An exit multiple is the valuation multiple at which a company is acquired or goes public, most commonly revenue, EBITDA, or ARR multiples. Common variants include revenue multiple, EBITDA multiple, ARR multiple for SaaS, or user-count multiple for consumer products. It is used to compare exits across deals, inform founder valuation expectations, and serve as a primary lens through which strategic acquirers and PE firms evaluate targets. It is the shortcut metric most M&A conversations actually run on, despite the existence of more sophisticated valuation methodologies.
The major multiples by business model: SaaS / subscription: typically valued on ARR multiple (annual recurring revenue), with public-market multiples ranging from 4 to 8x ARR for slow-growing or mid-margin businesses up to 15 to 30x ARR for high-growth top-quartile companies (Bessemer Emerging Cloud Index, Meritech data). E-commerce / consumer products: typically valued on revenue multiple (typically 1 to 4x revenue, occasionally higher for high-growth or category-defining brands), sometimes EBITDA multiple (8 to 15x for mature, profitable businesses). Mature profitable businesses (non-SaaS): typically valued on EBITDA multiple (typically 6 to 12x for healthy mid-market, higher for industry leaders with durable moats). Consumer apps and marketplaces: sometimes valued on gross merchandise value multiple (GMV multiple, typically 1 to 3x), revenue multiple, or user multiple ($X per monthly active user). The multiples-vs-DCF debate: discounted-cash-flow analysis is theoretically more rigorous (model future cash flows, discount to present value) but practically less reliable for high-growth or pre-profit companies where the future cash flows are deeply uncertain. Most modern M&A and IPO valuation in tech runs on revenue or ARR multiples adjusted for growth rate, gross margin, retention, and CAC efficiency. The "Rule of 40" (growth rate plus profit margin should sum to ≥40 for healthy SaaS) is widely used as a quick multiple-adjustment shorthand.
Exit multiples are the language M&A actually speaks. DCF is what the investment banker pulls out when the multiples don't tell the story the seller wants to hear, which means DCF analysis is almost always a defense, not the primary valuation lens. The actual conversation is "what's your ARR, what's your growth rate, what's your net retention, what's your gross margin, here's a comparable transaction at Xx ARR, we're offering Yx ARR adjusted for [these specific factors]." Founders who don't know their comparable transactions inside out walk into M&A conversations underprepared and get anchored on the wrong number.
What founders get wrong: Treating exit multiples as predictive of a specific deal price rather than as a starting reference range. The actual multiple for any specific deal depends on growth rate, retention, gross margin, strategic value to the acquirer, competitive dynamics in the auction, and dozens of other factors. The multiple is the conversation starter, not the answer.
Related: Enterprise Value vs Equity Value · Acquisition · IPO · TAM SAM SOM
What is an exit multiple?
The valuation multiple at which a company is acquired or goes public, most commonly revenue multiple, EBITDA multiple, ARR multiple for SaaS, or sometimes user-count multiple for consumer products. Used to compare exits across deals and inform valuation expectations.
What are typical exit multiples for SaaS companies?
Public-market ARR multiples range from 4 to 8x for slow-growing or mid-margin businesses up to 15 to 30x for high-growth top-quartile companies (Bessemer Emerging Cloud Index, Meritech data). Private-market acquisition multiples typically run at a discount to public comparables. The Rule of 40 is widely used as a multiple-adjustment shorthand.
Why are multiples used instead of DCF?
Discounted-cash-flow analysis is theoretically more rigorous but practically less reliable for high-growth or pre-profit companies where future cash flows are deeply uncertain. Most modern tech M&A and IPO valuation runs on revenue or ARR multiples adjusted for growth, retention, gross margin, and efficiency metrics.
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