Translate
Default
English
Español
Français

Sign Up for Our E-News!

Join over 18,000 other roofers who get the Week in Roofing for a recap of this week's best industry posts!

Sign Up
AskARoofer -  Ad - AAR Podcasts
RCS En Espanol -  Ad - LVR
ABC -  - Deliver Success
All Weather Insulated Panels -  Ad - InnovaCELL
NRCA -  ad - National Roofing Week 2026 250x265
Terial -  Ad - May 2026
Translate
Default
English
Español
Français

Is there a “perfect” revenue mix when selling a roofing company?

Is there a “perfect” revenue mix when selling a roofing company?
June 2, 2026 at 12:00 p.m.

By Exit Stage Left Advisors.

What buyers actually look for when evaluating your roofing business, and why the answer might surprise you.

Roofing owners love to ask this question: “If I’m 60% residential and 40% commercial, will buyers pay more?”

Here at Exit Stage Left Advisors, we know the truth: there is no perfect revenue mix or magic formula. And chasing one can actually hurt your valuation more than it helps.

Buyers want predictability, scalability and lack of risk. Those are the important high-level benchmarks for an attractive roofing business. 

A 100% residential roofing company can command a premium if the operation is repeatable, the margins are consistent and the business doesn’t rely on the owner to sell every job. On the other hand, we’ve seen commercial roofing companies struggle in M&A because revenue is unpredictable, customer concentration is high and backlog visibility is poor.

If you're an insurance-driven residential business, buyers may have extra scrutiny. Not because insurance work is bad, but because it can be volatile, seasonal and market-dependent. Storm exposure, carrier behavior and regulatory shifts all matter. If most of your revenue depends on factors outside your control, buyers are going to use that as leverage to discount your valuation. 

Commercial roofing brings the potential for longer contracts and higher job averages, but it also means longer sales cycles, more working capital needs and customer concentration risk. All it takes is one large customer walking away and the business can change dramatically. 

What buyers really want is balance with intention. They want to understand why your revenue mix looks the way it does and whether it can be repeated without you. Without you being of the upmost importance. 

So, what’s the “perfect” revenue mix?

It’s the one where revenue is easy to explain, margins are defensible and future cash flow is believable. Buyers don’t need perfection, but they do need predictability. If buyers see risk, they are quick to move on. 

If you’re curious how buyers would view your revenue mix and what it means for valuation, you can get a no-cost, confidential business valuation at www.wesellroofers.com or reach out to alex@esladvisors.com or ben@esladvisors.com for a no-obligation consultation.

Because in M&A, clarity creates confidence and confidence drives value.

Learn more about Exit Stage Left Advisors in their Coffee Shop Directory or on wesellroofers.com



Recommended For You


Comments

There are currently no comments here.

Leave a Reply

Commenting is only accessible to RCS users.

Have an account? Login to leave a comment!


Sign In
SRS - Banner Ad - SRS Delivers Supplies During Storm Season
Translate
Default
English
Español
Français

Sign Up for Our E-News!

Join over 18,000 other roofers who get the Week in Roofing for a recap of this week's best industry posts!

Sign Up
Soylei -  Ad - Apex 1132 May 2026
SRS -  Ad (En Espanol Page) - Credit Application
TAMKO -  Ad - Hailguard April Campaign
SRS -  Ad - SRS Delivers Supplies During Storm Season
Roof Hugger  Ad - Q2
Sherwin Williams Roofing Solutions -  - Polyurethane