FREE BEGINNER’S GUIDE

New to Stock Investing?
Start Here.

Before buying individual stocks, learn the basics: what stocks are, how the market works, and why a fundamentals-first mindset matters.

Download the Beginner’s Guide to Stock Investing and start building your foundation with clear, practical education.

EBITDA

EBITDA stands for earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization.

In fundamental investing, EBITDA is a profitability metric used to estimate a company’s operating earnings before financing costs, income taxes, and certain non-cash accounting expenses. Investors often use EBITDA to compare companies with different debt levels, tax rates, depreciation policies, or acquisition histories.

Why EBITDA Matters

EBITDA matters because it gives investors a rough view of a company’s operating profitability before the effects of capital structure, taxes, depreciation, and amortization.

Fundamental investors use EBITDA to answer:

“How much profit does this business generate before financing costs, taxes, and major non-cash charges?”

For example, a company with $500 million of EBITDA generated $500 million of earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization.

EBITDA is widely used in valuation, credit analysis, acquisition comparisons, and operating performance analysis. However, EBITDA is not the same as free cash flow.

EBITDA Formula

The EBITDA formula is:

EBITDA = Net Income + Interest + Taxes + Depreciation + Amortization

Another common version is:

EBITDA = Operating Income + Depreciation + Amortization

Where:

Net Income = Profit after all expenses

Interest = Financing cost from debt

Taxes = Income taxes

Depreciation = Expense that allocates the cost of physical assets over time

Amortization = Expense that allocates the cost of certain intangible assets over time

Example of EBITDA

Suppose a company reports:

Net Income: $100 million
Interest Expense: $30 million
Taxes: $40 million
Depreciation: $60 million
Amortization: $20 million

EBITDA would be:

EBITDA = $100 million + $30 million + $40 million + $60 million + $20 million
EBITDA = $250 million

This means the company generated $250 million of EBITDA during the period.

Another way to calculate EBITDA:

Operating Income: $170 million
Depreciation: $60 million
Amortization: $20 million

EBITDA = $170 million + $60 million + $20 million
EBITDA = $250 million

EBITDA in Fundamental Investing

In fundamental investing, EBITDA is used as a starting point for understanding operating profitability.

Investors may use EBITDA to evaluate:

  • Operating earnings
  • Business profitability
  • Valuation multiples
  • Debt repayment capacity
  • Acquisition comparisons
  • Credit risk
  • Margin trends
  • Capital structure differences
  • Industry peer comparisons
  • Private-market transaction multiples

EBITDA can be useful, but it should not be treated as owner earnings or free cash flow.

What Does EBITDA Stand For?

EBITDA stands for:

Earnings Before Interest, Taxes, Depreciation, and Amortization

Each part matters:

TermMeaning
EarningsProfit before the listed items are added back.
InterestDebt financing cost.
TaxesIncome taxes.
DepreciationNon-cash expense tied to physical assets.
AmortizationNon-cash expense tied to certain intangible assets.

In plain English, EBITDA tries to show business earnings before financing, taxes, and certain accounting expenses.

EBITDA vs. EBIT

EBITDA excludes depreciation and amortization.

EBIT includes depreciation and amortization.

EBITDA = Earnings Before Interest, Taxes, Depreciation, and Amortization

EBIT = Earnings Before Interest and Taxes
MetricDepreciation and Amortization Included?Main Use
EBITDANoBroader operating earnings proxy before depreciation and amortization.
EBITYesMore conservative measure of operating profit.

EBIT is often more conservative for capital-intensive businesses because depreciation may reflect real asset wear and future replacement needs.

EBITDA vs. Operating Income

Operating income measures profit from core business operations after operating expenses, including depreciation and amortization.

EBITDA adds depreciation and amortization back to operating income.

EBITDA = Operating Income + Depreciation + Amortization

Operating income is usually closer to reported accounting profit from operations. EBITDA is a modified measure that removes depreciation and amortization.

EBITDA may be useful for comparison, but operating income can be more conservative.

EBITDA vs. Net Income

Net income is final profit after all expenses, including interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization.

EBITDA excludes those items.

Net Income = Profit after all expenses

EBITDA = Profit before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization

EBITDA is usually higher than net income because it adds back several expenses.

