Get an instant indicative valuation for your convenience store using practical earnings logic, rent ratio, stock turns, and valuation benchmarks.

This calculator is designed for convenience store owners who want a more realistic picture of value based on the quality of the underlying business, not just gross turnover. It is suitable for neighbourhood convenience stores, small grocery-style operators, mixed retail stores, and local service stores where trading consistency, margin profile, occupancy cost, inventory control, and repeat local demand all influence value.

Convenience stores are often judged on simplicity and consistency. A store may trade steadily, but buyers will still look closely at whether margins are defendable, stock is well controlled, the location is working hard enough, and the business can continue without the current owner being central to day-to-day operation. This calculator helps turn those factors into a practical valuation range and a clearer buyer-readiness picture.

DoBusiness Valuation Calculator

Convenience Store Valuation Calculator

Estimate the value of your convenience store using earnings, rent ratio, stock turns, and valuation benchmarks.

Structured valuation logic
Industry benchmark checks
Confidence and methodology explained

What you will get

  • Indicative low, mid and high valuation range
  • Buyer-readiness factors and benchmark commentary
  • A practical summary you can reuse when preparing your sale listing
Best results

Use your most recent full-year figures where possible. Keep one-off or owner-specific expenses in addbacks so the tool can normalise earnings more realistically.

You can leave unknown fields blank.

If you do not know every figure, complete the fields you can. The calculator will still produce an indicative result, but confidence will be higher when more relevant information is provided.

Step 1
Select a category

Choose the closest business type so we can show the right metrics.

Step 2
Add the numbers

Enter financials, then answer the buyer-risk profile questions.

Step 3
Unlock the report

Reveal the full methodology, benchmark notes, and email summary.


01

Choose your business category

Select the matching Directorist category so the calculator uses the closest valuation model and can save the correct pending listing category later.

Pick the closest real-world category rather than the broadest one. That gives you better field prompts and more useful benchmarking.


Your selection changes the visible metrics, operating checks, and the Directorist category used when we create a pending listing draft.

02

Financial performance

These figures drive seller discretionary earnings and the asset component of the valuation.

If you are testing, use the sample tool below. If you are a seller, treat the figures as guidance and adjust to your actual business records. If a figure is unknown, it can be left blank.

Use a generic sample set to instantly populate the calculator with sensible example figures for the selected category. This is designed to speed up testing, not to suggest a real valuation.


Use total sales for the last full 12 months before owner drawings.


Enter profit after normal operating expenses, before any owner-specific adjustments are added back.


Include what the owner pays themselves for working in the business. If the owner works full time, use a realistic annual wage for that role.


Add one-off, non-recurring, or discretionary expenses a buyer may not continue. Examples include unusual legal fees, private expenses, or once-off repairs.


Use the approximate market value of transferable plant and equipment included in the sale.


Enter saleable inventory likely to transfer at settlement.


Estimate any near-term capital a buyer may need to refresh, repair, or modernise the business.

03

Business profile

These questions help measure transferability, buyer risk, and how stable the earnings stream looks.

Think like a buyer: could this business keep performing with the current team, systems, and customer base if the owner stepped back? If you are unsure about some profile answers, leave them blank rather than guessing.


Longer trading history generally improves buyer confidence and evidence of durability.


Use the regular team size excluding casual one-off support where possible.


Choose fixed term if the business has a lease, month to month if occupancy is rolling, or N/A for online or mobile businesses that do not rely on premises.


Only use this if there is a fixed-term lease in place. Leave it blank for month-to-month or not applicable businesses.


Low means the business can run without the owner day to day. High means customers, staff, or operations rely heavily on the owner staying involved.


Low means revenue is spread across many customers. High means a small number of customers account for a large share of revenue.


Choose the current earnings trend based on the last 12 to 24 months rather than a single strong or weak month.


Reflect the site visibility, access, catchment strength, and how suitable the location is for this business type.


Estimate the share of revenue that is contracted, repeat, subscription-based, or reliably recurring.


Count material licences, permits, or formal approvals required to operate legally.

04

Cafe operating metrics

These inputs help test whether the financial story is realistic for this business family.

These fields improve realism checks and confidence scoring. They are helpful, but if some operating figures are not available yet, you can leave them blank.









04

Hospitality operating metrics

These inputs help test whether the financial story is realistic for this business family.

These fields improve realism checks and confidence scoring. They are helpful, but if some operating figures are not available yet, you can leave them blank.


Use a representative week excluding unusual spikes or public-holiday distortions.


Estimate the share of sales coming from liquor or bar sales if applicable.


