Net Debt to EBITDA – Leverage Ratio

By Bulios Research Updated 24.03.2026

Net Debt to EBITDA is one of the most important leverage indicators that investors and analysts use when evaluating a company's financial stability. Unlike Debt-to-Equity ratio, it also accounts for the cash the company has available.

How Net Debt to EBITDA is Calculated

The formula consists of two parts:

\text{Net Debt} = \text{Total Debt} - \text{Cash and Equivalents}

  • Total Debt includes both short-term and long-term interest-bearing liabilities
  • Cash and Equivalents are money in accounts and short-term liquid investments
  • EBITDA is Earnings Before Interest, Taxes, Depreciation and Amortization

What the Result Means

The value shows how many years the company would theoretically need to pay off net debt from operating profit.

Value Interpretation
< 1.0 Very low leverage, company can easily manage debt
1.0 – 2.0 Healthy leverage, conservative approach
2.0 – 3.0 Moderately elevated leverage, still acceptable
3.0 – 4.0 Higher leverage, requires attention
> 4.0 High leverage, potential risk

Example: A company has total debt of $800 million, cash of $200 million, and EBITDA of $150 million. Net debt is $600 million and Net Debt to EBITDA is 4.0. This means it would theoretically take the company 4 years to pay off debt from operating profit.

Why Net Debt to EBITDA Matters

This indicator is popular for several reasons:

  • Accounts for cash – a company with high debt but also large cash reserves is less risky
  • Uses operating performance – EBITDA better reflects ability to generate cash than net income
  • Enables comparison – eliminates differences in depreciation methods and tax rates
  • Creditors watch it – banks often set maximum values as loan conditions

Industry Differences

As with Debt to Assets ratio, the ideal value varies by industry:

  • Utilities and telecommunications – commonly 3.0–5.0 (stable cash flow allows higher leverage)
  • Consumer Staples – typically 1.5–2.5
  • Technology – often below 1.0 (companies hold large cash reserves)
  • Real Estate companies – 4.0–6.0 (debt is the main financing source)

Negative Value – What it Means

Net Debt to EBITDA can be negative in two cases:

  1. Negative net debt – company has more cash than debt. This is a positive signal, the company is in excellent financial condition.

  2. Negative EBITDA – company is loss-making at operating level. This is a warning signal.

Always look at what caused the negative value.

Limitations of the Indicator

  • EBITDA isn't cash flow – doesn't include capital expenditures or working capital changes
  • One-time items – may distort EBITDA up or down
  • Seasonality – for some companies, EBITDA varies significantly during the year
  • Different definitions – companies may calculate EBITDA differently (adjusted vs. reported)

How to Use the Indicator in Practice

For a comprehensive view of leverage, combine Net Debt to EBITDA with other indicators:

Also track the trend over time. Gradually rising Net Debt to EBITDA may signal problems, even if the current value is still normal.

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