How to sell your landscaping business.

In landscaping, what you sell matters as much as how much you sell. Buyers pay dramatically more for recurring maintenance contracts than for design-build and installation work — because one repeats every month and the other has to be won again from scratch. Here's how landscaping businesses are valued and how to position yours for the strongest possible outcome.

Updated June 2026·Written by operators, not brokers

Typical landscaping & lawn value

2× – 4× SDE

Smaller / install-weighted1.7× – 2.5× SDE
Solid maintenance base, $1M+ revenue2.5× – 3.5× SDE
60%+ contracted maintenance, dense routes3.5× – 4×+ SDE / EBITDA

What a landscaping & lawn business is worth

The range, and what sets where you land.

Half of landscaping and lawn-care businesses sell between roughly 1.7× and 3× SDE, with the well-run, recurring-heavy quarter trading above that. Sale values dipped modestly in 2024 then jumped about 20% in 2025, and the gap keeps widening between maintenance-based businesses — which buyers treat as sound, recurring investments — and design-build shops, whose lumpier revenue has performed less favorably. Crossing $1M in revenue is roughly where multiples start to firm up.

The one thing that matters most

Contracted maintenance is worth 2–3× more than installation

This is the defining fact of selling a landscaping business: buyers value recurring maintenance revenue two to three times more richly than installation or design-build revenue, because repeat contracts represent ongoing relationships and far lower volatility. A business that's 60%+ contracted maintenance with tight routes earns the top of the range; a design-build shop that has to re-win its revenue every season — however profitable — trades lower. If you want to maximize value, every maintenance contract you add is worth multiples of an equivalent dollar of install work.

What’s different

Selling a landscaping & lawn business isn’t generic.

Landscaping splits cleanly into two businesses that get valued very differently. Recurring maintenance — mowing, fertilization, commercial grounds contracts, sometimes snow — is predictable and sticky, and buyers pay up for it. Design, hardscape, and installation are profitable but episodic, and buyers discount the volatility. Knowing which business you mostly are, and shifting toward the recurring side before a sale, is the single biggest lever on your multiple.

What drives landscaping & lawn value

What buyers pay up for.

Contracted maintenance share

Recurring maintenance — ideally 60%+ of revenue — is valued 2–3× more richly than installation. It's the heart of the multiple.

Commercial contracts

Multi-year commercial grounds-maintenance contracts add stability and lift value beyond a residential-only base.

Route density

Tight routes with low 'windshield time' raise margins and make the business easier for a buyer to integrate.

Revenue scale

Crossing roughly $1M in revenue is where multiples start to firm; larger, systematized operations trade above the median.

Seasonality smoothing

A credible plan for the off-season — snow removal, year-round services, or geographic mix — reduces the discount buyers apply to seasonal income.

Crew & equipment readiness

Retained crews and a fleet that isn't deferred-maintenance heavy keep buyers from pricing in transition and capital risk.

What pulls value down.

Design-build dependency

A business weighted toward installation and hardscape has to re-win its revenue every year. Buyers discount that volatility versus contracted maintenance.

Sub-$1M, undocumented

Smaller businesses with loose books and handshake customer arrangements trade at the bottom of the range. Formalize contracts and clean up financials.

Heavy seasonality, no plan

A summer-only model with deep off-season gaps and no smoothing strategy gets discounted for the slow months.

Who’s buying

The buyers for your landscaping & lawn business.

Landscaping consolidation is led by PE-backed national and regional platforms building density in commercial grounds maintenance, alongside strategic regional operators and individual buyers acquiring maintenance routes. The common thread is a preference for contracted, recurring revenue over episodic install work. Long-term holding companies like Chisel value the recurring maintenance base and the customer and crew relationships that come with it.

Compare every buyer type in the full guide →

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Landscaping & lawn seller questions

Landscaping & lawn-specific questions.

For the universal stuff — taxes, deal structures, the full process — see the complete selling guide.

Most landscaping and lawn-care businesses sell at 2×–4× SDE, with roughly half landing between 1.7× and 3×. Install-weighted or smaller businesses trade at the lower end; operations with 60%+ contracted maintenance, tight routes, and $1M+ revenue reach the top. Your maintenance-to-installation mix is the biggest factor.

Because it repeats. Buyers value recurring maintenance revenue two to three times more richly than installation or design-build, since contracts represent ongoing relationships and far lower volatility, while install work has to be won again every season. Shifting your mix toward contracted maintenance before a sale is the most effective way to raise your multiple.

Crossing roughly $1M in annual revenue is where landscaping multiples generally start to firm up, and larger, systematized operations trade above the median. Below that, recurring maintenance share and clean documentation matter even more to get a fair number.

Grow contracted maintenance toward 60%+ of revenue, add multi-year commercial contracts, tighten routes to cut windshield time, formalize customer agreements and clean up the books, and put a credible seasonality-smoothing plan in place. Each move pushes you from the volatile design-build end toward the recurring end buyers pay up for.

Keep reading

The complete guide to selling.

This page covers what’s specific to landscaping & lawn. The full guide walks through valuation, how buyers pay, taxes, the step-by-step process, a document checklist, and a plain-English glossary.

Read the complete guide

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