Net income is more directly tied to earnings available to shareholders, while EBITDA is more focused on operating earnings before financing and certain accounting costs.

EBITDA vs. Free Cash Flow

EBITDA is not free cash flow.

Free cash flow accounts for operating cash flow and capital expenditures.

EBITDA = Earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization

Free Cash Flow = Operating Cash Flow - Capital Expenditures

A company may report strong EBITDA but weak free cash flow if it has:

  • High capital expenditures
  • Large working capital needs
  • Cash taxes
  • Interest payments
  • Restructuring costs
  • Stock-based compensation
  • Acquisition costs

Free cash flow is often more important for estimating intrinsic value because it shows cash available after operating and reinvestment needs.

EBITDA vs. Gross Profit

Gross profit is revenue minus cost of goods sold.

EBITDA is earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization.

Gross Profit = Revenue - Cost of Goods Sold

EBITDA = Net Income + Interest + Taxes + Depreciation + Amortization

Gross profit shows profitability after direct costs. EBITDA shows a broader measure of operating earnings after operating expenses but before financing, taxes, depreciation, and amortization.

EBITDA vs. Adjusted EBITDA

EBITDA follows a basic formula.

Adjusted EBITDA modifies EBITDA by adding back or removing selected items.

Common adjusted EBITDA add-backs may include:

  • Stock-based compensation
  • Restructuring costs
  • Acquisition costs
  • Litigation expenses
  • Severance expenses
  • Impairment charges
  • One-time losses
  • Foreign exchange effects

Adjusted EBITDA can be useful when adjustments are reasonable and truly non-recurring. It can be misleading when companies remove recurring costs or exclude real economic expenses.

Adjusted EBITDA = EBITDA ± Management Adjustments

Investors should review each adjustment carefully.

EBITDA Margin

EBITDA margin shows EBITDA as a percentage of revenue.

EBITDA Margin = EBITDA ÷ Revenue

EBITDA margin is usually expressed as a percentage:

EBITDA Margin % = (EBITDA ÷ Revenue) × 100

For example, if a company generates $1 billion of revenue and $250 million of EBITDA:

EBITDA Margin = $250 million ÷ $1 billion
EBITDA Margin = 25%

This means the company keeps 25 cents of EBITDA for every $1 of revenue.

EBITDA and EV/EBITDA

EBITDA is commonly used in the EV/EBITDA valuation multiple.

EV/EBITDA = Enterprise Value ÷ EBITDA

EV/EBITDA compares the value of the whole operating business to EBITDA.

For example, if a company has an enterprise value of $5 billion and EBITDA of $500 million:

EV/EBITDA = $5 billion ÷ $500 million
EV/EBITDA = 10x

This means the business trades at 10 times EBITDA.

EBITDA and Debt

EBITDA is often used in credit analysis because it can help estimate a company’s ability to service debt.

Common debt metrics include:

Net Debt / EBITDA = Net Debt ÷ EBITDA

and:

Debt / EBITDA = Total Debt ÷ EBITDA

A company with high debt relative to EBITDA may have greater financial risk.

However, EBITDA does not pay debt by itself. Debt is paid with cash, so investors should also review free cash flow, interest expense, debt maturities, and liquidity.

EBITDA and Capital Expenditures

Capital expenditures are one of EBITDA’s biggest blind spots.

EBITDA adds back depreciation, but depreciation may represent real wear and tear on assets. If a business needs large capital expenditures to maintain operations, EBITDA may overstate economic profitability.

Investors should compare:

EBITDA

Capital Expenditures

Free Cash Flow

A company with high EBITDA but consistently weak free cash flow may be less attractive than EBITDA suggests.

EBITDA and Depreciation

Depreciation is a non-cash expense that spreads the cost of physical assets over their useful lives.

EBITDA adds depreciation back.

This can be reasonable when depreciation is not closely tied to current cash spending. But depreciation can still represent a real economic cost if the company must eventually replace assets.

Capital-intensive companies may look better on EBITDA than they do on free cash flow.

EBITDA and Amortization

Amortization is a non-cash expense that spreads the cost of certain intangible assets over time.

EBITDA adds amortization back.

