Most Canadian business owners do not know what their business is actually worth. That gap is expensive.

Most business valuations are completed long before a business is sold and are used to support tax planning, succession decisions, shareholder buyouts, estate freezes, financing conversations, and strategic decision-making throughout the life of the business. Wefinx helps Canadian owner-managed businesses understand what their business is worth, what is driving or suppressing that value, and how valuation connects to the decisions that matter most.

Knowing your number changes how you run the business and how you eventually leave it.

Most business owners have a rough sense of what their business might be worth. Fewer have a defensible, structured view of fair market value that could withstand CRA scrutiny, a buyer’s due diligence, or a shareholder dispute.

The gap between an informal estimate and a properly supported valuation shows up at the worst moment: when a succession is being structured, when a partner wants out, when an estate freeze needs a defensible number, or when a buyer’s advisor produces their own valuation and the owner has nothing to counter it with. Businesses forced into valuation discussions under pressure often discover value risks much later than they should have.

A Wefinx business valuation engagement establishes a clear, supportable view of fair market value and connects it directly to the planning decisions the number is meant to inform. The value a strategic buyer may pay can differ materially from the fair market value used for tax, succession, and shareholder planning purposes, which is why the purpose of the valuation matters.

What Business Valuation Looks Like Inside Your Business

These are the areas a Wefinx business valuation engagement covers for Canadian owner-managed businesses.

Fair Market Value Assessment

We establish a defensible fair market value range for the business based on earnings quality, working capital quality, industry multiples, asset values, revenue predictability, customer concentration, owner dependence, and risk profile. Valuation is both a calculation and a professional judgment. We apply the appropriate methodology, whether income, market, or asset-based, depending on the nature of the business and the purpose of the engagement.

What changes:

You have a clear, supportable view of what the business is worth and why, rather than an estimate with no foundation behind it.

EBITDA Normalization and Earnings Quality

Reported earnings rarely reflect the true economic performance of an owner-managed business. Owner compensation adjustments, non-recurring expenses, personal expenses run through the business, related-party transactions, and discretionary spending all need to be normalized before a meaningful valuation can be established. The normalized EBITDA is the number buyers, lenders, CRA, and quality of earnings reviewers work from. We ensure it is accurate and fully documented.

What changes:

The earnings figure underlying the valuation reflects the genuine operating performance of the business rather than what happened to be reported.

Valuation for Tax and Estate Planning

Estate freezes, intergenerational transfers, shareholder reorganizations, and LCGE planning all require a defensible fair market value at the time of the transaction. CRA has the ability to substitute fair market value if the price used in a related-party transaction is not supportable. A valuation prepared to CICBV standards provides the documentation that protects the tax position taken. We coordinate the valuation directly with the tax planning it supports.

What changes:

Tax and estate planning decisions are supported by a defensible valuation rather than an informal estimate that CRA could challenge.

Succession and Exit Readiness Valuation

Understanding current value is the starting point for succession and exit planning. Without a clear baseline, the gap between current value and the owner’s financial target is invisible, succession pricing has no anchor, and strategic decisions are made without understanding their impact on enterprise value. We establish the baseline and connect it directly to the succession, exit, tax, and value growth planning decisions that follow.

What changes:

Succession and exit planning begins from a clear, honest view of where the business stands today rather than an optimistic estimate.

Shareholder Buyout and Dispute Valuation

When a shareholder wants out, when a partner buyout is being structured, or when a dispute requires an independent valuation, the number needs to be supportable to both parties. We provide independent fair market value assessments that can withstand scrutiny from the other side’s advisor, serve as the basis for a negotiated settlement, or support litigation if the dispute proceeds further.

What changes:

The valuation provides an independent, defensible anchor for the buyout or dispute that can withstand scrutiny from counterparties, advisors, lenders, or CRA where necessary.

