Free Tool

Free Comparable Company Analysis Tool

Peerset helps analysts, founders, and students find comp companies faster. Enter a company name, get a peer set, and move into the valuation work that actually matters.

Find comp companies fast

Start with a company name and get a curated public peer set in seconds.

See valuation-ready metrics

Review market cap, revenue, EBITDA, EV/Revenue, EV/EBITDA, and P/E in one workflow.

Move from search to analysis

Use the output as the first pass for banking decks, IC memos, fundraising prep, and classroom work.

Who uses a peer company finder?

Investment bankers

Build a first-pass comp set before you refine the pitch or valuation section.

Equity research analysts

Speed up peer mapping when coverage expands or a model needs fresh market context.

PE and VC analysts

Frame market positioning and public comp ranges during diligence and screening.

Startup founders and finance teams

Anchor fundraising narratives with a more disciplined comparable company analysis process.

Why use Peerset instead of manual searching?

Manual comp work usually starts in a spreadsheet, jumps to market data terminals, then ends in a document where the analyst still has to explain why the peer set makes sense. That is a lot of time spent before any real valuation judgment happens.

Peerset is built to compress the first-pass screening step. It gives you a usable set of trading comps quickly so you can spend more of your time reviewing comparability, pressure-testing multiples, and writing the investment view.

Typical Workflow

From company name to valuation comp table

Use the free searches to get a clean first pass, then tighten the set based on business model, size, growth, and geography.

01

Search the target company.

02

Review the proposed peer set and remove weak fits.

03

Compare trading multiples across the final group.

04

Use the output in your model, memo, or deck.

Related resources

If you are building a full comparable company analysis process, use the practical guide on how to find comparable companies for valuation. If you need the theory behind the multiples, start with what trading comps are and how analysts use them.