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Business Valuation Regina | PIN.ca

Forensic FMV Reports for Saskatchewan's Capital Economy — Flat Fee $3,500 | 10-Day Delivery

Eric Jordan, CPPA Regina Business Valuator

Business Valuation for Dispute Resolution, Litigation, and Fair Market Value in Regina

Over 95% of business disputes are resolved without going to court.
We provide the valuation data that makes fair, timely settlements possible.

At PIN.CA, we recognize that most business owners, shareholders, and stakeholders want a clean exit — not years of litigation. Traditional accounting-based valuations often fail to capture the real drivers of value, particularly intangible assets that determine how a business actually performs in the marketplace.

Our methodology bridges formal valuation standards, including current and emerging CBV guidelines, with real-world operational reality. The result is defensible Fair Market Value conclusions that support resolution rather than fuel conflict.


1. Collaborative Valuation for Dispute Resolution

Our primary service, designed for the 95% who want to settle, move forward, and protect capital.
Instead of opposing experts battling over spreadsheets, we facilitate a transparent, stakeholder-focused valuation process. Using the 25 Factors Affecting Business Valuation together with the 5 Senses Inspection Report, we identify and document both tangible and intangible assets that are routinely overlooked in conventional reports.

What this delivers:

  • Clarity: A shared, evidence-based understanding of value
  • Credibility: Intangible assets identified, measured, and explained in plain language
  • Momentum: Valuations completed quickly to keep negotiations moving

Engagement terms:

  • Fixed cost: $3,500 flat fee
  • Timeline: Typically completed within 10 days
  • Framework: Collaborative, documented, and designed to reduce conflict rather than escalate it

2. Litigation and Court-Directed Valuation Services

For the small minority of cases where court involvement is unavoidable.
When a matter proceeds to litigation, we provide independent, technically rigorous valuation work suitable for judicial scrutiny.

Independent, Court-Directed Valuation

When engaged as a neutral expert, our duty is to the court. We determine Fair Market Value by identifying, measuring, and explaining both tangible and intangible assets using normalized financials and documented operational evidence.


3. Valuation Report Review and Critique

We also act as independent consultants to review existing valuation reports. In this role, our duty is to you alone. We assess reports against accepted valuation standards and guidelines, identify unsupported assumptions, highlight overlooked assets, and clearly explain where methodology diverges from market reality.


The Three Approaches to Business Valuation in Regina

Market Approach

The market approach values a Regina business by comparing it to similar businesses that have recently sold. While commonly used, PIN.ca's 25 Factors methodology identifies why comparable sales data is often structurally flawed for private Regina SMEs — and how to correct for those gaps to reach a defensible FMV conclusion.

Asset Approach

The asset approach values a Regina business based on the fair market value of its individual assets minus liabilities. For most operating businesses, this method alone captures only 30–40% of real value — the tangible assets. Our forensic methodology ensures that intangible assets unique to Regina's market are identified, documented, and included.

Income Approach

The income approach — including Discounted Cash Flow (DCF) and Capitalization of Earnings — is the most defensible method for income-generating Regina businesses. It values the business based on its ability to generate future economic benefits, adjusted for Regina-specific risk factors identified through the 25 Factors analysis.


Business Valuation Is Not Accounting

Accounting reports the past; business valuation in Regina withstands present scrutiny for CRA, courts, and disputes.

Traditional reports use accounting templates, but modern business value stems from intangible assets like systems, relationships, positioning, risk, and operational reality — often 90% of a private business's value.

Many business valuations fail CRA audits, litigation, financing, or shareholder disputes because math alone isn't enough.


Why Most Business Valuations Collapse Under Scrutiny

Most fail due to unidentified intangible assets, unmeasured value drivers, or undefendable conclusions in Canadian courts or CRA reviews.

In a global economy where 68% of wealth is intangible, traditional business valuation models are incomplete.


Merit-Based & Evidence-Driven Business Valuation

"We provide business valuations in Regina based on demonstrated performance and measurable assets, not assumptions or labels. Results, risk, and replicability determine value."


Built for Cross-Examination in Canadian Courts

Cross-examination tests business valuations. If not explainable, defendable, and evidence-backed, they fail in court, CRA audits, litigation, or financing.

PIN.ca business valuations are pressure-proof from the start.


The PIN.ca Forensic Business Valuation Methodology

Eric Jordan 25 Factors Affecting Business Valuation™
Replaces goodwill guesswork with structured analysis of value drivers for accurate FMV reports.

5 Senses Inspection Report™
Desk valuations fail; forensic inspections provide observed facts for unchallengeable evidence in CRA and court settings.

