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Seller Playbook

8 EBITDA add-backs most dealer CPAs miss.

A misclassified add-back costs four to six times its face. At industry multiples, a $250K legitimate adjustment that's never surfaced is $1.5M of enterprise value left on the table. Here are the eight categories Coussa Group sees missed most often across Canadian and US dealership transactions.

What This Article Covers

Eight defensible add-backs. Built before the CIM, not scrambled after the LOI.

Tax-minimized financials and sale-ready financials are two different documents. The discipline that optimizes a December 31 tax bill is not the discipline that maximizes enterprise value at closing. The eight categories below run in the order we tend to find them.

Owner comp above market

The replacement-GM benchmark. Often a six-figure annual delta. At 5x, a $610K delta = $3.05M of enterprise value.

Related-party rent

Above or below market lease between OpCo and the principal's holding entity. Routinely a $300K+ annual normalization.

Personal & non-recurring

Family demos, club memberships, one-time legal fees. Defensible if documented. Credibility-destroying if overreached.

Floorplan, OEM timing, accounting policy, pandemic anomalies

Four technical categories. Each contestable in DD if not pre-built. Each multi-million in enterprise value at scale.

When a dealer principal hands me a tax return and a year-end financial package for the first time, the first thing I do is take it apart.

Dealership CPAs are excellent at what they are retained to do. They minimize tax, defend audits, and keep the OEM composite clean. That is valuable, ongoing work. But tax-minimized financials and sale-ready financials are not the same document, and the discipline that optimizes a December 31 tax bill is not the discipline that maximizes an enterprise value at closing. A dollar of legitimate EBITDA that sits in the wrong line item, or a legitimate owner add-back that is never surfaced and documented, does not just cost a dollar at closing. At a six-times multiple it costs six. At eight, eight. In the cross-border transactions we advise across Canada and the United States, we routinely find between $250,000 and $1.2 million of legitimate normalized EBITDA that the seller's existing books understate, and we have seen single add-back categories move enterprise value by more than seven figures on their own.

What follows is the checklist we run on every engagement, in the order we tend to find them. Each is defensible in front of a sophisticated buyer's quality of earnings team, and each requires documentation built before the Confidential Information Memorandum goes out, not scrambled together after an LOI lands on the table.

1. Owner compensation above market

The dealer principal who runs a successful single-point or multi-rooftop group almost always draws compensation well above what a replacement general manager would command. That is appropriate. The owner carries risk, equity, guaranty exposure, and institutional knowledge that a GM does not.

For purposes of a sale, however, a buyer is evaluating the business assuming the owner is no longer in the seat. The normalization is straightforward in concept and often contested in practice. You identify the market-rate compensation for a replacement general manager in the relevant region and OEM tier, subtract it from the owner's current package (including benefits, bonuses, and deferred compensation), and add the delta back to EBITDA.

Example

A Midwest domestic dealer principal draws $950,000 in total compensation. A replacement GM in that market commands $340,000 all-in. The $610,000 delta, sustained across three years, is a $610,000 add-back. At a 5x multiple, that is $3.05 million in enterprise value.

Why buyers push back

Buyers will question whether the owner's role truly can be filled for $340,000, particularly if the owner is also functioning as CFO, fixed operations director, or OEM liaison. Document the replacement GM benchmark using a defensible regional compensation study.

2. Related-party rent above market

Where the dealer principal owns the real estate through an adjacent LP or LLC and leases it to the operating entity, the rent paid by the OpCo is almost always set at a rate chosen for tax and estate reasons rather than market comparables. Sometimes it is above market. Sometimes it is below. Either way, a buyer will normalize to market rent, and the difference flows through EBITDA.

Example

An Ontario import dealer leases its facility from an adjacent holding company at $42 per square foot on a 38,000 square foot facility. Regional market comparables support $32 per square foot. The $10 per square foot overage on 38,000 square feet is $380,000 per year. Normalized out, that is $380,000 added back to EBITDA. At 7x, $2.66 million in enterprise value.

Why CPAs push back

Related-party rent is often set to move income to a real-estate-holding entity for tax purposes. Changing the narrative at sale requires clean market rent evidence, ideally two to three independent comparables and a letter from a regional commercial real estate broker.

3. Personal expenses run through the business

Vehicle expenses for family members not employed by the business. Club memberships. Non-business travel. Family payroll for roles that exist on paper but not in practice. A portion of the home office that will not transfer to the buyer. These items are legitimate tax strategy in ownership. They become a defensible add-back in sale.

Example

A Texas multi-rooftop group runs $185,000 annually through the income statement for two family demonstrator vehicles, three country club memberships, and one niece on payroll in a part-time marketing role. Each expense is documented and reasonable in its own context. Normalized out, the $185,000 is add-back, and at a 6x multiple, $1.11 million in enterprise value.

Why buyers push back

Sophisticated buyers will scrutinize each line. Be prepared to show invoices, payroll records, and a clear statement of which items the buyer will and will not continue. Overreach on this category destroys credibility on the others.

4. Non-recurring one-time expenses

Legal fees for a dispute that resolved. A facility renovation that will not repeat. A cybersecurity incident and the six-figure remediation that followed. A one-time professional services fee for a prior strategic review. OEM audit costs that fell outside the normal cadence. Each is a legitimate non-recurring item, and each is a legitimate add-back when normalized across the trailing twelve-month (TTM) window.

Example

A Florida luxury dealer incurred $240,000 in legal and consulting fees in 2024 defending a wrongful termination suit that settled in early 2025. The suit is resolved, the counsel is retired, and the fees will not recur. The $240,000 is add-back. At 8x, $1.92 million.

