Market: United Kingdom — This page summarizes the published SME benchmark for this business type, including its disclosed market basis, so advisors and operators can cite a clear starting point before a full company-specific valuation.
Business type benchmark
Last published: 13 Apr 2026fresh · 59 days old≈ 6 min readMarket context
Pair the multiples below with Delphi's latest country factors: currency, risk-free rate, macro conditions, statutory tax, and country-risk premium.
Endpoint
Pull this sector's multiples together with country market data in one response. Use JSON for agents and apps, or CSV for Excel models and deal workpapers.
/api/benchmarks/v1/context?business_type_id=truck-rental&locale=en&country_code=GBClassification
77.12
NACE Rev. 2 primary code. National statistical labels (e.g. SBI, NACE-BEL) describe how each country maps this activity.
Markets
Benelux aggregate
Published benchmark
13 Apr 2026 · reviewed 7 Jun 2026
Indicative, model-derived reference — evidence basis and confidence are disclosed per row.
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Sign up freeUse these ranges as a market reference, not as a substitute for a full valuation. Company quality, growth, concentration, recurring revenue, margin profile, and deal context still matter.
These benchmark pages work best when they feed into a fuller valuation workflow on Upswitch. Start with the market range, then choose the method that fits the company.
Both are useful — they answer different questions. Pick the right reference for the work.
Upswitch Index
Private-market, SME, by business type
Damodaran
Listed equities, global, by sector
Truck Rental in United Kingdom
In the United Kingdom, the EU NACE Rev. 2 primary maps to UK SIC 2007 — Companies House registers business activity at the five-digit SIC level. Cross-border comparability uses the four-digit Rev. 2 root.
The UK SME market is the largest in Europe by deal count and the most adviser-mediated. Buyer pools split between mid-market PE (London-centric), regional trade buyers, and a growing search-fund segment. Post-Brexit the cross-border buyer flow has tilted toward US strategics and Anglo-friendly EU buyers; pricing has decoupled modestly from EU comparables on regulated and consumer-facing assets where regulatory divergence creates risk premia.
Administrative and support services
The multiples above are a market anchor — not the valuation. What drives the outcome are sector-typical normalisations, value drivers and risk compressors.
What reported EBITDA almost always distorts in this sector.
What typically lifts the multiple in this sector.
What compresses the multiple or kills the deal.
Illustrative — not a recommendation. Real valuations run through the Upswitch engine.
A facility-services group reports €8.4M revenue and €640k EBITDA across three streams (cleaning 60%, security 25%, soft FM 15%). Normalising owner labour to a market-rate operations director (€140k vs €70k drawn), removing €55k of one-off project-clean win income, and accruing missing €40k of sectoral-CBA holiday pay, normalised EBITDA settles at €475k. Sector range 4.5×–6.0× yields €2.1M–€2.9M, with the upper-bound supported by 70% recurring contract share and the lower-bound reflecting wage-cost pass-through lag.
UK SIC 2007 was developed in alignment with NACE Rev. 2 — the four-digit root is the same. UK adds one further digit of national specificity. Cross-border comparables and the Upswitch Index aggregate at the four-digit level; UK Companies House search resolves SIC subclasses for in-country comparables.
No. They are published market reference points for this business type in the country markets that Upswitch has evidence for. A real valuation still needs company-specific inputs and judgment.
Different sectors are often discussed with different market lenses. Upswitch shows the published metrics that are available for this business type.
Yes. These pages are designed as citation-friendly starting points. For a client-ready report, use the full valuation workflow on Upswitch.
Yes. The Upswitch Index publishes free SME valuation multiples (EV/EBITDA, EV/Revenue, and P/E) by business type. Benelux can be native-local where row evidence supports it; wider European market views are disclosed as beta, borrowed, aggregate, or compatibility coverage. Historical vintages and audit exports are on paid plans.
Damodaran publishes annual global multiples for listed companies by broad sector — a gold standard for public markets. Upswitch Index publishes granular SME/private-company benchmark ranges by business type with row-level disclosure of whether evidence is native-local, borrowed, aggregate, or beta-stage. Both are useful; they answer different questions.
Upswitch publishes only through row-level benchmark contracts. Evidence can include private-market observations, local filings or statistics, listed-comparable context, and macro calibration anchors, but source labels are used only when they actually contributed to the resolved benchmark. Full methodology is on the methodology page.
Deeper reading
Three long-form articles on the infrastructure layer beneath European SME succession — selected for this sector.
Shared truth + buyer matching
Seller, buyer, advisor and bank work on four different views of the same facts. How shared truth and structured matching unlock European SME liquidity.
Read on upswitch.app →
Sale-ready in 12 months — seven signals
Seven signals that drag SME valuations 15-30% lower in due diligence — and how to remove each in 12 months of focused preparation.
Read on upswitch.app →
Price versus value — the SME succession trap
Owners overestimate by 20-40% on average. Buyers underestimate by a similar margin. How data closes the gap at the negotiation table.
Read on upswitch.app →
Upswitch.app
This database is the public benchmark layer. Upswitch is the full platform: company-specific valuations, client-ready reports, advisor workflow, and API access for teams. Free accounts work across both.