Insurance and Buy-Sell Agreement Valuation

Shareholders agreements and buy-sell arrangements often require a current fair market value to trigger or execute properly when a partner dies, becomes disabled, or wants to exit. Without a defensible valuation in place, the price becomes a dispute rather than a process. Life insurance coverage tied to a buy-sell arrangement also needs to reflect actual business value to function as intended. We provide valuations that support both the agreement mechanics and the insurance planning connected to them.

What changes:

Buy-sell arrangements and related insurance coverage are anchored to a current, supportable valuation rather than an outdated number that creates conflict at the worst moment.

Financing and Lender Valuation Support

Banks and private lenders often require a business valuation as part of a financing application, refinancing, or operating line review. We prepare valuations that meet lender requirements and reflect the financial reality of the business in a format that supports the financing conversation rather than raising additional questions. Working capital expectations and cash flow consistency also materially affect how lenders and buyers evaluate the business during financing and transaction discussions.

What changes:

The financing conversation is supported by a credible, professionally prepared valuation rather than an informal estimate the lender has to discount.

Value Driver Analysis and Improvement Planning

A valuation is most useful when it explains not just what the business is worth but what is driving and suppressing that value. Customer concentration, owner dependence, key person dependence, revenue quality, margins, management depth, and documented systems all affect how the business is valued by a buyer or successor. Intangible factors such as management depth, documented systems, customer relationships, and operational independence often influence valuation as much as the financial statements themselves. We identify the gaps and connect the valuation to a prioritized plan to close them over time.

What changes:

The valuation becomes a roadmap for improving enterprise value rather than a number that arrives without context.

Most business owners have an estimate of what their business is worth. Few have a number they could defend.

Most owners lack a structured understanding of what drives or limits business value. The Business Value and Exit Readiness Assessment identifies valuation gaps, measures readiness, and highlights opportunities to strengthen enterprise value before buyer, CRA, or shareholder scrutiny.

Built for Canadian Business Owners Who Need to Know Their Number

Understanding current value is the first step in any exit or succession process. Without a clear baseline, every subsequent decision is made on an assumption rather than a fact.

A partner wants out, a shareholder dispute is developing, or a buyout needs to be priced. An independent, defensible valuation is the only way to anchor the conversation.

Tax planning around an estate freeze or family succession requires a supportable fair market value at the time of the transaction. CRA scrutiny of related-party transactions makes this non-negotiable.

A lender requires a valuation, an acquisition is being considered, or a major strategic decision needs to be evaluated against its impact on enterprise value.

A valuation is not the end of the conversation. It is the beginning.

Knowing what the business is worth today tells you where you stand. Exit planning, succession planning, value growth advisory, and tax structuring tell you how to close the gap between where you stand and where you need to be. Wefinx connects the valuation to the planning it should inform rather than delivering a report that sits in a folder.

What Our Clients Are Saying

Real feedback from real business owners. We let the work speak.

Services That Work Alongside This

A current valuation is the starting point for exit planning. Understanding what the business is worth, what is limiting that value, and what the gap to the owner’s financial target looks like is the foundation from which exit strategy is built.

Succession pricing, estate freeze structuring, and intergenerational transfer planning all depend on a defensible fair market value. Valuation and succession planning are designed to work together from the start.

LCGE preparation, estate freezes, and shareholder reorganizations all require a valuation that can withstand CRA scrutiny. Tax planning and valuation strategies are carefully coordinated so each supports the other effectively.

The businesses that know their number make better decisions with it.

Every Wefinx business valuation engagement starts with a structured review of the business, its financial performance, ownership structure, the purpose of the valuation, and the planning decisions the valuation is meant to support before any methodology is applied.

A 30-minute discovery call is the right place to start.

Questions About Business Valuation Services

What is fair market value and why does it matter for Canadian business owners?

Fair market value is the price at which a business would change hands between a willing buyer and a willing seller, both with reasonable knowledge of the facts and neither under compulsion to act. It is the standard CRA applies when evaluating related-party transactions, estate freezes, and intergenerational transfers. It is also the standard buyers and their advisors use when assessing what a business is worth in a transaction. A valuation that does not meet this standard creates exposure, whether to CRA on a tax filing or to a counterparty in a negotiation.

