Investors use a variety of metrics to value a company.
Some prefer to look at a company’s P/E ratio - measuring its stock price against its earnings.
Other investors like the P/B ratio - understanding the worth of a company's assets vs its current stock price.
However, these metrics tell you if a company is under or overvalued based on its assets or its earnings.
But how do you value a company’s actual business including the profits that it earns?
EV/EBITDA is one of Wall Street's favorite valuation metrics.
And once you understand it, you'll have a powerful tool to compare companies across industries and spot whether a stock is priced fairly.
Let’s break down what it is, how to calculate it, why it’s important, and some other factors you need to consider before valuing a company with it.
But first: Our market analysts are spotting potentially undervalued companies every week in Market Briefs Pro.
Get in-depth data and research on stocks the rest of the market hasn’t spotted yet by subscribing today.
What Does EV/EBITDA Actually Mean?
The EV/EBITDA ratio has two parts you need to understand:
Enterprise Value (EV): The total cost to buy the entire company today.
EBITDA: Earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization.
When you divide enterprise value by EBITDA, you get a multiple. This multiple shows how much investors are willing to pay for each dollar of the company's core earnings.
Think of it like buying a coffee shop. If the shop makes $100,000 per year and you're paying $500,000 for it, you're paying 5x the annual earnings.
That's the basic concept behind EV/EBITDA.
Why EV/EBITDA Matters More Than You Think
Here's whymany investors use EV/EBITDA as a valuatioan metric:
It ignores accounting tricks. Companies can manipulate earnings with depreciation and tax strategies. EBITDA strips that away to show core business performance.
It works across industries. Unlike P/E ratios, EV/EBITDA accounts for different capital structures.
A company with lots of debt looks different than a debt-free company when you use EV/EBITDA.
It's better for growth companies. Many high-growth companies aren't profitable yet.
P/E ratios don't work for them. But if they're generating revenue and have positive EBITDA, you can still use EV/EBITDA to value them.
How to Calculate Enterprise Value (The First Part)
Let's walk through calculating EV step by step using a real example.
Here's the formula: Enterprise Value = Market Cap + Total Debt - Cash and Cash Equivalents
Step 1: Find the Market Cap
Go to Yahoo Finance, Google Finance, or any financial website. Look up a stock - the market cap is usually right under the stock price.
For our example, let's say a company has a market cap of $4.37 trillion.
Step 2: Add Total Debt
Open the company's 10-K report (you can find this on the SEC's website or the company's investor relations page). Go to the balance sheet.
Find "Total Liabilities" - this represents debt obligations. Let's say it's $32.27 billion.
Step 3: Subtract Cash
Still on the balance sheet, look at the assets section. Find "Cash and Cash Equivalents."
In our example, that's $8.58 billion.
Do the Math
$4.37 trillion (market cap) + $32.27 billion (debt) - $8.58 billion (cash) = $4.39 trillion
That's your enterprise value.
How to Calculate EBITDA (The Second Part)
EBITDA stands for Earnings Before Interest, Taxes, Depreciation, and Amortization.
Here's why we calculate it this way: We want to see what the core business is worth without accounting variables getting in the way.
The formula: EBITDA = Net Income + Interest Expense + Tax Expense + Depreciation + Amortization
Step 1: Grab Net Income
Back to the 10-K report. Look at the income statement. Find "Net Income."
In our example: $72.8 billion.
Step 2: Add Interest Expense
Still on the income statement, find "Interest Expense." This might show as a negative number, but we're adding it back in as a positive.
Example: -$247 million becomes +$247 million.
Pro tip: Use your browser's search function (Ctrl+F or Cmd+F) to find these line items quickly.
Step 3: Add Tax Expense
Find "Tax Expense" or "Income Tax" on the income statement.
Example: $11.1 billion.
Step 4: Add Depreciation and Amortization
This one's a bit trickier. Look in the cash flow statement under operating activities. You'll see adjustments for depreciation and amortization.
Example: $1.86 billion.
Do the Math
$72.8B + $0.247B + $11.1B + $1.86B = $86 billion
That's your EBITDA.
Putting It All Together: The EV/EBITDA Ratio
Now we have both pieces:
- Enterprise Value: $4.39 trillion
- EBITDA: $86 billion
EV/EBITDA = $4,390 billion ÷ $86 billion = 51x
This company is valued at 51 times its EBITDA.
What Does a 51x Multiple Actually Tell You?
A ratio of 51x by itself doesn't mean much - you need context to actually make sense of it.