Together, they create a forensic record of reality for your Regina business valuation.


Proven in Canadian Courts, CRA Audits, and Real Markets

  • Accepted in Canadian litigation under cross-examination
  • 20+ CRA-accepted business valuation reports without pushback
  • 10-year validation: 2016 valuation sold at exact value; buyer returned for exit valuation
  • Informed by 43 Canadian judicial decisions on business valuation
PIN Valuations

"Under cross-examination, Eric Jordan's valuation shone brightly and withstood scrutiny."


Regina Business Valuation Landscape – 2026

In 2026, Regina's business valuation landscape is anchored by Saskatchewan's position as the world's most important potash and agricultural export hub. For valuators, this creates a uniquely stable earnings environment — commodity-backed revenues provide a defensible floor that volatile service-economy businesses in larger cities simply cannot match.

1. Potash & Agriculture: The Commodity Floor

Saskatchewan produces approximately 30% of the world's potash supply. Businesses in agricultural input, processing, or logistics tied to this sector carry a Global Demand Premium that insulates valuations from domestic economic cycles.

2. Government of Saskatchewan Anchor

As the provincial capital, Regina's economy benefits from stable government employment and Crown corporation activity. This creates predictable B2G revenue for local suppliers, reducing earnings risk and supporting higher income-approach valuations.

3. Oil & Gas Secondary Exposure

Saskatchewan's oil production (particularly in the Bakken formation) provides secondary commodity exposure. Energy sector supply businesses carry dual commodity risk — but also dual revenue stability when both oil and agricultural markets are performing.

4. Affordable Operating Environment

Regina offers the lowest commercial lease rates and living costs of any provincial capital in Canada. This means normalized operating margins for Regina businesses are typically higher than identical businesses in more expensive cities.

2026 Valuation Comparison: Regina vs. Saskatoon vs. Winnipeg

MetricReginaSaskatoonWinnipeg
Primary Valuation AnchorGovernment + AgricultureAgriculture + TechEnergy + Diversification
Talent Risk DiscountVery LowLowLow
SME Valuation MethodSDE / AssetSDE / EBITDAEBITDA
Tax Advantage (SME)9–11%9–11%9–11% + No PST
Commodity StabilityYes — potash/ag/oilYes — potash/agritechModerate
CBV Standard CapturePartial (ag gaps)Partial (IP gaps)Adequate

The Specialist's Verdict

Regina in 2026 is a Commodity-Backed Stability market. Agricultural and government-anchored businesses produce highly defensible cash flows. The most common valuation error in Regina is undervaluing location-based intangibles tied to proximity to agricultural supply chains.

PIN.ca's 25 Factors Affecting Business Valuation and 5 Senses Inspection Report are specifically designed to surface these gaps and build them into a defensible, court-ready FMV conclusion that reflects Regina's actual 2026 market reality.


Frequently Asked Questions: Business Valuation in Regina

How much does a business valuation cost in Regina?
PIN Valuations provides flat-fee business valuations starting at $3,500 CAD for Regina and Saskatchewan businesses, completed within 10 business days. All reports are defensible for CRA, litigation, divorce, and shareholder dispute purposes.
How does Saskatchewan's agricultural economy affect business valuations in Regina?
Agricultural supply, processing, and logistics businesses in Regina benefit from proximity to one of the world's most productive farming regions. Long-term supply contracts and recurring government relationships reduce risk discounts in income-approach valuations, directly increasing FMV conclusions.
Can a Regina business valuation be used in a Saskatchewan court?
Yes. Eric Jordan, CPPA provides court-ready FMV reports that meet Saskatchewan judicial standards and have withstood cross-examination in Canadian litigation. Expert witness services are available for Regina and throughout Saskatchewan.

20 In-Depth Regina Business Valuation Guides

20 in-depth guides covering every major valuation scenario faced by Regina business owners, lawyers, accountants, and shareholders.

Q 01 · FAIR MARKET VALUE

What Is the Fair Market Value of My Regina Business?

FMV is the legal standard used by CRA, courts, and every serious buyer in Regina. Here's exactly how it's determined.

Read Full Guide →
Q 02 · STANDARDS OF VALUE

Fair Value vs. Fair Market Value in Regina

Two standards that look similar but produce very different numbers. The choice can shift results by 30–40%.

Read Full Guide →
Q 03 · GOODWILL

What Is Goodwill in a Regina Business Valuation?

The most commonly used and most commonly misused concept in valuation. Not an asset; a category for what wasn't individually identified.

