Last Updated: February 6, 2025

The following report compiles EBITDA and revenue multiple data pertaining to the sale of private oil and gas companies as of Q1 2025. Using proprietary data aggregators, news and media reports, and industry publications, our team has calculated the following averages. (Sources)

The tables below show average EBITDA and revenue multiples for private oil and gas businesses, broken down by industry subsector as well as EBITDA and revenue range. 

EBITDA Multiples for Private Oil and Gas Companies, Q1 2025

Company Type EBITDA Range
$1-3M $3-5M $5-10M
Downstream 6.3x 7.3x 8.2x
Midstream 5x 5.9x 6.5x
Upstream 5.4x 6.3x 7.5x
Integrated N/A 5.4x 6.7x

Revenue Multiples for Private Oil and Gas Companies, Q1 2025

Company Type Revenue Range
$1-5M $5-10M $10-25M
Downstream 2x 2.5x 3.5x
Midstream 1.7x 2.3x 3.6x
Upstream 1.9x 2.5x 4.1x
Integrated N/A N/A 3.2x

The State of Oil and Gas M&A Moving into 2025

Oil & gas M&A exhibited YoY gains for the last three years despite considerable macroeconomic headwinds. In the last year, the M&A market has seen multiples for smaller firms rise considerably, on average rising between .2-.8x every quarter across industry subsectors, in some cases being valued at nearly the same rate as larger integrated companies. Our team attributes the increases in EBITDA multiples to high gas prices stemming from increased demand for oil and gas, which was caused by OPEC raising their long-term oil demand outlook by 6 million barrels in October 2023. 

Private Oil & Gas Deal Value & Volume, H1 2021 – H1 2025

  H1 2021 H2 2021 H1 2022 H2 2022 H1 2023 H2 2023 H1 2024 H2 2024 H1 2025 (est)
Deal Value $97B $89B $103B $92B $105B $97B $101B $103B $106B
Deal Volume 168 212 170 216 187 232 188 201 215

In addition, the new administrations emphasis on new drilling projects created notable improvements for independent upstream oil companies, which had, on average, a +.7x increase in their EBIDTA multiples. Downstream companies, by contrast, took a small hit at -.3x, and midstream companies saw a smaller increase than downstream at +.2x. 

Integrated companies with operations in two or more stages of oil production saw approximately a +.4x rise in their EBITDA multiple.

This increase seems modest, however our data suggests that buyers are becoming more interested in picking up smaller companies: nearly 60% of upstream deals in 2023 were for companies under $250m in revenue. Our research team believes that this trend is only likely to continue as the Federal Reserve continues to cut interest rates.

EBITDA Multiples for Private Oil & Gas Companies, Q1 2021 – Q1 2025

Chart (52)

As the graph above shows, EBITDA multiples reached their pre-pandemic levels around Q4 2022 and have been making steady gains ever since. Our research does indicate, however, that the deal process has lengthened significantly, with averages rising from 9-12 months in 2022 to 10-18 months as of Q4 2024. 

The last two years especially have seen extended due diligence due to geopolitical conflict (i.e. the Russia-Ukraine war) as well as tightening legislation as a result of growing pressure for oil companies to comply with ESG standards. In August, for example, the Department of the Interior proposed permanently raising royalty fees to 16.7%, cementing previously temporary changes caused by the Inflation Reduction Act. As we’ve observed in other industries, buyers are likely to wait these challenges out to see their effects on the industry once implemented before committing to any large purchases. 

Based on the current M&A market and observed industry trajectories, our research team makes the following predictions: 

  • More public companies will go private. In order to escape ESG regulations placed on public oil and gas companies, business owners are likely to take their operations private. We’ve already seen this in the 2022 data, which showed 64% more public-to-private deals than private-to-public and showed nearly a quarter of all deals moving away from companies with net-zero commitments. We expect a larger portion of the oil industry will go private in the coming years.
  • M&A deals will take longer but earn higher payouts. Based on current projections, however, rates may not become truly attractive to buyers until 2025, as initial decreases next year are hypothesized to be minimal. On the other hand, oil and gas multiples have surpassed their pre-pandemic levels as of last year and are consistently rising in deal value YoY, meaning that the payout at the end of these extended deal processes is likely to be higher than what business owners have received in the last three years.
  • Smaller companies stand the most to gain in the coming year. By far, the biggest advances shown in oil and gas over 2023 were in smaller independent companies ($1-10M EBITDA) specializing in one area of production. Companies in this position are even in a strange position to benefit from high-interest rates, which have turned acquirers away from expensive, larger companies. In this position, the most advisable course of action is to start a relationship with an M&A advisory firm early to survey the market.
Related: See our report on the Top M&A Advisory Firms in the US

Selling Your Oil and Gas Company

M&A data is often kept frustratingly opaque, which makes it all the more difficult for business owners going through a process. Publishing this data is a part of my mission to improve transparency in M&A. I’m also available to speak to fellow entrepreneurs to offer advice on where your company is at and what next steps you should take. 

You can reach me using the link below or through the contact page of this site.

