New York, June 10, 2026, 10:03 (ET)
- MCW quote pages still show $7.10, but the stock shows zero volume and no open, high or low for June 10.
- Mister Car Wash completed its $3.1 billion take-private sale to Leonard Green & Partners on May 19, ending public trading in the shares.
- The stock was also removed from the S&P SmallCap 600, with F&G Annuities & Life taking its place before the May 19 open.
Mister Car Wash investors looking up MCW today are seeing a price that looks alive but is not behaving like a tradable stock. Robinhood’s snapshot still lists Mister Car Wash at $7.10, yet shows no open, high or low for June 10 and volume of zero, which matters because the company has already completed its take-private sale and its common stock has ceased trading.
The reason MCW is not moving is straightforward: there is no regular public market left for it. Mister Car Wash said on May 19 that investment funds managed by Leonard Green & Partners completed the acquisition in an all-cash deal implying a total enterprise value of $3.1 billion. Enterprise value is the takeover value of the business, including equity and debt-like obligations.
Under the transaction, Leonard Green acquired all outstanding shares not already owned by its affiliates for $7.00 per share in cash. Management rolled over part of its ownership, meaning some insiders kept an economic stake in the private company instead of cashing out fully.
Nasdaq had already laid out the market mechanics. The exchange said MCW was halted after the May 18 after-hours session, the merger closed before the market opened on May 19, and the stock was suspended effective May 20. Delisting means a company’s shares are removed from an exchange; in this case, it explains why a visible quote should not be read as an ordinary trading signal.
There was an index effect, too. S&P Dow Jones Indices removed Mister Car Wash from the S&P SmallCap 600 before the May 19 open and replaced it with F&G Annuities & Life. For index funds, that kind of deletion can force buying and selling around the effective date, but that event has already passed.
The final public-company paperwork has also started to close the door. On May 29, Mister Car Wash filed a Form 15 with the SEC to terminate registration or suspend its duty to file reports under the Securities Exchange Act. The filing listed common stock as the covered security, no other reporting classes, and approximately one holder of record as of the notice date.
That makes the current $7.10 screen price awkward. The cash deal price was $7.00 per share, while today’s quote page shows $7.10 with zero volume. For retail investors, the important point is not the extra dime on a stale quote; it is that MCW is no longer a normal Nasdaq stock with live price discovery.
The business Leonard Green is taking private was still growing before the deal closed. In the first quarter, Mister Car Wash reported revenue of $277.9 million, up 6% from $261.7 million a year earlier. Comparable-store sales, a measure of sales at locations with enough operating history to make year-over-year comparisons meaningful, rose 3.9%.
Its subscription base was the bigger attraction. The company said it had about 2.5 million Unlimited Wash Club members as of March 31, up about 9% from Dec. 31, and operated 549 car washes in 21 states. That recurring-revenue model is central to why a private-equity buyer would want the asset even as the public listing disappears.
Profitability also improved heading into the take-private. Adjusted EBITDA — earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization, adjusted for certain items — rose to $96.7 million from $85.6 million a year earlier, while adjusted EBITDA margin increased to 34.8% from 32.7%. Net income rose to $34.2 million from $27.0 million.
John Lai, Mister Car Wash’s chairman and chief executive, framed the deal as a way to invest outside the pressure of the public market, saying “going private gives us greater flexibility to continue investing.” The company said at closing that it operates approximately 550 locations and has the largest car wash subscription program in North America. PR Newswire
The risk has shifted. Public shareholders no longer face daily MCW price swings, but the private company is taking on a different burden: a May 19 SEC filing said Mister Car Wash Holdings entered into a credit agreement amendment that included a $900 million senior secured first-lien incremental term loan facility to fund shareholder consideration and transaction costs. If subscription growth cools, costs rise or new-store returns disappoint, that debt could limit flexibility — and with the Form 15 filed, outside investors will have far less routine public reporting to watch.