Most owner-operated businesses are deliberately run to minimize taxable profit. That's good tax planning and terrible optics at sale time — the P&L a buyer first sees understates what the business actually produces for its owner. Add-backs are how the gap gets bridged: expenses a new owner wouldn't bear, added back to profit to show true earning power. Done with discipline, they are the difference between a business priced on its tax return and a business priced on its economics. Done sloppily, they are the single most common reason diligence turns adversarial.
Salary, payroll taxes, health insurance, retirement contributions, and other benefits paid to one working owner. In a valuation built on seller's discretionary earnings (SDE), all of it is added back — SDE is defined as the total economic benefit one owner-operator takes out of the business.
The family vehicle on the company books, the personal cell phones, travel that was really a vacation, the season tickets. Every one of these is a legitimate add-back if it can be traced to a specific line in the books — and a credibility problem if presented as a round-number estimate.
A lawsuit settled, a flood repaired, a website rebuilt, moving costs. The test buyers apply is simple: did it happen once, and will the new owner face it again? An expense that recurs every two or three years — equipment rebuilds, say — is a cost of the business, not an add-back, and experienced buyers know the difference.
Depreciation, amortization, and interest are standard add-backs under both SDE and EBITDA conventions — the buyer will have their own capital structure and their own depreciation schedule. One caveat: in equipment-heavy businesses, a buyer will mentally re-subtract a realistic annual capital-expenditure figure, so adding back depreciation doesn't make equipment replacement costs disappear.
Every add-back should carry three things: the expense line it came from, the dollar amount per year for the last three years, and a one-sentence explanation a skeptical lender would accept. That schedule — not the headline earnings number — is what an SBA lender's underwriter and a buyer's accountant actually read. A clean three-year add-back schedule is one of the highest-return documents an owner can prepare before going to market, and it's one of the items on our exit-readiness checklist.
The free SDE calculator walks through owner compensation, perks, and one-time expenses line by line — no signup, about two minutes. Or start a confidential inquiry and we'll outline what a defensible add-back schedule looks like for your business before you share a single document.
Only the difference between what the business pays and market rate, and only when the owner also owns the building. If the business pays the owner's building entity above-market rent, the excess is added back; below-market rent works in reverse and reduces earnings. Buyers check this against local comps.
There's no fixed count, but proportion matters: when add-backs approach or exceed the reported profit, the earnings story rests entirely on the schedule's credibility. That's workable with clean documentation — and fatal without it.
Ultimately the buyer and, in financed deals, the lender's underwriter. A broker's job is to present a schedule conservative enough to survive both reviews intact — a deal that holds its price through diligence beats a bigger number that re-trades.
Nothing on this page is an appraisal, a broker price opinion, or an opinion of value for any specific business, and no statement here is a commitment that any add-back will be accepted by any buyer or lender. Nothing on this page is legal, tax, or financial advice; consult your own advisors.
Dom Dominguez, MBA, MS is a Florida-licensed business broker. As required by Florida Real Estate Commission Rule 61J2, the broker license is registered with Hedgestone Business Advisors, a trade name of Steinberg Re Holdings, LLC, a Florida limited liability company (collectively, "Hedgestone"). Hedgestone neither owns nor operates this Site; this disclosure appears solely for brokerage-licensure compliance. Vaultolio is a brand name for the website only and is not itself a legal entity or licensed brokerage. Florida Broker License No. FL BK3529743. Mailing address: 2431 NW 92nd Ave, Coral Springs, FL 33065. Phone: 813-389-9466. Vaultolio does not claim or represent licensure in any other state.