Company valuation calculator

A company valuation calculator estimates what a business is worth from its financial performance. This free tool values an Indian company using four standard methods – EV/EBITDA, EV/Revenue, price-to-earnings (P/E) and net-asset (book) value – and blends them into an indicative enterprise-value range. Enter your revenue, EBITDA, net profit, net worth and debt, pick your sector, and it applies sector-median multiples to produce a base valuation with a low–high range. You can then download a branded PDF report. It is an indicative estimate for planning, fundraising and benchmarking – not a registered valuation.

Enter your figures

Enter all figures in ₹ crore. Nothing is stored – the estimate is computed in your browser.

Infyner
Indicative valuation report
Acme Logistics Pvt Ltd
19 Jun 2026
Logistics & transport
infyner.com
Base enterprise value
₹140 Cr
range ₹115 Cr – ₹165 Cr
Implied equity value
₹128 Cr
less net debt ₹12 Cr
How we got there – methods
MethodMultipleImplied EVWeight
Key ratios

Indicative estimate generated from the figures entered, using sector-median multiples. This is not a SEBI-registered valuation, audit or investment advice. Infyner accepts no liability for decisions based on this report.

How to value a company with this tool

  1. Enter your financials. Type in annual revenue, EBITDA, net profit, net worth and total debt (in rupees crore).
  2. Choose your sector. Select the industry that best fits the company – this sets the valuation multiples used.
  3. Calculate. See the enterprise value, equity value and a low–high range across four methods.
  4. Download the report. Get a branded PDF with the full method breakdown and key ratios.

How the valuation methods work

The tool runs four standard valuation methods and weights them into a single base figure. Showing the range and the methods is deliberate – a credible valuation is a band, not a single precise number.

EV/EBITDA

Enterprise value = EBITDA × a sector multiple. This is the most widely used method for profitable private companies because it removes the effect of debt and accounting policy, making businesses comparable across the sector.

EV/Revenue

Enterprise value = Revenue × a sector multiple. Useful for fast-growing or thin-margin companies where EBITDA understates the opportunity.

Price-to-earnings (P/E)

Equity value = Net profit × a P/E multiple. A simple read on what the market pays for each rupee of earnings in the sector.

Net-asset (book) value

Equity value ≈ net worth, the book value of shareholders' funds. A floor for asset-heavy businesses and the fallback when a company is loss-making.

The tool converts between enterprise value and equity value using net debt (total debt minus cash). Loss-making inputs automatically drop the EBITDA and P/E methods and re-weight the rest.

Worked example

Take a logistics company with revenue of ₹120 Cr, EBITDA of ₹18 Cr, net profit of ₹9 Cr, net worth of ₹65 Cr and net debt of ₹12 Cr. At a sector EV/EBITDA of about 8× the enterprise value is ₹144 Cr; EV/Revenue at 1.2× gives ₹144 Cr; a P/E of 15× implies an equity value of ₹135 Cr; and net-asset value sits at ₹65 Cr. Blended and weighted, the base enterprise value lands near ₹140 Cr, or roughly ₹115–165 Cr as a working range.

Frequently asked questions

How is a company's valuation calculated?

A company's value is most often estimated by applying market multiples to its financial performance. This tool uses four standard methods - EV/EBITDA, EV/Revenue, price-to-earnings (P/E) and net-asset (book) value - then blends them into an indicative enterprise-value range using sector-median multiples.

What is EV/EBITDA and why does it matter?

EV/EBITDA compares a company's enterprise value to its earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation. It is the most widely used multiple for valuing profitable private companies because it strips out capital structure and accounting choices, making businesses easier to compare.

Can I value a loss-making or pre-revenue company?

Yes, with caveats. If EBITDA or net profit is zero or negative, the tool drops the EBITDA and P/E methods and leans on the EV/Revenue and net-asset methods instead. For pre-revenue startups, multiples-based valuation is unreliable and a qualitative or venture method is more appropriate.

How accurate is this valuation?

It is an indicative estimate, not a registered valuation. Real transaction values depend on growth, margins, customer concentration, debt terms, control premiums and negotiation. Treat the output as a starting range for planning, fundraising or benchmarking - not a final price.

Is my data stored?

No. In this free calculator the figures you enter are processed in your browser to compute the estimate and generate the PDF. They are not sent to or stored on a server.

Do I need to sign up to download the report?

No. The PDF report, including the Infyner branding and the full method breakdown, downloads directly from your browser without any sign-up or payment.