Source

 

Last Updated: February 6, 2025

The following report compiles EBITDA and revenue multiple data pertaining to the sale of private oil and gas companies as of Q1 2025. Using proprietary data aggregators, news and media reports, and industry publications, our team has calculated the following averages. (Sources)

The tables below show average EBITDA and revenue multiples for private oil and gas businesses, broken down by industry subsector as well as EBITDA and revenue range. 

EBITDA Multiples for Private Oil and Gas Companies, Q1 2025

Company Type EBITDA Range
$1-3M $3-5M $5-10M
Downstream 6.3x 7.3x 8.2x
Midstream 5x 5.9x 6.5x
Upstream 5.4x 6.3x 7.5x
Integrated N/A 5.4x 6.7x

Revenue Multiples for Private Oil and Gas Companies, Q1 2025

Company Type Revenue Range
$1-5M $5-10M $10-25M
Downstream 2x 2.5x 3.5x
Midstream 1.7x 2.3x 3.6x
Upstream 1.9x 2.5x 4.1x
Integrated N/A N/A 3.2x

The State of Oil and Gas M&A Moving into 2025

Oil & gas M&A exhibited YoY gains for the last three years despite considerable macroeconomic headwinds. In the last year, the M&A market has seen multiples for smaller firms rise considerably, on average rising between .2-.8x every quarter across industry subsectors, in some cases being valued at nearly the same rate as larger integrated companies. Our team attributes the increases in EBITDA multiples to high gas prices stemming from increased demand for oil and gas, which was caused by OPEC raising their long-term oil demand outlook by 6 million barrels in October 2023. 

Private Oil & Gas Deal Value & Volume, H1 2021 – H1 2025

  H1 2021 H2 2021 H1 2022 H2 2022 H1 2023 H2 2023 H1 2024 H2 2024 H1 2025 (est)
Deal Value $97B $89B $103B $92B $105B $97B $101B $103B $106B
Deal Volume 168 212 170 216 187 232 188 201 215

In addition, the new administrations emphasis on new drilling projects created notable improvements for independent upstream oil companies, which had, on average, a +.7x increase in their EBIDTA multiples. Downstream companies, by contrast, took a small hit at -.3x, and midstream companies saw a smaller increase than downstream at +.2x. 

Integrated companies with operations in two or more stages of oil production saw approximately a +.4x rise in their EBITDA multiple.

This increase seems modest, however our data suggests that buyers are becoming more interested in picking up smaller companies: nearly 60% of upstream deals in 2023 were for companies under $250m in revenue. Our research team believes that this trend is only likely to continue as the Federal Reserve continues to cut interest rates.

EBITDA Multiples for Private Oil & Gas Companies, Q1 2021 – Q1 2025

Chart (52)

As the graph above shows, EBITDA multiples reached their pre-pandemic levels around Q4 2022 and have been making steady gains ever since. Our research does indicate, however, that the deal process has lengthened significantly, with averages rising from 9-12 months in 2022 to 10-18 months as of Q4 2024. 

The last two years especially have seen extended due diligence due to geopolitical conflict (i.e. the Russia-Ukraine war) as well as tightening legislation as a result of growing pressure for oil companies to comply with ESG standards. In August, for example, the Department of the Interior proposed permanently raising royalty fees to 16.7%, cementing previously temporary changes caused by the Inflation Reduction Act. As we’ve observed in other industries, buyers are likely to wait these challenges out to see their effects on the industry once implemented before committing to any large purchases. 

Based on the current M&A market and observed industry trajectories, our research team makes the following predictions: 

  • More public companies will go private. In order to escape ESG regulations placed on public oil and gas companies, business owners are likely to take their operations private. We’ve already seen this in the 2022 data, which showed 64% more public-to-private deals than private-to-public and showed nearly a quarter of all deals moving away from companies with net-zero commitments. We expect a larger portion of the oil industry will go private in the coming years.
  • M&A deals will take longer but earn higher payouts. Based on current projections, however, rates may not become truly attractive to buyers until 2025, as initial decreases next year are hypothesized to be minimal. On the other hand, oil and gas multiples have surpassed their pre-pandemic levels as of last year and are consistently rising in deal value YoY, meaning that the payout at the end of these extended deal processes is likely to be higher than what business owners have received in the last three years.
  • Smaller companies stand the most to gain in the coming year. By far, the biggest advances shown in oil and gas over 2023 were in smaller independent companies ($1-10M EBITDA) specializing in one area of production. Companies in this position are even in a strange position to benefit from high-interest rates, which have turned acquirers away from expensive, larger companies. In this position, the most advisable course of action is to start a relationship with an M&A advisory firm early to survey the market.
Related: See our report on the Top M&A Advisory Firms in the US

Selling Your Oil and Gas Company

M&A data is often kept frustratingly opaque, which makes it all the more difficult for business owners going through a process. Publishing this data is a part of my mission to improve transparency in M&A. I’m also available to speak to fellow entrepreneurs to offer advice on where your company is at and what next steps you should take. 

You can reach me using the link below or through the contact page of this site.

Source

​Business – First Page Sage