What are the three levels of business valuation reports in Canada?

Canadian business valuations prepared to CICBV standards come in three levels. A Comprehensive Report provides the highest level of analysis and documentation and is used when the valuation needs to withstand the greatest scrutiny, such as litigation or formal CRA challenges. An Estimate Report provides a supported opinion of value with less detailed analysis and is typically used for succession planning, financing, and strategic decisions. A Calculation Report provides a value based on agreed-upon procedures and limited scope, often used for internal purposes or preliminary planning. The purpose of the valuation determines both the level of reporting required and the amount of supporting analysis necessary for the conclusion to withstand scrutiny.

When does CRA require a business valuation?

CRA does not always require a formal valuation report, but it has the authority to substitute fair market value in any transaction between non-arm’s-length parties, including family members, related corporations, and shareholders. Estate freezes, intergenerational share transfers, and shareholder buyouts at below-market prices are among the most common situations where CRA scrutinizes the value used. A properly prepared valuation provides documentation to support the price and reduces the risk of a reassessment.

How is the value of a private Canadian business determined?

Private business valuation applies one or more of three primary approaches depending on the nature of the business: the income approach, which values the business based on its future earnings capacity, typically expressed as a multiple of normalized EBITDA; the market approach, which compares the business to similar transactions involving comparable companies; and the asset approach, which values the underlying assets and liabilities of the business. Most owner-managed business valuations rely primarily on the income approach because the value of the business is driven by what it earns rather than what it owns. The normalized EBITDA used in the calculation, and the multiple applied to it, are where the most significant professional judgment is exercised. Depending on the ownership interest being valued, discounts for lack of marketability or minority ownership may also apply. Conversely, controlling interests may justify control premiums depending on the rights and influence attached to the ownership position being valued.

What is EBITDA normalization and why does it matter?

EBITDA normalization adjusts reported earnings for items that do not reflect the genuine operating performance of the business. Owner compensation above or below market rates, non-recurring expenses, personal expenses run through the business, related-party transactions, and discretionary spending are all adjusted so the earnings figure represents what the business would earn under arm’s-length conditions. Buyers and lenders work from normalized EBITDA, not reported earnings. An unsupported or incorrect normalization is one of the most common sources of valuation disputes.

How does a business valuation connect to exit or succession planning?

A valuation establishes where the business stands today. Exit planning and succession planning use that baseline to identify the gap between current value and the owner’s financial target, prioritize improvements to enterprise value, structure the tax position of the transaction, and establish the pricing framework for a succession or sale. A valuation without planning is a number. A valuation connected to planning is a starting point for meaningful decisions.

Know what your business is actually worth.Then build toward a stronger number.

Most Canadian business owners have a rough sense of what their company might be worth. Very few have a clear, defensible picture of what is driving that value, what is quietly suppressing it, and what an informed buyer would actually pay.

Your business is likely your largest asset. Treat it like one.

Revenue is not value. Buyers pay for quality earnings, predictable revenue, leadership depth, and transferability. Without a clear valuation, growth decisions, succession timing, and exit strategy all rest on assumptions. That gap is where capital gets misallocated and value gets left behind.

What valuation advisory covers

Current Business Value Assessment

We analyze financial performance, earnings quality, market factors, and key business risks to produce a realistic valuation range. Gives Canadian business owners a clear, defensible starting point for growth, succession, or exit decisions.

Value Driver Analysis

Profitability, recurring revenue, owner dependence, customer concentration, leadership depth, and scalability. Shows exactly where to focus to improve what buyers and successors pay for.

Value Gap Identification

The difference between current value and potential value is often larger than owners expect. Clarifies the upside opportunity and what it realistically takes to reach it.

Exit and Sale Readiness Valuation

We assess where your business would likely land in the market and what preparation would improve buyer confidence and pricing outcomes.

Succession and Ownership Transition Support

Valuation provides the foundation for informed ownership transfers, partner buyouts, and family succession decisions. Supports fair, structured conversations grounded in facts rather than estimates.

