Turn a total enterprise value into a share-based figure
A per-share view can make a large enterprise value easier to compare with other per-share metrics.
Money Tools
Estimate enterprise value per share from enterprise value and shares outstanding.
Why this page exists
Per-share valuation views get easier to compare when total enterprise value is turned into one share-based figure instead of staying as a large total. This calculator helps visitors estimate enterprise value per share from enterprise value and shares outstanding.
Interactive tool
Enter your numbers and read the result first, then use the sections below to understand what affects the outcome.
Calculator
Estimate enterprise value per share from enterprise value and shares outstanding.
Result
Estimated enterprise value per share based on total enterprise value divided by shares outstanding.
This is a simple per-share enterprise-value estimate, not financial advice. Share-count definitions can vary, so match the same basic or diluted share basis when comparing results.
Planning note
Last updated April 15, 2026. Use this tool to compare scenarios and plan ahead, then confirm important details with the lender, employer, insurer, contractor, or other qualified provider involved in the final decision.
How it works
Enter enterprise value and shares outstanding.
The calculator divides enterprise value by shares outstanding.
It shows the per-share estimate and the values used.
Understanding your result
This is a simple per-share estimate, not financial advice. Comparisons work best when the same share-count basis is used each time.
Browse more money toolsExamples
Example scenarios help turn a quick estimate into a more useful comparison or planning step.
A per-share view can make a large enterprise value easier to compare with other per-share metrics.
Changing shares outstanding can show how strongly dilution or buybacks affect the per-share picture.
Enterprise-value-per-share views often fit naturally beside market cap, cash per share, and price-ratio tools.
FAQ
The calculator divides enterprise value by shares outstanding to estimate enterprise value on a per-share basis.
A higher share count spreads the same total enterprise value across more shares, which lowers the per-share figure.
No. Enterprise value per share is a simple share-based view of total enterprise value, not the same thing as the current trading price.
Related tools
Use these related tools to compare nearby scenarios, check a second estimate, or keep narrowing down the right decision.
Estimate enterprise value from market capitalization, debt, cash, and optional balance-sheet adjustments.
Estimate market capitalization from current share price and shares outstanding.
Estimate cash per share from total cash and cash equivalents and shares outstanding.
Estimate free cash flow per share from total free cash flow and shares outstanding.
Estimate a company’s price-to-sales ratio from market capitalization and annual revenue.