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Ontario

Pharmacy for sale in Ontario

Buy or sell a pharmacy in Ontario with practising pharmacists who know the province's funding model, regulator, and market. Confidential for sellers, qualified access for buyers.

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Key numbers: Ontario pharmacy market

5x to 6.5x

typical normalized EBITDA multiple

$120K

market manager salary used in normalization

6 to 12

months for a typical managed sale

  • Community pharmacies in Ontario typically transact at 5.0 to 6.5 times normalized EBITDA, with 6.0 as a common midpoint for established operations.
  • The Ontario Drug Benefit program pays a standard dispensing fee of $8.83, with higher rates available for pharmacies in rural and underserviced areas.
  • Ontario is the largest pharmacy market in Canada, with more than 4,500 community pharmacies serving a population of over 15 million.
  • Ontario bans rebates on generic drugs for public plan claims, which compresses margins for pharmacies that historically relied on manufacturer allowances.
  • Long term care pharmacy in Ontario moved to a capitation funding model in 2020, paying a fixed per resident amount instead of per prescription fees.

Source: PharmacyBroker.ca transaction parameters and public provincial data, updated July 2026.

Buying or selling a pharmacy in Ontario

Ontario combines the highest prescription volumes in the country with some of the tightest funding rules. The Ontario Drug Benefit program covers seniors and social assistance recipients at a standard dispensing fee of $8.83, and the province prohibits rebates on generic drugs. For buyers, this means the quality of earnings matters as much as the headline revenue: a pharmacy that depends heavily on rebate income or on a small number of public plan payers will attract meaningful haircuts from both lenders and purchasers.

Long term care and specialty operations are valued differently from retail. Since 2020, Ontario funds LTC pharmacy through capitation, a fixed payment per resident bed rather than a fee per prescription, which makes contract stability and bed counts the key valuation drivers for those businesses. Premium urban retail pharmacies with stable scripts, clinic proximity, and secure long term leases still command the strong end of the 5.0 to 6.5 multiple range.

Ownership transfers are overseen by the Ontario College of Pharmacists, which must issue a new certificate of accreditation when a pharmacy changes hands. Every accredited pharmacy must have a Designated Manager who is a licensed pharmacist, and corporate ownership is subject to conditions under the Drug and Pharmacies Regulation Act. Buyers should budget time for the accreditation process alongside financing and due diligence.

Pharmacy operations in Ontario are regulated by the Ontario College of Pharmacists, which oversees the licensing and transfer requirements that every sale must satisfy. We coordinate that process as part of every engagement.

No public listings in Ontario right now

Most pharmacy sales here never reach a public page. Sellers list confidentially and buyers on our qualified list hear first. Tell us what you are looking for, or list your own pharmacy for sale confidentially.

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Pharmacy transactions in Ontario: your questions

What multiple do Ontario pharmacies sell for?
Most Ontario community pharmacies transact between 5.0 and 6.5 times normalized EBITDA. Well located urban pharmacies with stable or growing scripts and long lease terms sit at the top of that range, while rebate dependent or declining operations price below the midpoint of 6.0.
Who regulates pharmacy ownership transfers in Ontario?
The Ontario College of Pharmacists. A change of ownership requires a new certificate of accreditation for the pharmacy, and the business must operate under a Designated Manager who is a licensed pharmacist. The College's requirements should be built into the closing timeline.
Can a non-pharmacist own a pharmacy in Ontario?
Ontario permits corporate pharmacy ownership subject to conditions in the Drug and Pharmacies Regulation Act, including requirements relating to pharmacist involvement in the corporation. In practice, every pharmacy must be accredited and managed day to day by a licensed pharmacist. Structuring advice from counsel familiar with the Act is essential before closing.
How do I find a pharmacy for sale in Ontario?
Most Ontario pharmacy sales are never publicly listed. Owners sell confidentially through advisors and brokers to protect staff, patients, and banner relationships. If you are searching for a pharmacy for sale in Ontario, working with a transaction advisor gives you access to off market opportunities and a realistic view of pricing.
How long does an Ontario pharmacy sale take?
A typical transaction takes 6 to 12 months from preparation to close. Financing approval, due diligence on payer mix and rebate exposure, and the Ontario College of Pharmacists accreditation process for the new owner are the main timeline drivers.

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