Estimate your app valuation before listing
Get a directional valuation range for a mobile app or SaaS business, then pressure-test the number against revenue proof, operating history, transfer complexity, and buyer diligence expectations.
A valuation only works when the proof is ready.
Buyers usually look past the headline multiple and ask whether revenue is durable, ownership can transfer, code is maintainable, and the seller can support a clean handoff.
What buyers usually inspect after the estimate
The calculator can organize pricing expectations, but the strongest seller materials explain the evidence behind the number.
Revenue quality
Buyers compare gross revenue, profit, recurring revenue, ad or store payout history, refunds, chargebacks, and customer concentration before trusting a multiple.
Growth and retention
Growth is strongest when it is supported by cohort, churn, active user, traffic, and acquisition channel data rather than a short-term spike.
Operational transferability
Clean code handoff notes, domain and store transfer plans, service ownership, and support workload can reduce buyer uncertainty.
Proof readiness
Well-organized artifacts help buyers diligence the estimate. Sensitive documents should be redacted before they are shared.
Turn the estimate into a seller-ready listing
- Use the calculator to frame a starting range, not a guaranteed sale price.
- Collect revenue, profit, expense, traffic, user, churn, and platform account evidence.
- Write down what transfers with the business and what requires post-close cooperation.
- Create a listing only after the supporting proof and known risks are ready to explain.
App valuation questions
Is the valuation calculator a guaranteed sale price?
No. The calculator gives a directional estimate based on submitted inputs. Actual offers depend on buyer diligence, proof quality, revenue durability, risk, transfer complexity, and market demand.
What proof should sellers prepare before relying on a valuation?
Prepare revenue reports, payout history, profit and expense records, traffic or user analytics, churn or retention data, ownership records, code and infrastructure notes, and transfer requirements.
Can the valuation estimate be used in a listing?
Sellers can use it as a starting point for pricing, but the listing should explain the underlying revenue, profit, growth, risks, and transfer details that support the asking price.