DCF valuation calculator that projects what the business is worth.

Model revenue growth, EBITDA margin, WACC, and terminal assumptions to see enterprise value, equity value, and value per share before committing to a formal valuation model.

Direct answerA DCF valuation calculator discounts projected free cash flows and a terminal value back to today using WACC to estimate enterprise value, equity value, and implied share price.
Browser-first workflowMulti-year projectionBuilt for finance teams

1. Build the projection

Calculator

Enter revenue, growth, margin, WACC, and terminal assumptions. Or load the sample scenario.

Enter assumptions or load a sample scenario to see the results.

DCF Valuation Calculator in the browser

The functional tool stays first: use the calculator, review the result, and only then scroll into the guide below.

Privacy-first workflow

This page runs in the browser and is designed for quick finance review before you move the numbers into a broader model.

What this tool is built to solve

A DCF valuation calculator discounts projected free cash flows and a terminal value back to today using WACC to estimate enterprise value, equity value, and implied share price.

Valuation requested without explicit assumptions

Spell out revenue growth, margin, and WACC so the number is traceable.

Terminal value dominates but is never stress-tested

Show terminal value as a share of enterprise value so reviewers can challenge it.

Equity value skipped because net debt is unknown

Subtract net debt explicitly to bridge from enterprise value to equity value and per-share price.

Multi-year DCF projection

Model explicit forecast years with revenue growth and margin assumptions baked in.

Terminal value transparency

See terminal value as a percentage of enterprise value so you can challenge the long-run assumption.

Browser-only analysis

Use the tool quickly before moving the numbers into a broader valuation model.

Exportable results

Take the output into board decks, investment memos, or M&A review materials.

How to use the DCF valuation calculator well

This section is written for searchers, answer engines, and busy finance teams: direct definitions, practical steps, and concrete follow-up guidance.

What it is

A DCF valuation calculator discounts projected free cash flows and a terminal value back to today using WACC to estimate enterprise value, equity value, and implied share price.

Who it is for

FP&A teams, founders, investment analysts, CFOs, M&A advisors, and board-level reviewers.

What matters most

Revenue, growth rate, EBITDA margin, WACC, terminal growth rate, projection period, net debt, and shares outstanding shape the output.

Four practical steps

Use the tool as a fast decision layer. The goal is to move from raw assumptions to a usable valuation answer before you open a larger model.

1
Start with current revenue.

Enter the latest full-year or trailing-twelve-month revenue as the base for the projection.

2
Set growth and margin assumptions.

Define the revenue growth rate and EBITDA margin that drive projected free cash flows.

3
Enter discount and terminal inputs.

Set WACC, terminal growth rate, and projection years to complete the model.

4
Review the valuation bridge.

Use enterprise value, equity value, and per-share price in the next planning or deal discussion.

What reviewers usually validate first

These are the areas teams usually discuss first once the calculation or analysis is visible.

Revenue growth realism

Confirm the growth rate reflects market size, competitive position, and historical performance rather than optimistic targets.

Margin sustainability

Validate that EBITDA margin assumptions account for scale effects, pricing pressure, and investment needs.

WACC defensibility

Check that the discount rate reflects the actual cost of equity, cost of debt, and capital structure of the business.

Terminal value weight

Flag models where terminal value exceeds 70-80% of enterprise value and stress-test the terminal growth rate.

Net debt accuracy

Ensure net debt captures all interest-bearing obligations minus true excess cash, not operating cash.

Share count dilution

Use fully diluted shares outstanding including options and convertibles to avoid overstating per-share value.

Built to close the gap between a formula and a usable valuation decision

Most search results either define DCF or sell a larger platform. This page solves the immediate job first: use the tool, see the answer, and understand what it means before you move into a deeper workflow.

Calculator first

The functional tool stays on top so users can solve the immediate problem before reading a guide.

Interpretation included

The result cards explain what the output means instead of leaving users with a raw number.

Useful before a custom build

Ledger Summit can build richer valuation tooling later, but this page delivers value now.

DCF Valuation Calculator questions, answered directly

Written in short form so searchers can get a clear answer without digging through generic product copy.

A DCF valuation calculator discounts projected free cash flows and a terminal value back to today using WACC to estimate enterprise value, equity value, and implied share price.

FP&A teams, founders, investment analysts, CFOs, M&A advisors, and board-level reviewers.

Revenue, growth rate, EBITDA margin, WACC, terminal growth rate, projection period, net debt, and shares outstanding shape the output.

No. The page runs the calculator in your browser and does not require a file upload for the base workflow.

Yes. If you need a richer model, recurring workflow automation, or an internal production version, Ledger Summit can build it around your process.

Need this connected to a broader workflow?

Use the free browser tool first. If you need a richer model, reporting automation, or an internal production version, Ledger Summit can build the next layer around your process.

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