Use practical trading seats, not maximum theoretical capacity.


Include occupancy rent only, excluding loan repayments or owner drawings.


Estimate the share of revenue generated through delivery platforms or direct delivery.


How many reliable staff are available to run service without owner coverage.

04

Automotive operating metrics

These inputs help test whether the financial story is realistic for this business family.

These fields improve realism checks and confidence scoring. They are helpful, but if some operating figures are not available yet, you can leave them blank.






04

Ecommerce operating metrics

These inputs help test whether the financial story is realistic for this business family.

These fields improve realism checks and confidence scoring. They are helpful, but if some operating figures are not available yet, you can leave them blank.









04

Digital operating metrics

These inputs help test whether the financial story is realistic for this business family.

These fields improve realism checks and confidence scoring. They are helpful, but if some operating figures are not available yet, you can leave them blank.


Use MRR where subscriptions or retained billing exists.


Estimate monthly customer or revenue churn.


Use current paying customers, subscribers, or active business accounts.


Use typical monthly sessions or visitors across key digital properties.


Low means most traffic comes from one platform or channel. High means demand is diversified.


Use annual revenue per active customer where possible.

04

Trades operating metrics

These inputs help test whether the financial story is realistic for this business family.

These fields improve realism checks and confidence scoring. They are helpful, but if some operating figures are not available yet, you can leave them blank.






04

Beauty operating metrics

These inputs help test whether the financial story is realistic for this business family.

These fields improve realism checks and confidence scoring. They are helpful, but if some operating figures are not available yet, you can leave them blank.


Use active rooms, styling chairs, or treatment stations available for normal trading.


Count the practitioners or stylists who regularly generate service revenue.


Include memberships, recurring packages, or strong prepaid client plans.


Use the average ticket value per client visit.


Use the approximate average review score across major platforms.


Estimate total appointments or visits in a typical trading week.

04

Retail operating metrics

These inputs help test whether the financial story is realistic for this business family.

These fields improve realism checks and confidence scoring. They are helpful, but if some operating figures are not available yet, you can leave them blank.






04

Manufacturing operating metrics

These inputs help test whether the financial story is realistic for this business family.

These fields improve realism checks and confidence scoring. They are helpful, but if some operating figures are not available yet, you can leave them blank.


Estimate the percentage of practical production or distribution capacity currently in use.


Use gross margin after direct production or inventory costs.


Estimate how much revenue the single largest customer contributes.


Use the approximate operational footprint of the business.


Low means heavy reliance on one supplier or source. High means a more diversified supply chain.


Include repeat wholesale contracts, standing purchase orders, or distribution agreements.

04

Accommodation operating metrics

These inputs help test whether the financial story is realistic for this business family.

These fields improve realism checks and confidence scoring. They are helpful, but if some operating figures are not available yet, you can leave them blank.







04

Childcare operating metrics

These inputs help test whether the financial story is realistic for this business family.

These fields improve realism checks and confidence scoring. They are helpful, but if some operating figures are not available yet, you can leave them blank.






04

Education operating metrics

These inputs help test whether the financial story is realistic for this business family.

These fields improve realism checks and confidence scoring. They are helpful, but if some operating figures are not available yet, you can leave them blank.


Use the practical number of students that can be served or enrolled.


Estimate current enrolment as a percentage of realistic capacity.


Use average monthly or annualised fee per student depending on your business model.


Count regular instructors, trainers, or teaching staff.


Include funded, term-based, corporate, or contracted revenue.


Reflect how strong and well-documented your compliance and accreditation profile is.

This convenience store valuation calculator estimates value primarily from seller discretionary earnings and then adjusts the valuation multiple for transfer risk, benchmark quality, operating profile, recurring customer demand, and buyer appeal. Inventory and equipment are treated separately where relevant so the underlying value of the store itself is clearer.

Convenience store buyers often focus on:

  • consistency of trade
  • rent as a percentage of revenue
  • gross margin and stock turns
  • local repeat demand
  • owner dependence
  • lease security
  • operating history
  • how straightforward the store will be to run after handover

A convenience store with sensible occupancy costs, reliable local trade, disciplined stock control, and clean operating systems will usually present better than a store with weak margins, poor inventory management, or heavy dependence on the owner’s daily presence.

Buyers are often attracted to stores that are predictable, easy to understand, and capable of running without the seller doing everything personally. Where the business is stable and well organised, saleability generally improves.

This is an indicative valuation tool only. It is most useful for planning, pricing guidance, and preparing the business for market. Final market value will depend on due diligence, lease terms, inventory quality, buyer demand, and the quality of the store at the time of sale.