Read Full Guide →
Q 04 · INTANGIBLE ASSETS

How to Value Intangible Assets in a Regina Small Business

Most Regina valuations lump everything into goodwill. Here's how to actually identify and value the assets that represent up to 90% of worth.

Read Full Guide →
Q 05 · DIVORCE

Business Valuation for Divorce in Regina

If you or your spouse owns a business in Regina, it must be valued. Here's what it costs, how the process works, and what courts expect.

Read Full Guide →
Q 06 · SHAREHOLDER BUYOUT

Business Valuation for Shareholder Buyout in Regina

When a shareholder leaves voluntarily or not — shares must be valued. The standard of value matters more than the methodology.

Read Full Guide →
Q 07 · SHAREHOLDER AGREEMENTS

Shareholder Agreement With No Valuation Method in Regina

When a Regina shareholder agreement is silent on valuation, Canadian courts must decide. Here's how they handle it.

Read Full Guide →
Q 08 · OPPRESSION REMEDY

Oppression Remedy Valuation in Saskatchewan

Uses fair value — not FMV — meaning minority discounts are typically excluded. Here's what courts need and how evidence changes outcomes.

Read Full Guide →
Q 09 · COURT CHALLENGES

Can a Regina Business Valuation Be Challenged in Court?

Yes — every valuation submitted as evidence can be challenged. Here are the most common grounds and how to make your report resistant.

Read Full Guide →
Q 10 · TAX PLANNING

Business Valuation for a Section 86 Estate Freeze in Regina

Your accountant structures the freeze. Your lawyer drafts the documents. But the valuation is what CRA scrutinizes — sometimes years later.

Read Full Guide →
Q 11 · FINANCIALS

Normalizing Financial Statements for Regina Business Valuation

A $500,000 Regina business can appear to earn $80,000 or $250,000 depending on adjustments. Here's why normalization is critical.

Read Full Guide →
Q 12 · RISK FACTORS

Owner Dependency Discount in Regina Business Valuation

The single most common reason a Regina business is worth less than its owner expects. Here's how it's identified, measured, and reduced.

Read Full Guide →
Q 13 · METHODOLOGY

Why Comparable Sales Are Wrong for Regina Business Valuation

The most commonly used and least reliable method for private businesses. Here's why comparable sales data is structurally flawed.

Read Full Guide →
Q 14 · CREDENTIALS

CBV vs CPPA for Business Valuation in Regina

Comparing Regina's two main valuator designations — what each credential requires and what it tells you about the report quality.

Read Full Guide →
Q 15 · SELLING STRATEGY

How to Increase Regina Business Value Before Selling

A valuation-driven roadmap showing which of the 25 Factors to address first and how each improvement translates into measurable value.

Read Full Guide →
Q 16 · REPORTS

Business Valuation Report Example — Regina

A section-by-section walkthrough of what a well-prepared Regina report contains and the red flags that signal a weak one.

Read Full Guide →
Q 17 · FINANCING

Business Valuation for a Bank Loan in Regina

When and why Canadian lenders require a valuation, and how a lending valuation differs from one prepared for sale or divorce.

Read Full Guide →
Q 18 · GOVERNMENT LOANS

Business Valuation for a CSBFP Loan in Regina

How to get a Regina valuation that satisfies Canada Small Business Financing Program requirements for loans up to $150,000.

Read Full Guide →
Q 19 · FRANCHISES

Franchise Valuation for Sale in Regina

A franchise is not valued like an independent Regina business. The franchise agreement fundamentally changes the analysis.

Read Full Guide →
Q 20 · EXPROPRIATION

Expropriation Business Valuation in Regina

When the government takes your Regina property, compensation extends beyond land value — including goodwill destruction and disturbance damages.

Read Full Guide →

Why PIN.CA

  • Focus on resolution first, not procedural escalation
  • Specialized expertise in intangible asset identification and valuation
  • Clear, fixed pricing with no hourly surprises
  • Reports designed to be understood by owners, advisors, opposing parties, and the court

Who Uses PIN.ca Business Valuation Services in Regina

  • Business owners seeking accurate FMV
  • Lawyers and self-litigants in disputes
  • Accountants needing defensible valuation support
  • Lenders and private financiers
  • Buyers and sellers of businesses
  • Shareholders in partnership disputes
  • Cross-border clients requiring Regina valuations

Hire a Business Valuation Specialist in Regina, Not a Generalist

Serious outcomes demand specialists, not templates. For business valuations that survive scrutiny in CRA audits or Canadian courts, choose differently.

PIN.ca: Business Valuations Built for Reality.

CALL ERIC JORDAN NOW (TOLL-FREE)