Skip to content

NVR NVR Price / book

Price / book at other companies

Pultegroup logo
PultegroupPHM
1.7×+0.1×
D.R. Horton logo
D.R. HortonDHI
1.7×0.0×
Lennar logo
LennarLEN
1.3×-0.1×
Invitation Homes logo
Invitation HomesINVH
1.7×-0.5×
Home Depot logo
Home DepotHD
22.8×-23.5×
MFA Financial logo
MFA FinancialMFA
0.5×0.0×

Other financials

Income statement

See full
Revenue$1.9B-21.7%
Net income$198.4M-33.8%
EPS (diluted)$67.76-28.5%

Balance sheet

See full
Cash & equivalents$1.7B-24.4%
Total debt$41.0M-1.0%
Total equity$3.5B-11.7%
Total assets$5.6B-9.8%

Cash flow

See full
Operating cash flow$339.7M+63.5%
CapEx$4.9M-31.0%
Free cash flow$334.8M+66.8%

Valuation

See full
Market cap$17.52B-14.9%
Enterprise value$15.83B-13.7%
P/E14.2×+1.2×
P/S1.8×-0.2×

Profitability

See full
Operating margin9.7%
Net margin12.6%-2.3pp

Returns & leverage

See full
Return on equity33.3%-5.0pp
Debt / equity0.0×

Where this comes from

Calculated from NVR’s reported figures.

Based on the most recent quarter.

The official record: NVR’s 10-Q, filed May 6, 2026, on SEC EDGAR. View the filing →

Ask your AI about NVR's price / book.

Connect your AI assistant and compare it to peers, right in your chat.

Connect your AI
Harbor at dusk
Claude

Questions, answered.

What is NVR's price / book?
NVR (NVR) reported price / book of 5.2× in Q1 2026.
How has NVR's price / book changed year-over-year?
NVR's price / book decreased by 3.7% year-over-year, from 5.4× to 5.2×.
What is the long-term trend for NVR's price / book?
Over 4 years (2021 to 2025), NVR's price / book has grown at a -1.9% compound annual growth rate (CAGR), from 23.5× to 21.7×.
What does price / book mean?
How the market price compares to the company's accounting net worth.
How do you interpret price / book?
Below 1.0 can flag a market discount to book value (common for distressed or asset-heavy firms); high values reflect intangible value the balance sheet doesn't capture. Most informative for financials and asset-heavy businesses.
How does price / book compare across companies?
A core valuation gauge for banks and insurers; weak for asset-light firms where book value understates economic value.