Negotia Group · Sunshine Coast, Queensland

Business Valuation Sunshine Coast.

Independent. Court-ready. Grounded in this market.

Kevin Lovewell · FAIBB · RBV · 35+ years

Business valuation Sunshine Coast — Kevin Lovewell, Negotia Group registered business valuer
Kevin Lovewell · Negotia Group

What is a business valuation on the Sunshine Coast?

In one line

A business valuation establishes the defensible market value of a business for a specific purpose. It is not an estimate. It is a professionally prepared opinion using both the business’s own financials and market evidence — and it can be relied upon in negotiation, legal proceedings and due diligence.

Sunshine Coast owners commission Negotia Group to do business valuations for a variety of reasons: to establish a defensible market value of their business, whether the purpose is a sale, succession, finance, separation or dispute. The work of Negotia Group in performing business valuations is independent, confidential, and prepared to a standard that holds firm when it is tested. We act for owners, and where instructed, for their accountants and solicitors.

When Sunshine Coast owners need a valuation.

Every situation is different. What they share is a number that needs to be defendable — under scrutiny, under market pressure, or under cross-examination. We are engaged regularly by Sunshine Coast business owners who are:

  1. 01Planning a sale and want to know what their business will realistically achieve before committing to a price or an agent.
  2. 02Dealing with an unexpected offer and need independent advice on whether it reflects what the business is genuinely worth.
  3. 03Working through succession and need a valuation during family and internal conversations with advisors.
  4. 04Facing a partnership separation or shareholder dispute where an independent and unbiased opinion of market value is needed.
  5. 05Going through a marital or family law matter where a court-ready business valuation is necessary.
  6. 06Seeking finance or restructuring, and a lender or adviser has requested a formal assessment.
  7. 07Undertaking estate planning where the value of a business forms part of the estate.

In each case, the starting point is the same: a confidential conversation about the purpose, the timeframe, and what level of assessment the situation actually requires.

Indicative assessment vs formal valuation.

Not every situation requires a full report. Choosing the wrong level of assessment is one of the most common — and most expensive — mistakes business owners make. A formal business valuation costs more and takes longer for a reason. Here is how to think about which one applies to you.

Option A

Indicative Assessment

  • Lighter scope, faster turnaround, lowest cost
  • For early-stage planning and initial conversations
  • Not suitable where the number will be legally tested
  • When to use: sale planning, succession thinking, understanding your position before any commitment
Option B

Formal Business Valuation

  • Full scope, compliant with imposed standards, fully documented methodology and deep market and industry research
  • Court-ready and due-diligence grade
  • Defensible in negotiation and all forms of litigation, including ATO reviews
  • When to use: partner dispute, family law, buyer due diligence, ATO or finance requirement
§ 04 · Process

How the valuation process works.

Every engagement follows a structured path — thorough without being disruptive, and confidential at every stage.

1

Confidential conversation

We discuss your situation, the purpose of the assessment, and the appropriate level of engagement. No obligation at this stage.

2

Information gathering

We provide a clear list of what we need — financial statements, operational information, contracts where relevant. The process is structured to minimise your time.

3

Analysis

We assess the financials, normalise earnings, apply recognised Australian valuation practice, and examine the non-financial factors that affect value — the things the numbers alone do not show.

4

Draft review

We share our findings before the final report is issued, giving you the opportunity to clarify any factual matters.

5

Final report

A written assessment delivered to the agreed standard — indicative or formal — within the agreed timeframe, fit for the purpose it was commissioned for.

§ 05 · Local advantage

Why use a local Sunshine Coast business broker (QLD).

There is a difference between a valuation prepared by someone who knows this market and one prepared from a distance. The Sunshine Coast is not a generic Queensland market. From Caloundra in the south to Noosa in the north, the buyer profiles, the industry mix, and the transaction dynamics vary in ways that matter when a number is being set.

Kevin grew up here.

Kevin Lovewell grew up on the Sunshine Coast. He attended Maroochydore Primary and Nambour High. He played football here. He has lived and worked on the Sunshine Coast and brought his family up in this environment.

That is not a marketing claim; it is the reason his assessments of Sunshine Coast businesses carry a level of local grounding that a business broker operating from a national database simply cannot replicate.

35+
Years valuing QLD businesses
Local
Caloundra to Noosa
§ 06 · Specialist sectors

Specialist valuation: building, construction & trade services.

Valuing a building, construction or trade-services business on the Sunshine Coast requires more than applying a standard multiple to adjusted earnings. These businesses carry factors that most valuers do not adequately account for:

  • Work in progress
  • Contract revenue
  • Licensing requirements
  • Subcontractor dependency
  • Margin variability across jobs
  • Customer concentration
Where methodology decides the outcome.

We have valued businesses in this sector extensively across South-East Queensland and the East Coast of Australia. It is one of the areas where the quality of the valuation methodology makes the most material difference to the outcome — for sellers, for buyers, and for the courts.

Frequently asked questions.

What Sunshine Coast owners ask before they engage
  • Q1 How much does a business valuation cost on the Sunshine Coast? +
    Cost depends on the scope and purpose of the engagement. An indicative assessment is lighter and faster than a formal valuation. We are transparent about fees at the first conversation — before any work is commissioned. There are no open-ended engagements and no bill surprises. A business valuation for Sunshine Coast owners commissioned through us is scoped and costed upfront, and prepared by Kevin Lovewell personally.
  • Q2 What is the difference between an indicative assessment and a formal valuation? +
    An indicative assessment gives you a working estimate — useful for planning, early conversations, and understanding your position. A formal business valuation is prepared to a higher evidentiary standard and is suitable for legal proceedings, buyer due diligence, ATO review, and any situation where the number will be challenged. The comparison table above sets out when each applies.
  • Q3 How long does a business valuation take? +
    An indicative assessment generally takes four to five days from receipt of the required information. A formal valuation takes longer — generally seven to ten days, depending on the complexity of the business and the purpose of the report. We negotiate the timeframe before we begin, and we can always accommodate urgent assignments.
  • Q4 Do I need a formal valuation for a partnership separation or dispute? +
    In most cases, yes. Where a matter may proceed to mediation, arbitration or litigation, an indicative assessment will not carry the certainty required. A court-ready business valuation prepared to a recognised, industry-accepted standard is what gives all parties — and the court — a number they can rely upon. We have worked with many Sunshine Coast accounting and legal practices as their “go-to” expert, preparing independent, unbiased valuations for their clients in partnership separations and family law matters. See: Partnership Separations →
  • Q5 Which valuation method applies to my business? +
    The appropriate method depends on the nature of the business, its earnings history, its asset base, and the purpose of the valuation. We do not apply a single method, and we do not work towards a target valuation. We assess which approach is most appropriate for your specific situation and explain our reasoning. That is what makes the work independent, unbiased, and value for money.

Based elsewhere in Queensland? See our business brokers Brisbane and business brokers Gold Coast pages.

§ 08 · Get started

Ready to talk?

The first conversation is confidential and carries no obligation to proceed.

When you are ready, we are available.

Last reviewed June 2026 · Kevin Lovewell · RBV (Registered Business Valuer) · FAIBB (Fellow, Australian Institute of Business Brokers)