washregal
Member
Is there a strong rule of thumb for car wash apprasal / valuation for sale? How to set a selling price?
This is super helpful. Evaluating a potential car wash investment currently. Using method above, it looks like 5.85-8.85 is range for retail on loopnet for my state. Using your formulae, 6.5-9.5 might be a fair CAP range for a IBA+SS car wash. I'm curious from others is that range meshes with what you actually purchased a IBA car wash business (after negotiations) -- what was the CAP rate? Thanks!Calculate net operating income (ebida for a wash) and then divide by a cap rate for your area. You can search loopnet for listings of things like dollar general, Walgreens and other commercial rentals to get an idea. If most of those are in the 6-6.5 percent range you might use 7-9 percent as an initial guide to see if you think the number is realistic. Spread might be higher depending on how good or bad your wash is performing.
Thanks! This is super helpful.yeah, i would never pay less than a 12% cap rate for a car wash. Even then it is a stretch.
Investment real estate selling at a 6% return on capital is one thing because you have NNN's set up and all you do is collect rent.
With car washes you need to hire/fire, fix things, keep customers happy, etc. it is not a passive real estate investment.
With the SS/IBA model the expenses are roughly the same everywhere, so a rough use of 3-4x gross REALLY speaks to a multiple of net too...because there is economies of scaling the expenses, a good performing wash should sell closer to 4 and because the reverse is true a poor performing wash is worth closer to 3.
With any business you are buying future cash flows, you should never pay for POTENTIAL, and you should never pay for 6 quarters to a dollar- that's on the seller.
Thanks. Thankfully, it is closer to the latter situation.If you are seeing retail caps in your area over 8, I’d start at 10% as a minimum for a wash for the reason bighead mentions about the work involved. Also, cap rate is just a starting point or one factor to determine if the price is even reasonable. Age and condition of equipment, likelihood of keeping existing employees (if any), etc. will all factor into the decision. If ebida is $100k and seller wants $2mm you better run. If they want $1mm might be worth the due diligence and negotiation. This board has a lot of wisdom so keep searching and researching. Good luck!
> Exactly what Roz said. My background is real estate finance and yeah I would look at CAP rates but the deal has to pencil out with or without debt.Exactly what Roz said. My background is real estate finance and yeah I would look at CAP rates but the deal has to pencil out with or without debt.
And car washes are not NNN investments like a retail strip center, ground lease on a bldg etc. there is A LOT of work involved in running a wash.
If your comfortable post the Financials of the washes and we can better chime in on what we believe a fair value would be for them.