Enterprise Value to Sales Calculator

Pri Geens

Pri Geens

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Enterprise Value to Sales Calculator

Capitalization
Financial Performance

Valuation Results

Enterprise Value (EV) $0
EV/Sales Multiple 0.00x
Valuation Status
EV/Sales compares a company’s total value to its revenue. Lower multiples may indicate undervaluation, while higher multiples suggest overvaluation. Common in software/SaaS valuation.

What Is Enterprise Value to Sales?

Enterprise Value to Sales (EV/Sales) compares a company’s total value to its annual revenue.

It answers one simple question:

How much are investors paying for every dollar of revenue?

Unlike price-to-sales, EV/Sales includes debt and cash. That makes it more complete and more accurate when comparing companies.


EV/Sales Formula

The formula has two parts.

Step 1: Calculate Enterprise Value (EV)

Enterprise Value = Market Capitalization + Total Debt − Cash

Step 2: Calculate EV/Sales

EV/Sales = Enterprise Value ÷ Annual Revenue

That’s it.


What Each Input Means in the Calculator

Your calculator uses four inputs:

1. Market Capitalization ($)

This is the total value of a company’s shares.

Formula:

Share Price × Total Shares Outstanding

Example:
If a company has 10 million shares at $50 each, market cap = $500 million.


2. Total Debt ($)

This includes:

  • Long-term loans
  • Bonds
  • Short-term borrowings

Debt increases enterprise value because a buyer would have to pay it.


3. Cash & Cash Equivalents ($)

This includes:

  • Cash on hand
  • Bank balances
  • Liquid short-term investments

Cash reduces enterprise value because it can offset debt.


4. Annual Revenue ($)

This is the company’s total yearly sales.

Important: Revenue must be greater than zero to calculate EV/Sales.


How the EV/Sales Calculator Works

Your calculator follows this logic:

  1. Adds Market Cap + Debt
  2. Subtracts Cash
  3. Divides the result by Annual Revenue
  4. Displays:
    • Enterprise Value
    • EV/Sales Multiple
    • Valuation Status

It also categorizes the result into valuation levels.


Example Calculation

Let’s walk through a simple example.

  • Market Cap = $500,000,000
  • Total Debt = $100,000,000
  • Cash = $50,000,000
  • Revenue = $200,000,000

Step 1: Enterprise Value

EV = 500M + 100M − 50M
EV = 550M

Step 2: EV/Sales

EV/Sales = 550M ÷ 200M
EV/Sales = 2.75x

This means investors are paying $2.75 for every $1 of revenue.


How to Interpret EV/Sales Results

Your calculator classifies the multiple into ranges:

Negative EV

Distressed (Negative Enterprise Value)
This happens when cash is greater than market cap + debt. It often signals financial stress or deep undervaluation.


Less Than 2x

Potentially Undervalued / Low Growth

May indicate:

  • Slower growth
  • Market skepticism
  • Possible opportunity

2x to 5x

Healthy / Fairly Valued

Common for:

  • Stable businesses
  • Moderate growth companies

5x to 10x

High Valuation / High Growth Expected

Often seen in:

  • Technology companies
  • SaaS firms
  • Fast-growing startups

Investors expect strong future revenue growth.


Above 10x

Expensive / Speculative

This usually means:

  • Very high growth expectations
  • Strong brand dominance
  • Market hype

Higher risk if growth slows.


Why Investors Use EV/Sales

EV/Sales is popular because:

1. It Works for Unprofitable Companies

Many startups and tech companies do not have profits yet. Earnings-based ratios like P/E don’t work well there.

EV/Sales solves that.


2. It Allows Fair Comparisons

Since EV includes debt and cash, it compares companies more fairly than price-based ratios.

Two companies may have the same revenue but very different debt levels. EV/Sales captures that difference.


3. It Is Common in SaaS and Tech Valuation

High-growth companies are often valued based on revenue multiples rather than profits.


When to Use an EV/Sales Calculator

Use it when:

  • Comparing companies in the same industry
  • Evaluating startups
  • Analyzing high-growth stocks
  • Screening potential investments
  • Estimating acquisition value

It is especially useful when profits are low or negative.


Limitations of EV/Sales

No metric is perfect. EV/Sales has weaknesses.

1. It Ignores Profit Margins

A company with high revenue but low margins may look attractive on EV/Sales but still struggle financially.


2. It Ignores Cost Structure

Revenue alone does not tell you how efficiently the company operates.


3. Industry Differences Matter

A 4x multiple may be cheap in software but expensive in retail.

Always compare companies within the same industry.


EV/Sales vs Other Valuation Metrics

Here’s how it compares:

MetricBest ForLimitation
P/E RatioProfitable companiesDoesn’t work with losses
Price/SalesQuick comparisonsIgnores debt
EV/EBITDACash flow analysisNot ideal for early startups
EV/SalesGrowth & SaaS companiesIgnores profitability

EV/Sales sits in the middle. It is simple but more complete than price-to-sales.


Best Practices When Using EV/Sales

Follow these tips:

  • Compare companies in the same sector
  • Look at revenue growth rate
  • Check profit margins
  • Review debt levels
  • Combine with EV/EBITDA or free cash flow

Never rely on one ratio alone.


Who Should Use an EV/Sales Calculator?

This tool is useful for:

  • Retail investors
  • Financial analysts
  • Startup founders
  • Venture capital professionals
  • M&A advisors
  • Business students

If you need a quick, structured valuation snapshot, this calculator helps.