Why buyers push back

Buyers will ask whether the expense is truly one-time or a symptom of a recurring operational weakness. A single facility renovation is easy. A pattern of legal fees across multiple years is harder. Document the specific event, the specific vendor, and why the cost will not repeat.

5. Floorplan interest normalization

In a rising or falling rate environment, floorplan interest expense can distort trailing EBITDA in ways that do not reflect normalized operating performance. The normalization runs two directions. Where inventory levels were abnormally high due to supply chain overcorrection, the associated interest is adjusted. Where rates moved materially, a normalized rate assumption applied to normalized inventory levels can be appropriate.

Example

A Quebec import dealer carried an average new vehicle inventory of $38 million through 2023 versus a normalized level of $22 million, the excess being a deliberate response to post-pandemic allocation recovery. The excess $16 million at 7.5 percent floorplan rate is $1.2 million in non-normalized floorplan interest, legitimately added back. At 6.5x, $7.8 million in enterprise value.

Why buyers push back

This is the most technical of the add-backs and the most contested. Defend it with inventory-level time series, OEM allocation letters, and a clear articulation of what normalized inventory should look like going forward.

6. OEM incentive timing and stub-period issues

OEM incentive programs, stair-step bonuses, quarterly performance rebates, and wholesale compensation accruals create timing distortions that do not cleanly map to calendar periods. A transaction that closes mid-year carries stub-period complications in all directions. An incentive earned in Q4 but booked in Q1 distorts quarterly comparability. A program change from the manufacturer in year three of the TTM window makes year-over-year comparison meaningless without adjustment.

Example

A BMW dealer's Q4 2025 stair-step bonus of $620,000 was accrued into Q1 2026 under the manufacturer's program rules. Presented to a buyer as Q1 performance, it distorts the first-quarter picture. Normalized into the period earned, EBITDA comparability improves and the 2025 trailing figure is more defensible.

Why buyers push back

Buyers do not want to be surprised by a program that has changed or a stair-step that will not repeat at the same level. Provide program-by-program documentation and a forward view of how the incentive structure is likely to evolve.

7. Accounting policy changes

A change from LIFO to FIFO inventory accounting. A shift in capitalization threshold from $2,500 to $5,000. A revision to the warranty reserve methodology. A move from cash to accrual basis on a specific line item. Each is a defensible accounting change that creates a one-time earnings distortion. Each requires a normalization adjustment to make trailing twelve-month EBITDA comparable.

Example

A Pennsylvania domestic dealer shifted from LIFO to FIFO inventory accounting in Q2 2025 to improve financial statement comparability for an eventual sale. The transition created a one-time $310,000 reduction in cost of goods sold. Normalized out of TTM EBITDA, the $310,000 is a reduction to add-back (a negative adjustment), not an addition. Disclosing it proactively protects credibility on the other seven categories.

Why CPAs push back

Policy changes often go undocumented in the owner's memory. Pull every material accounting policy change across the trailing three years, document the P&L impact of each, and present them alongside the positive add-backs.

8. Pandemic-era anomaly adjustments

The 2020 through 2022 period produced gross margin distortions that cut both directions. New vehicle gross profit per unit retailed spiked to historically abnormal levels. Used vehicle wholesale margins compressed and then inverted. Fixed operations customer-pay work softened and then surged. Government support programs, whether CEWS in Canada or PPP in the United States, flowed through in ways that were legitimate at the time and are not normal going forward.

Example

A dealer group reporting 2021 new vehicle front-end gross of $5,800 per unit retailed versus a normalized $2,900 benchmark carried $2,900 per unit of non-normalized margin. On 1,400 units, that is $4.06 million of abnormal front-end, which a sophisticated buyer will strip out entirely in the base-year view. Sellers who ignore this adjustment find it imposed on them in due diligence, after LOI.

Why this cuts both ways

Some pandemic-era anomalies hurt EBITDA, especially in fixed operations and used vehicle wholesale. Normalize both sides honestly. A seller who only normalizes the positive adjustments loses credibility in the first meeting.

The Coussa normalization disciplineEvery add-back we present to a buyer comes with a three-part defense: the source document (invoice, policy, lease, benchmark study), the calculation methodology, and the narrative rationale. We reconcile every add-back line to the audited or reviewed financial statements and to the OEM composite where relevant. We disclose negative adjustments alongside positive ones, unprompted. By the time a buyer's quality of earnings provider begins its work, the entire normalization schedule has been documented, indexed, and pre-read. This discipline is how a credible enterprise value survives due diligence intact — and how our sellers routinely close transactions within five to ten percent of the preliminary valuation range we issue at engagement, rather than absorbing the 15-25% haircut common when add-backs are contested late.

Where to go from here

If you are a dealer principal considering a transaction inside the next twelve to thirty-six months, normalization is the single highest-leverage work you can do. Every dollar of legitimate, defensible add-back that is surfaced and documented before the CIM goes out is a dollar multiplied by the industry multiple at closing. Every dollar missed is a dollar left on the table, and at scale it compounds into the difference between a good outcome and the outcome you actually earned.

Coussa Group runs this work as the first phase of every seller engagement. We issue a preliminary enterprise value range within ten business days of receiving three years of financials, the most recent OEM composite, and the completed operational questionnaire. Every assumption is documented line by line. Nothing leaves our four walls without your written consent.

Further reading

Next Step

Request a preliminary enterprise value range.

Coussa Group issues a preliminary EV range within 10 business days of receiving 3 years of financials, the most recent OEM composite, and the completed operational questionnaire. Every assumption documented line by line.