EV/EBITDA

What is EV/EBITDA?

The EV/EBITDA ratio compares a company's enterprise value to its earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization, valuing the whole operating business independent of capital structure.

EV/EBITDA is a valuation multiple that divides enterprise value by EBITDA. Enterprise value represents the market value of the operating business, including debt and preferred equity and net of cash. EBITDA approximates operating earnings before financing costs, taxes, depreciation, and amortization, which can make the multiple useful for comparing companies with different capital structures.

How to calculate it

Formula

EV/EBITDA = Enterprise Value / Earnings Before Interest, Taxes, Depreciation, and Amortization

Example

Example frame: EV/EBITDA expands when enterprise value rises faster than EBITDA, and contracts when EBITDA improves faster than enterprise value. JPMorgan Chase (JPM) live stock page.

Trailing vs forward variants

Trailing EV/EBITDA uses recent EBITDA, while forward EV/EBITDA uses estimated EBITDA. Forward versions can be useful after a cycle turn, but they rely on forecasts.

Benchmarks

EV/EBITDA is most useful within sectors because margin structure, depreciation, lease burden, and capital intensity vary widely. Use the live S&P 500 benchmark as a broad anchor, then compare the company with businesses that have similar asset intensity and cycle exposure.

Sector comparison

As of Jul 9, 2026 | n=12Median EV/EBITDA by sector
SectorMedian EV/EBITDAAs of
S&P 50015.34xJul 9, 2026
Technology24.83xJul 9, 2026
Real Estate17.87xJul 9, 2026
Industrials17.6xJul 9, 2026
Basic Materials15.18xJul 9, 2026
Healthcare14.94xJul 9, 2026
Consumer Defensive14.46xJul 9, 2026
Consumer Cyclical14.44xJul 9, 2026
Utilities13.24xJul 9, 2026
Communication Services11.13xJul 9, 2026
Financial Services10.4xJul 9, 2026
Energy10.14xJul 9, 2026

Universe distribution

As of Jun 23, 2026 | n=3,428Universe distribution versus S&P 500Typical range is the 25th to 75th percentile: -1.03x to 16.41x. Values outside that band need a business-specific explanation.

Chart view is trimmed to the 5th-95th percentile for readability.

Interpretation

How to read it

  1. Compare EV/EBITDA inside the same sector or industry because depreciation, margins, and capital intensity vary widely.
  2. Check debt, cash, and lease obligations so the enterprise value side reflects the true financing burden.
  3. Pair the multiple with free cash flow, capex needs, and revenue growth before treating a low EV/EBITDA as cheap.

High vs low

A lower EV/EBITDA multiple can indicate a cheaper enterprise valuation, but it can also reflect weaker growth, lower margins, high leverage, cyclicality, or poor cash conversion. A higher multiple can reflect stronger expected growth, higher returns on capital, better margins, or a more resilient business model. The key test is whether EBITDA converts into cash after maintenance capex, working capital, interest, and taxes. The P/E ratio is a more equity-focused valuation multiple.

Reference

Extremes

As of Jul 9, 2026 | sp500Current highest and lowest EV/EBITDAThese are the top and bottom 3 companies in the S&P 500 for this metric.
Highest
  • CrowdStrike Holdings, Inc. (CRWD)
    Technology
    592.6x
    EV/EBITDA
  • Datadog, Inc. (DDOG)
    Technology
    403.7x
    EV/EBITDA
  • Ford Motor Company (F)
    Consumer Cyclical
    247.5x
    EV/EBITDA
Lowest
  • Carvana Co. (CVNA)
    Consumer Cyclical
    -826.6x
    EV/EBITDA
  • International Paper Company (IP)
    Consumer Cyclical
    -682.8x
    EV/EBITDA
  • MetLife, Inc. (MET)
    Financial Services
    -44.1x
    EV/EBITDA
GroupCompanyTickerSectorEV/EBITDAAs of
HighestCrowdStrike Holdings, Inc.CRWDTechnology592.6xJul 9, 2026
HighestDatadog, Inc.DDOGTechnology403.7xJul 9, 2026
HighestFord Motor CompanyFConsumer Cyclical247.5xJul 9, 2026
LowestCarvana Co.CVNAConsumer Cyclical-826.6xJul 9, 2026
LowestInternational Paper CompanyIPConsumer Cyclical-682.8xJul 9, 2026
LowestMetLife, Inc.METFinancial Services-44.1xJul 9, 2026

Limitations

EV/EBITDA can improve comparability, but it has important limits:

  • Ignores capital expenditures, which can be material for asset-heavy businesses.
  • Can overstate cash profitability because EBITDA excludes depreciation and amortization.
  • Can be less useful for banks and insurers, where debt is part of the operating model.
  • Does not replace earnings-based valuation for shareholders. Read about P/E Ratio.

FAQ

Screen stocks by EV/EBITDA

Compare enterprise-value multiples across companies and sectors.