Private Company Valuation Calculator
Convert between price per share and company valuation instantly. Pre-loaded with shares outstanding data for 100+ private companies including SpaceX, Stripe, Databricks, and more.
Estimates only. Share counts may vary due to stock options, convertible notes, and recent equity issuances. Always verify with official sources.
How it works: Enter any two values to calculate the third.
Valuation = Shares Outstanding × Price Per Share
About This Calculator
This free valuation calculator helps investors, shareholders, and financial professionals estimate private company valuations based on secondary market pricing. Whether you're evaluating a potential investment, planning a secondary sale, or simply curious about how price per share translates to company valuation, this tool provides instant calculations.
Our database includes shares outstanding data for over 100 private companies across technology, fintech, healthcare, and other sectors. Data is sourced from public filings, funding announcements, and secondary market research.
Frequently Asked Questions
How do you calculate private company valuation from price per share?
To calculate a private company's valuation from the price per share, multiply the price per share by the total number of shares outstanding. For example, if a company has 100 million shares outstanding and the price per share is $50, the implied valuation is $5 billion (100M × $50 = $5B).
How do you convert valuation to price per share?
To convert a company valuation to price per share, divide the total valuation by the number of shares outstanding. For example, if a company is valued at $10 billion and has 500 million shares outstanding, the price per share is $20 ($10B ÷ 500M = $20).
What are shares outstanding?
Shares outstanding refers to the total number of shares of a company's stock that are currently owned by all shareholders, including institutional investors, company insiders, and public investors. This number is used to calculate market capitalization and price per share.
Why do private company valuations change?
Private company valuations change due to new funding rounds, secondary market transactions, company performance, market conditions, and comparable public company valuations. Secondary market prices can differ from official funding round valuations based on supply and demand.
How accurate is this calculator?
This calculator provides estimates based on reported shares outstanding data. Actual share counts may vary due to employee stock options, convertible notes, warrants, and recent equity issuances. Always verify important decisions with official company disclosures or legal counsel.