a business can be valued. The most widely used method across the optometric industry