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Exclusive-American Residential Services explores $3.5 billion-plus sale, sources say

By Thomson Reuters Mar 23, 2026 | 2:51 PM

By Abigail Summerville

March 23 (Reuters) – The private equity owner of American Residential Services (ARS) is exploring a sale of the heating, ventilation, and air conditioning (HVAC) and ​plumbing services provider that could value it at over $3.5 ‌billion, according to three sources familiar with the matter.

Investment bank Rothschild & Co’s Business Services franchise is running the sale process, which is at an early stage, the sources said, requesting anonymity because the ‌matter ​is private.

The potential sale comes as ⁠private equity firms continue ⁠to favor residential services investments, a sector that remains resilient during periods of market volatility due to steady, recurring demand.

Private equity firm GI Partners is the majority owner ​of ARS after making an investment in 2020. Existing investor Charlesbank Capital Partners and the company’s management remained ⁠invested in the business.

GI Partners and ⁠Rothschild declined to comment. ARS did not ​immediately respond to a request for comment.

Memphis, Tennessee-based ARS generates ​around $200 million of annual earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation ‌and amortization and over $1.5 billion of revenue, two of the sources said.

Private equity firms have been active buyers of residential services companies. Last month, Blackstone bought home services provider Champions ⁠Group for an undisclosed amount. Earlier this month, Reuters reported that Oak Hill Capital agreed to buy Guild Garage Group, an ⁠alliance of garage ‌door repair and replacement businesses, for more ⁠than $800 million.

ARS completes 1.2 million customer visits ​per ‌year and employs over 6,000 people, including ​over 2,500 ⁠skilled technicians, according to GI Partners’ website.

Founded in 2001, GI Partners invests primarily in healthcare, software and services companies and has raised more than $47 billion to date.

(Reporting by Abigail Summerville in New York; editing by Echo Wang and Nick Zieminski ​in New York)