Amortization may be less economically meaningful when it relates to acquired intangible assets. But investors should understand what is being amortized before ignoring the expense.

Large amortization add-backs can make EBITDA much higher than operating income.

EBITDA and Stock-Based Compensation

Some companies exclude stock-based compensation from adjusted EBITDA.

Investors should be careful with this adjustment.

Stock-based compensation may be non-cash when recorded, but it can dilute shareholders over time. If a company excludes stock-based compensation from adjusted EBITDA, the business may look more profitable than it really is for owners.

A useful adjustment may be:

Adjusted EBITDA After Stock-Based Compensation = Adjusted EBITDA - Stock-Based Compensation

EBITDA and Intrinsic Value

EBITDA can help investors compare companies, but it does not directly estimate intrinsic value.

Intrinsic value depends on the future cash flows a business can generate for owners.

A company with strong EBITDA may still have weak intrinsic value if it requires heavy capital expenditures, has high debt, pays large cash taxes, or cannot convert EBITDA into free cash flow.

Investors should use EBITDA alongside:

  • Free Cash Flow
  • Owner Earnings
  • Discounted Cash Flow (DCF)
  • DCF Model
  • Operating Income
  • EBIT
  • Net Income
  • Return on Invested Capital (ROIC)
  • Net Debt
  • Capital Expenditures
  • Margin of Safety

Advantages of EBITDA

EBITDA can be useful because it:

  • Helps compare companies with different capital structures.
  • Excludes interest expense from financing decisions.
  • Excludes income taxes that may vary by jurisdiction.
  • Adds back depreciation and amortization.
  • Is commonly used in acquisition analysis.
  • Can help estimate operating earnings before certain accounting costs.
  • Is widely used in valuation multiples such as EV/EBITDA.

EBITDA is most useful when investors understand what it includes and what it leaves out.

Limitations of EBITDA

EBITDA has major limitations.

Common limitations include:

  • It is not free cash flow.
  • It ignores capital expenditures.
  • It ignores working capital needs.
  • It ignores cash taxes.
  • It ignores interest payments.
  • It can overstate profitability for capital-intensive businesses.
  • It can be distorted by aggressive adjustments.
  • It may exclude stock-based compensation in adjusted versions.
  • It does not directly estimate intrinsic value.
  • It may make highly leveraged companies look safer than they are.

EBITDA should be a starting point, not a complete measure of business value.

Common EBITDA Mistakes

Common mistakes include:

  • Treating EBITDA as cash flow
  • Ignoring capital expenditures
  • Ignoring interest expense
  • Ignoring cash taxes
  • Ignoring working capital needs
  • Ignoring stock-based compensation
  • Relying on adjusted EBITDA without reviewing adjustments
  • Comparing companies from unrelated industries
  • Ignoring debt maturity risk
  • Assuming high EBITDA means high business quality
  • Using EBITDA instead of owner earnings

EBITDA can be useful, but only when paired with cash flow, debt, and capital intensity analysis.

EBITDA in Business Quality Analysis

EBITDA becomes more useful when combined with business quality analysis.

A company may have high-quality EBITDA if it has:

  • Durable revenue growth
  • Strong EBITDA margin
  • High free cash flow conversion
  • Low capital expenditure needs
  • Low debt
  • Recurring revenue
  • Pricing power
  • High return on invested capital (ROIC)
  • Durable competitive advantage
  • Good capital allocation

A company may have lower-quality EBITDA if it has:

  • Weak free cash flow conversion
  • High capital intensity
  • Heavy debt
  • Cyclical earnings
  • Aggressive adjusted EBITDA add-backs
  • High stock-based compensation
  • Weak pricing power
  • Poor capital allocation
  • Declining margins

A good investment is not simply a company with high EBITDA. It is a business that converts earnings into durable free cash flow and grows value per share over time.

Related Terms

FAQ

Ready to Go Beyond Definitions?

Learning investing terminology is the first step.

See how these concepts work together in our free Fundamental Investing Foundations course preview.

Continue Your Learning

Want to build a stronger foundation? Start with our guide to fundamental investing, then explore our courses on Understanding Financial Statements and Stock Valuation.

Get new articles, investing insights, and educational resources delivered to your inbox.

Scroll to Top