Been digging into a Tucson deal that's listed as a carpet cleaning company. Honestly almost skipped it until I looked closer.
The numbers: $1.9M trailing revenue, $323k SDE, $449k asking price. That's roughly 1.4x SDE – which should immediately tell you something's off.
What's actually happening here:
This isn't really a carpet cleaning business. I mean technically it is, but that's just one side. They're running:
- Carpet and tile cleaning – the low-margin recurring stuff that brings customers in
- Water/fire/mold restoration – the high-margin insurance work with way better unit economics
Most restoration outfits only handle mitigation (emergency response, drying everything out). This one's different because they hold a KB-2 general contractor license. That means they can do the full rebuild, not just the demo and dry-out. They're getting paid for the entire claim.
That licensing detail completely changes the valuation framework.
Why this is trading so cheap:
My guess is it's a combo of things – the broker categorized it wrong (specialty cleaning instead of construction/restoration), they don't seem to understand the competitive moat from the license, and there's probably some ownership transition complexity creating urgency.
Bottom line: it's priced like a janitorial service (1.5-2x multiple) when it should probably be valued closer to a restoration business (3x+ range).
Due diligence focus areas:
The qualifying party on that KB-2 is critical – you need to structure this right or the license advantage disappears. Also gotta check equipment age since restoration companies can have a lot of hidden capex in aging trucks and gear. Financing wise, the DSCR looks really strong even with conservative SBA assumptions.
Main takeaway: some of the best SMB deals are mispriced because of category issues or licensing complexity – not because the actual business is weak. Those tend to be where the alpha is.
What a buyable SMB actually looks like (numbers inside)
byu/Great_Opening_7492 inEntrepreneur
Posted by Great_Opening_7492
3 Comments
Nice call. Give me food for thought for the future. Many thanks
This is exactly the kind of deal that makes me want to quit my day job and start hunting for businesses lol
The KB-2 angle is huge – most people see “carpet cleaning” and their brain just shuts off, but that contractor license basically gives them a monopoly on the full restoration cycle in their market
Beware there is a comflict of interest for 1 company to do both mitigation and the rebuild.