Is Danaher Stock Still Attractive After Its Recent 9.1% Price Jump?

  • If you have been wondering whether Danaher at around $230 a share is a bargain in disguise or a quality name priced for perfection, you are not alone. This breakdown is designed to give you a clear, calm answer.

  • Over the last month the stock has climbed about 9.1%, even though it is only up 0.3% year to date and is still roughly flat over three years. This tells us sentiment has shifted recently even if long term returns have been muted.

  • That renewed interest has come as investors refocus on Danaher’s role in life sciences tools and diagnostics, where its portfolio spans everything from bioprocessing equipment to lab automation. At the same time, headlines around portfolio reshaping and ongoing integration of past acquisitions have reminded the market that Danaher is still actively fine tuning its mix of businesses rather than standing still.

  • Despite that backdrop, Danaher currently scores just 0/6 on our valuation checks, which suggests the market is not obviously underpricing its cash flows or assets based on standard models. Next we will unpack those methods in detail, then circle back to a way of thinking about valuation that ties the numbers to Danaher’s long term narrative.

Danaher scores just 0/6 on our valuation checks. See what other red flags we found in the full valuation breakdown.

A Discounted Cash Flow model estimates what a business is worth today by projecting its future cash flows and then discounting them back into current dollars. For Danaher, the model used is a 2 Stage Free Cash Flow to Equity approach, built on cash flow projections rather than earnings.

Danaher generated about $5.0 billion in free cash flow over the last twelve months, and analysts see this figure rising to roughly $7.0 billion by 2028. Beyond those analyst years, Simply Wall St extrapolates further growth out to 2035, with free cash flow approaching about $10.0 billion, before discounting each future year back to today in dollar terms.

Putting all of those discounted cash flows together gives an estimated intrinsic value of about $218 per share, compared with a current market price around $230. On this view, the stock screens as roughly 5.7% overvalued, which is a relatively small gap and well within the normal margin of error for any model.

Result: ABOUT RIGHT

Danaher is fairly valued according to our Discounted Cash Flow (DCF), but this can change at a moment’s notice. Track the value in your watchlist or portfolio and be alerted on when to act.

DHR Discounted Cash Flow as at Dec 2025

Head to the Valuation section of our Company Report for more details on how we arrive at this Fair Value for Danaher.

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