Let's compare this company to its competitors:
- Company A: 51x
- Company B: 27.5x
- Company C: 13.3x
- Company D: 17.8x
Company A is trading at a much higher multiple than its peers. This means the market is pricing in significantly higher growth expectations.
Investors are willing to pay more for Company A's earnings because they believe those earnings will explode in the future.
Is Higher Always Bad?
Not necessarily.
A high EV/EBITDA ratio could mean:
- The company is overvalued.
- The market expects massive growth.
- The company has unique competitive advantages.
- Industry-wide optimism is driving prices up.
A low EV/EBITDA ratio could mean:
- The company is undervalued (a buying opportunity).
- The business is struggling.
- The industry is out of favor.
- There are risks the market is pricing in.
You can't make a call based on the ratio alone - you need to do further research and understand why the company is valued in such a way.
When to Use EV/EBITDA vs Other Metrics
Every valuation metric has its place. Here's when EV/EBITDA may be useful for some investors:
You can use EV/EBITDA when:
- Comparing companies with different capital structures.
- Valuing companies that aren't yet profitable.
- Looking at capital-intensive industries (manufacturing, energy, infrastructure).
- You want to see core operational performance.
You may want to avoid using EV/EBITDA when:
- The company is asset-heavy with significant depreciation that matters (use P/B ratio instead).
- The company has no revenue yet (early-stage startups).
- You're comparing companies in wildly different industries.
For asset-heavy companies, Price-to-Book (P/B) ratio might make more sense.
For companies without earnings, Price-to-Sales (P/S) ratio works better.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
Mistake #1: Comparing Across Industries
A 30x multiple in software is normal. A 30x multiple in retail might be insane. Always compare companies within the same sector.
Mistake #2: Ignoring the Trend
Is the company's EV/EBITDA ratio rising or falling over time?
A rising ratio might mean the stock price is outpacing earnings growth - that could be a warning gin that its growth is not sustainable.
Mistake #3: Using EBITDA for Financial Companies
Banks and insurance companies don't work well with EV/EBITDA because their debt is part of their business model, not external financing.
Consider P/E ratios for financial companies instead.
Real-World Example: Semiconductor Industry
Let's look at how EV/EBITDA reveals industry dynamics. *EV/EBITDA number as of Q2 2025.
| Company | EV/EBITDA Multiple |
| Nvidia | 51x |
| AMD | 27.5x |
| Taiwan Semiconductor | 13.3x |
| Intel | 17.8x |
Nvidia's 51x multiple tells us the market expects it to dominate AI chips. That massive revenue growth you've been hearing about is more than likely already baked into its stock price.
AMD at 27.5x still commands a premium but not as extreme.
Taiwan Semiconductor at 13.3x might look like a value play - or it might reflect concerns about geopolitical risk and China tensions.
Intel at 17.8x sits in the middle, perhaps reflecting its struggle to keep pace with competitors.
How to Find EV/EBITDA Without Doing the Math
Let's be honest: calculating these metrics yourself builds understanding, but you don't always have time.
And while you should always do your own research, once you know how to calculate a companies EV/EBITDA, you’ll be able to spot if something looks off or not.
Most financial websites calculate EV/EBITDA for you:
- Yahoo Finance (look under "Statistics").
- Google Finance.
- MarketWatch.
- Morningstar.
- Financial Times.
The numbers are usually right there next to P/E ratio and other valuation metrics.
But knowing how to calculate it yourself helps you spot errors and understand what you're really looking at.
The Bottom Line on EV/EBITDA
EV/EBITDA is another way investors can assess the value of a company.
It strips away accounting variables to show you what investors are really paying for a company's core earnings.
But like any tool, you’ll want to understand how it can be used effectively:
- Always compare within the same industry.
- Look at trends over time, not just snapshots.
- Combine it with other metrics for a complete picture.
- Understand why the multiple is high or low before making judgments.
Keep in mind: Some investors use EV/EBITDA, while others never even consider it.
That’s because there’s no right or wrong way to value a stock - it just depends on what you’re looking for.
But EV/EBITDA can be a powerful asset for investors who understand how and where it is effective.
Researching stocks involves much more than just valuation metrics though - it also requires a combination of technical and fundmetnal analysis.
Our market analysts are researching stocks in-depth every single week on Market Briefs Pro.
What’s that? Our weekly investing report that spots potential investing opportunities before the rest of the market catches on.
Get the data and research you need to make smarter investment decisions and subscribe now.

