DCF Calculator
Calculate enterprise value using Discounted Cash Flow (DCF) analysis. Includes 5-year and 10-year DCF, Gordon Growth terminal value, equity value, intrinsic value per share, and WACC sensitivity analysis.
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Enterprise Value
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PV of Free Cash Flows (5yr) —
PV of Terminal Value —
Terminal Value % of EV —
Extended More scenarios, charts & detailed breakdown ▾
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Enterprise Value
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PV High-Growth Phase (Yrs 1-5) —
PV Declining Phase (Yrs 6-10) —
PV Terminal Value —
Professional Full parameters & maximum detail ▾
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Valuation
Enterprise Value —
Equity Value —
Intrinsic Value Per Share
Terminal Value
Terminal Value (Gordon Growth) —
Terminal Value % of EV —
How to Use This Calculator
- Enter 5 years of projected Free Cash Flows (use after-tax unlevered FCF = EBIT×(1−T) + D&A − CapEx − ΔNWC).
- Set Terminal Growth Rate (recommend 2–3%, must be less than WACC).
- Set WACC — use our WACC Calculator or input directly.
- The calculator shows PV of FCFs, PV of Terminal Value, and Enterprise Value.
- Use the Sensitivity Analysis tab to see EV at WACC ±2%.
- Open Professional to subtract net debt and get intrinsic value per share.
Formula
Enterprise Value = Σ FCFt/(1+WACC)^t + Terminal Value/(1+WACC)^n
Terminal Value (Gordon Growth) = FCF_n × (1+g) / (WACC − g)
Example
Example: FCFs growing 10%/yr from $10M. Terminal growth 2.5%, WACC 9.83%. PV of FCFs = $45.8M. TV = FCF5×1.025/(0.0983−0.025) = $204.5M. PV of TV = $127.2M. Enterprise Value = $173M. TV = 73% of EV.
Frequently Asked Questions
- Discounted Cash Flow (DCF) analysis values a business or investment by discounting projected future free cash flows back to present value using the WACC (discount rate). Enterprise Value = PV of FCFs + PV of Terminal Value. The terminal value captures all value beyond the forecast period.
- Terminal value represents the present value of all cash flows beyond the forecast period, typically using the Gordon Growth Model: TV = FCF_last × (1+g) / (WACC − g). Terminal value often represents 60–80% of total DCF value, making the terminal growth rate assumption extremely sensitive.
- The terminal growth rate should not exceed long-run GDP growth (2–3% for mature economies). Using a rate near WACC produces unrealistically high valuations. Most practitioners use 2–3% for stable businesses. The terminal growth rate must always be less than the discount rate.
- Equity Value = Enterprise Value − Net Debt (total interest-bearing debt minus cash & equivalents). Then intrinsic value per share = Equity Value / Diluted shares outstanding. Include all dilutive securities: options, warrants, convertibles.
- WACC depends on the company's capital structure and risk profile. Calculate WACC using our WACC Calculator with CAPM-derived cost of equity. Typical ranges: tech/growth companies 10–14%, mature industrials 7–9%, utilities 5–7%. Always run a sensitivity table at WACC ±2%.
Related Calculators
Sources & References (5) ▾
- Investment Valuation — Aswath Damodaran — NYU Stern / Wiley Finance
- Valuation: Measuring and Managing the Value of Companies — McKinsey — McKinsey & Company / Wiley
- CFA Institute — Free Cash Flow Valuation — CFA Institute
- Principles of Corporate Finance — Brealey, Myers & Allen — McGraw-Hill
- DCF Valuation Explained — Investopedia — Investopedia