business valuation

Business Valuation Software: How to Choose (2026 Guide)

Comparing business valuation software? See how appraisal-report tools and advisor value-building platforms differ and which fits your work.

Key takeaways

  • "Business valuation software" covers two different jobs: producing a standards-compliant appraisal report, and helping an owner understand and build business value toward an exit. Pick your tool by the job, not the label.
  • For formal appraisal reports (litigation, tax, ESOP, SBA, M&A) that must meet USPAP, SSVS, or Rev. Ruling 59-60, use a dedicated platform like ValuSource Pro or BVR DealStats.
  • For exit-planning and value-building work, advisors need a directional valuation, a value-driver assessment, and a planning workflow; not a litigation-grade report engine. That's what Maus is built for.
  • Maus is not a USPAP/SSVS appraisal-report tool and that's by design. It produces owner-friendly valuations tied to real-time financial reporting (QuickBooks/Xero) to drive recurring advisory engagements.
  • Many firms run both: an appraisal tool for formal engagements and an exit-planning platform for the ongoing advisory relationship. They solve different problems.

Most searches for "business valuation software" or "business appraisal software" bundle together two jobs that are actually very different. Pick based on the wrong one and you'll either overpay for compliance machinery you don't need, or buy a light tool that won't hold up where it counts.

Before you compare features, answer one question: are you producing a formal, defensible appraisal. Or are you helping a business owner understand and grow what their company is worth?

The right software depends entirely on which.

The two jobs valuation software does

The two jobs valuation software does - visual selection

Job 1

 Produce a standards-compliant appraisal report. This is the work of credentialed business appraisers and valuation analysts: engagements for litigation, divorce, estate and gift tax, ESOPs, SBA lending, or M&A, where the report has to satisfy USPAP, SSVS, or Revenue Ruling 59-60 and survive scrutiny from a court, the IRS, or opposing counsel. This work needs market-comp databases, cost-of-capital data, hundreds of variables, audit trails, and template language built around the standards.

 

Job 2

Help an owner understand and build business value toward an exit. This is the work of exit planners, financial advisors, CPAs, and business coaches: giving an owner a credible, directional sense of what their business is worth today, showing what's dragging the value down, and building a multi-year plan to grow it before they sell or transition. This work needs a defensible-enough estimate, value-driver assessment, owner-friendly reporting, and a way to turn the number into an engagement.

 

Same word — "valuation" — but the tools that win each job barely overlap.

Business Appraisal Quick comparison

 

Appraisal-report tools

Advisor value-building tools

Primary user

Business appraisers, valuation analysts, CPAs doing formal valuations

Exit planners, CEPAs, financial advisors, CPA-firm advisory teams

Core output

Standards-compliant written appraisal (USPAP / SSVS / 59-60)

Directional valuation + value-driver scorecard + owner action plan

Used for

Litigation, tax, ESOP, SBA, M&A, fairness opinions

Exit planning, value acceleration, advisory engagements, owner education

Depends on

Market-comp & cost-of-capital databases, 400+ variables, audit trails

Owner-friendly assessments, benchmarking, planning workflow, reporting

Representative tools

ValuSource Pro, BVR DealStats

Maus, BizEquity

What "good" looks like

Defensible in court / before the IRS

Drives an owner to act and start an engagement

If you need a formal appraisal report

Buy a dedicated appraisal platform. ValuSource Pro is the long-standing standard here: three decades of use by CPAs and appraisers, standards-based report templates (USPAP, SSVS, Rev. Ruling 59-60), 400+ variables, and integration with market-comp and cost-of-capital databases.

BVR's DealStats is the go-to for private-transaction comp data to support those reports. If your deliverable has to stand up in a courtroom or an audit, this is the category and it's where you should be looking.

 

Maus does not compete here, and we'll say so plainly: Maus is not a USPAP/SSVS appraisal-report engine. If formal, defensible appraisal reports are your product, ValuSource is the better fit.

If you're helping owners build value toward an exit

This is a different buyer with a different goal, and it's where most general-purpose appraisal software actually gets in the way — it's built to document a number, not to help an owner change it.

This is the job Maus is built for. Maus is exit-planning and value-acceleration software for advisors. Instead of producing a litigation-grade appraisal, it gives you:

  • A credible, directional valuation an owner can understand in plain language
  • A value-driver assessment that pinpoints what's suppressing the business's worth and where the upside is
  • The Value Acceleration Methodology (VAM) built into a structured, repeatable planning workflow
  • Owner-facing reports and dashboards that turn the number into a conversation and the conversation into a recurring advisory engagement

 

In other words: ValuSource tells an owner what the business is worth today and proves it. Maus helps an advisor show the owner what it could be worth, and sells the multi-year engagement to get there. If you're a financial advisor, CEPA, or CPA firm building an exit-planning practice, that second job is the one that grows your revenue.

So which should you choose?

Choose by the deliverable your client is actually paying for:

 

  • A defensible appraisal report (tax, litigation, ESOP, SBA, M&A) → ValuSource or BVR.
  • Help understanding and growing business value before a sale or transition → an exit-planning platform like Maus.

 

Plenty of firms run both — the appraisal tool for formal engagements, and an exit-planning platform for the advisory relationship that surrounds them. They're not competitors; they do different jobs.

 

FAQs

Is business valuation software the same as business appraisal software?

The terms are used interchangeably, but they cover two distinct jobs: producing a formal, standards-compliant appraisal report (ValuSource, BVR) versus helping an owner understand and build business value toward an exit (Maus, BizEquity). Choose based on which job you're doing.

 

What software do professional business appraisers use?

For formal, USPAP/SSVS-compliant reports, ValuSource Pro is the long-standing standard, often paired with comp databases like BVR's DealStats. These are built for litigation, tax, ESOP, and M&A engagements that must withstand scrutiny.

 

Is Maus appraisal software?

No. Maus is not a USPAP/SSVS appraisal-report engine. Maus is exit-planning and value-acceleration software for advisors; it produces directional valuations, value-driver assessments, and owner action plans to support advisory engagements, not formal appraisal reports.

 

What's the best valuation software for financial advisors and exit planners?

Advisors and exit planners generally need value-building and planning tools rather than appraisal-report engines. Platforms like Maus are purpose-built for this: a credible directional valuation, value-driver scoring, and the Value Acceleration Methodology in a repeatable workflow that turns a valuation into a recurring engagement.

 

Can I use one tool for both appraisals and exit planning?

Usually no single tool does both well. Many firms pair a dedicated appraisal platform for formal engagements with an exit-planning platform for the advisory relationship. They serve different clients and different deliverables.

 

Similar posts