Costs·July 2026·5 min read

How much does a business valuation cost in Australia?

A formal business valuation for tax in Australia usually costs between about $1,500 and $9,000 + GST, depending on the size of the business and how the report will be used. Here’s what you pay for, and why.

JW
Jackson Wilson
Business Valuation Specialist · B.Bus (Finance), RG146

The short answer

Most tax-purpose business valuations in Australia cost between about $1,500 and $9,000 + GST — but there is a catch. The cheap “$1,500” prices are usually indicative, unsigned estimates; a genuine signed report elsewhere typically starts at $3,990–$4,990. At Prismi a signed report starts at $1,495 (fixed, not “from”), with a $990 indicative snapshot if you just need a ballpark. Every fee is fixed before you start — no hourly surprises.

Prismi’s fixed fees

Indicative Snapshot
$990 +GST

A fast, fixed indicative range — not a signed report. Creditable toward an Essential report if you upgrade. ~5 business days.

Essential
$1,495 +GST

Australia’s lowest-priced signed report. Single methodology, senior-reviewer signed, APES 225 / IVS. 10–14 business days.

Comprehensive
$3,995 +GST

Multiple methods, normalised earnings and sign-off — about 20% below the $4,990 market standard. 15–25 business days.

Defensible
$8,995 +GST

A complete file for higher-value or contested matters where ATO review is likely. 25–35 business days.

What the rest of the market charges

Here is the Australian market, cheapest to dearest — most of which you only find out by asking for a quote:

  • ·Free online calculators — no methodology, not accepted for tax
  • ·Indicative / desktop estimates — advertised “from $1,500”, but unsigned
  • ·Signed valuation reports elsewhere — typically $3,990–$4,990
  • ·Mediation & family-law reports — $5,990–$7,990
  • ·Court / expert-witness reports — $13,990 and up

Why we publish our prices

Most valuers make you ring for a quote. We publish the full fixed-fee ladder so you can compare like-for-like — and see that a signed Prismi report ($1,495) costs less than most firms’ indicative estimates. Fixed before you start, never billed by the hour. Competitor pricing correct as at July 2026.

What changes the price

  • ·Size and complexity of the business — more entities means more analysis
  • ·How the report will be used — a concession claim needs more than an internal estimate
  • ·How clean your records are — tidy financials are quicker to work with
  • ·How likely the ATO is to look — higher stakes mean a more defensible file
  • ·Turnaround — rush jobs carry a premium

Is it tax deductible?

Usually, yes. A valuation obtained to manage your tax affairs is generally deductible as a cost of managing tax affairs, and in some cases can form part of the asset’s cost base. Your accountant can confirm the treatment for your situation — Prismi prepares the valuation, not the tax return.

Cheap valuations can cost more later

An online calculator or a one-page letter is cheap because it skips the work that makes a valuation hold up: testing more than one method, documenting the evidence, and signing it under an independence statement. If the ATO questions a thin valuation, the cost of fixing it — amended assessments, penalties, a second valuation — dwarfs the saving. For anything tax-related, pay once for a report that stands up.

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