About the firm

Independent. Specialist. Quarter-end after quarter-end.

Brickell Valuation Partners was founded in 2014 as a single-line-of-business valuation specialist for the private capital community. Our partners came out of the valuation specialist groups at the Big-4 and at one of the leading independent valuation houses, and they kept hearing the same thing from GPs: we want this work, but not from a firm that’s also pitching us advisory.

Twelve years later we sit on quarterly valuation rolls for buyout, growth equity, and private credit funds across the lower- and middle-market — and increasingly in the GP-led secondary segment, where independent NAV references are not optional. We do not advise on transactions. We do not do tax structuring. We do not solicit M&A mandates from our valuation clients. The discipline is the product.

Today we operate from Miami, Florida with a remote-first practice that follows GPs and their auditors wherever the work is — New York, Boston, Chicago, San Francisco, London, and increasingly the Gulf and Asia. Every engagement team includes credentialed practitioners (ASA, CFA, AICPA-credentialed in business valuation), and every workpaper is built to interface cleanly with the auditor’s valuation specialist on day one.

Empty professional office with vintage desk

How we work

Operating principles.

  • One line of business. Valuation only. We refer M&A, transaction tax, and consulting work out — to firms that have agreed not to refer it back.
  • Independence in fact and appearance. No GP holding more than 10% of any given partner’s annual hours. No partner with personal equity in any client GP or any portfolio company we mark.
  • Workpapers that survive an inspection. Every engagement is built to PCAOB AS 2501 documentation standards from day one — not retrofitted under audit pressure.
  • Calibration discipline. Quarterly marks reconcile to entry, exit, and round-pricing observations on a rolling basis. We document every triangulation point.
  • No-comment is a deliverable. When the available data does not support a conclusion at the precision the auditor needs, we say so. The firm is built on the assumption that this answer is allowed.