Growth Investment Decisions

Understanding which value drivers matter most ensures capital is allocated to the areas with the highest measurable impact, not the most obvious ones.

CEPA-Led Valuation Perspective

Our valuation work is informed by Certified Exit Planning Advisor methodology. That means findings connect directly to exit readiness, value growth strategy, and forward-looking improvement, not just a point-in-time snapshot.

Annual Valuation Updates

As the business evolves, updated valuations track progress and validate that strategic improvements are translating into measurable value over time.

Most Canadian business owners are making major decisions without knowing their number.

Growth plans, succession timing, shareholder discussions, and exit strategy all become harder when value is based on guesswork. A clear valuation changes the quality of every decision that follows.

Why Canadian business owners choose Wefinx for valuation

A number that drives next steps

We do not deliver a valuation and walk away. We explain what is driving it, what is suppressing it, and what decisions make the most sense from here. The output is direction, not just a figure.

Financial depth behind every assessment

Because we work inside the accounting and reporting of the business, our valuation work is grounded in actual numbers. Assumptions are made explicit, not buried.

The value gap made visible

The difference between current value and potential value is often significant and poorly understood. We surface it clearly so the highest-impact improvements become obvious.

Useful at every stage, not just before a sale

Valuation supports growth planning, ownership changes, retirement timing, and investment decisions. For many Canadian business owners, it becomes most valuable years before any transaction is considered.

Built around Canadian private market realities

Private business valuation in Canada is shaped by local market conditions, tax structure, and ownership norms. Our work reflects that environment specifically, not generic frameworks.

Connected to tax and exit planning

Valuation findings directly inform tax structuring, succession timing, and exit positioning. We connect those dots rather than treating valuation as a standalone exercise with no action attached.

Valuation is a starting point. These services move you forward.

Exit Planning

Structured preparation that improves business value, aligns personal financial goals, and coordinates the path toward a successful transition.

Explore Exit Planning

Value Growth

Once you understand your current valuation, the next step is improving it. We identify and build the drivers that increase enterprise value over time.

Explore Value Growth

Tax

The structure of ownership transfers and business dispositions has significant tax implications. Valuation work and tax planning belong together.

Explore Tax

Frequently asked questions about business valuation Canada

how to value a business Canada | business valuation services Ontario | small business valuation | enterprise value assessment Canada

How is a business valuation calculated?

Valuation can be based on earnings multiples, discounted cash flow, asset values, or comparable market transactions depending on the business type and purpose. For private owner-managed businesses in Canada, earnings quality and risk profile are typically the most influential factors.

Is revenue the main driver of business value?

No. Revenue matters but profitability, earnings consistency, owner dependence, recurring revenue, and buyer-perceived risk often have more influence on the final number than top-line size alone.

Do I need a valuation if I am not planning to sell?

Valuation is useful for growth planning, succession timing, shareholder buyouts, retirement preparation, and measuring progress over time. Many owners find it most valuable well before any transaction is on the horizon.

How often should I update my valuation?

Annual updates are valuable, particularly if the business is growing, ownership is changing, or a future exit or succession is being considered within the next several years.

What reduces business value the most?

Owner dependence is consistently the most significant discount factor. Inconsistent or declining earnings, heavy customer concentration, absence of documented systems, and reliance on key individuals outside ownership also suppress value substantially. These are also the factors that take the most time to fix, which is why early awareness matters.

Will I receive one exact number?

Valuation is most accurately expressed as a realistic range based on the assumptions, market conditions, and financial information available. A single precise figure typically overstates the certainty involved.

Can valuation help identify ways to increase business value?

Yes. Understanding what drives current value almost always reveals the highest-impact areas for improvement. That gap analysis is often as valuable as the number itself.

Ready to find out what your business is actually worth?

Stop planning against an assumption. We will review your current position, explain what is driving your value, and show you what a stronger number could look like.

Understand your value before your next big decision.

Whether you are planning growth, considering succession, or simply want to know where you stand, a clear valuation changes the quality of everything that follows.