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Upswitch IndexBenelux-native SME multiples with disclosed European market views

Fire Protection in Netherlands

Market: Netherlands — 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 read
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Market context

Netherlands market data

Pair the multiples below with Delphi's latest country factors: currency, risk-free rate, macro conditions, statutory tax, and country-risk premium.

NL

Endpoint

Model-ready data package

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=fire-protection&locale=en&country_code=NL

Classification

84.25

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.

Published benchmark ranges

Sign up free to see P25, median, and P75 ranges and NACE codes. No credit card.

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How To Use This Benchmark

Use 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.

Pair This With The Right Valuation Method

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.

Upswitch Index vs Damodaran

Both are useful — they answer different questions. Pick the right reference for the work.

Upswitch Index

Private-market, SME, by business type

  • Benelux-native where the row proves local evidence
  • By business type, disclosed market basis, citable vintages
  • Free to use — no credit card

Damodaran

Listed equities, global, by sector

  • Public-market companies, annual global cuts
  • Broad sector buckets, not country-resolved
  • Free academic resource

Fire Protection in Netherlands

Market context and regulation — Netherlands

Local classification

In the Netherlands, EU NACE Rev. 2 primary maps to SBI (Standaard Bedrijfsindeling) — the Dutch four-to-five-digit national classification curated by CBS. Each KvK registration carries one or more SBI codes. Valuation work uses the EU Rev. 2 root for cross-border comparability.

Official data sources

  • KvK (Kamer van Koophandel) — Dutch trade register, statutory data and SBI codes
  • CBS — Dutch statistical office; sector-aggregated benchmarks
  • Company.info / Graydon — commercial enrichment for SME comparables

Market and buyer context

The Netherlands is the deepest, most liquid SME transfer market in the Benelux. Family-business succession volume sits roughly two times Belgium's adjusted for population, with concentrated activity in Noord-Brabant (manufacturing, food), Zuid-Holland (logistics, professional services), Noord-Holland (Amsterdam services density) and Gelderland (mid-market industrial). The buyer pool spans local mid-market PE, search-fund operators, family offices, and a substantial Anglo-Saxon and DACH inbound flow on technology and B2B services. Pricing typically prints at a small premium to Belgium for otherwise comparable assets, reflecting market depth and structural simplicity (single language, single tax authority, federal-not-regional regime).

Valuation factors in Netherlands

  • BV holding structures are the norm for owner-managers — operational EBITDA must be cleanly separated from holding-level interest and dividends.
  • DGA (directeur-grootaandeelhouder) salary sits below market for tax reasons; normalise to a market-rate manager before applying any multiple.
  • Innovation-box-eligible IP can shift after-tax cash flow significantly — flag for the buyer model.
  • Pension-buy-out at the holding level (vroeger eigen-beheer) creates a phantom liability the next owner inherits.

Regulation and deal structure

  • Share deals in BV are notarial; planning lead time 3–5 weeks once due diligence closes.
  • Real-estate transfer tax (overdrachtsbelasting) is 10.4% for non-residential — split off the property entity for share-deal efficiency.
  • Earn-outs are common but tax treatment depends on whether the seller remains employed — model carefully.
  • 30%-ruling on incoming foreign hires can support buyer-side talent retention plans post-close.

General SME valuation

How fire protection actually gets valued

The multiples above are a market anchor — not the valuation. What drives the outcome are sector-typical normalisations, value drivers and risk compressors.

Normalisation checklist

What reported EBITDA almost always distorts in this sector.

  • Replace owner remuneration with a market-rate management charge for the same role.
  • Strip non-recurring items: legal settlements, one-off bad debts, government grants outside the operating cycle.
  • Re-classify capitalised maintenance back into operating expenses where it does not extend useful life.
  • Adjust related-party rent, royalties and management fees to arm's-length levels.
  • Recalculate depreciation on a maintenance-capex basis if the firm has been under-investing.
  • Remove revenue tied to a single departing customer or owner relationship.

Value drivers

What typically lifts the multiple in this sector.

  • Recurring contracted revenue with documented retention.
  • Owner-independent operations: a manager-led team that runs without the founder.
  • Diversified customer base where the top five represent under 30% of revenue.
  • Documented processes, clean books, and a recent third-party audit or review.

Value killers

What compresses the multiple or kills the deal.

  • Single-customer concentration above 25–30%.
  • Owner-embedded sales: the founder closes every deal personally.
  • Cash adjustments, family payroll and undocumented inter-company flows on the books.
  • Stagnant or declining revenue with rising fixed costs.

Anonymised worked example

Illustrative — not a recommendation. Real valuations run through the Upswitch engine.

Take a typical owner-managed SME with €4.2M revenue and €620k reported EBITDA. After normalising owner remuneration to a market-rate manager (€140k all-in versus €60k taken historically), removing a one-off legal settlement of €45k, and adjusting related-party rent to market (uplift of €18k/year), normalised EBITDA settles at €557k. Applying a sector EV/EBITDA range of 4.5×–6.0× yields an enterprise value band of €2.5M–€3.3M; deducting €380k of net debt and adjusting for €120k of excess working capital produces an indicative equity value of €2.2M–€3.0M before deal-specific adjustments.

Frequently Asked Questions

How do SBI codes relate to NACE Rev. 2 for valuation comparability?

SBI extends NACE Rev. 2 with one to two extra digits of national specificity. The Upswitch Index aggregates at the EU Rev. 2 four-digit level so comparables remain valid across borders; SBI sub-classes inherit the parent four-digit band. For Dutch-only comparables, KvK and CBS provide additional sector breakdowns at the SBI level.

Are these published numbers company-specific?

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.

Why do some business types show more than one metric?

Different sectors are often discussed with different market lenses. Upswitch shows the published metrics that are available for this business type.

Can I use this in a client conversation?

Yes. These pages are designed as citation-friendly starting points. For a client-ready report, use the full valuation workflow on Upswitch.

Is this database free to use?

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.

How does Upswitch Index compare to Damodaran?

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.

What is the source methodology behind these multiples?

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.

Related Business Types

Deeper reading

How valuation, normalisation and succession actually work

Three long-form articles on the infrastructure layer beneath European SME succession — selected for this sector.

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Full valuation workflow — Upswitch

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.