How to Buy an Existing Business (Complete 2026 Guide)
By ScoreVet Research · 2026-04-18 · United States
TL;DR — Key Facts
- →Buying an existing business removes the two hardest parts of entrepreneurship: finding customers and building cash flow. You inherit both on day one.
- →Main deal sources: BizBuySell, BizQuest, business brokers, direct outreach to retiring owners, and industry associations. Each has different buyer leverage.
- →Realistic timeline: 6–12 months from starting the search to owning a business. Due diligence alone takes 45–90 days on a serious deal.
- →Typical valuation: 2–4x SDE (Seller's Discretionary Earnings) for small businesses under $1M; 3–6x EBITDA for businesses above $1M.
- →Financing: SBA 7(a) loans cover up to $5M with 10% equity injection. Seller financing, ROBS, and conventional loans are also options.
Why buying beats starting from scratch
Starting a business means solving two problems simultaneously: building something people will pay for, and finding those people. Buying an existing business means solving neither. You inherit a product customers already pay for, a team that already operates, and cash flow that already services debt.
The numbers reflect this. According to the SBA's Office of Advocacy, roughly 20% of new businesses fail in year one and about 50% fail within five years. Established businesses with 10+ years of operating history have failure rates under 5% when transitioned to competent new ownership. That difference is the entire argument for the acquisition path.
The trade-off is capital. Starting from zero costs less upfront but takes 3–5 years to reach meaningful cash flow. Buying requires $100,000–$500,000+ in equity injection on day one but delivers cash flow from month one. For buyers with savings, industry experience, or access to SBA financing, the math favors buying.
Where to find businesses actually for sale
Most first-time buyers start on BizBuySell, the largest US business-for-sale marketplace. It works, but it is also the most competitive channel — every listed business has been seen by thousands of buyers, and the good ones sell quickly.
Five sourcing channels in order of competitiveness:
1. Direct owner outreach (lowest competition). Identify businesses with aging owners in categories you care about, mail them a letter or show up in person. Most are not actively listed — you are the only buyer in the conversation.
2. Industry associations and trade groups. Every industry has a trade association that knows which members are nearing retirement. Membership directories plus a few coffee meetings surface deals that never list.
3. Business brokers with exclusive mandates. Not every broker lists on BizBuySell. Local firms often have pocket listings — deals the seller wants handled quietly. Build relationships with 3–5 brokers in your area.
4. CPAs, attorneys, and commercial bankers. They talk to owners years before a sale happens. A relationship with an M&A-focused CPA is one of the highest-leverage sourcing channels for a serious buyer.
5. BizBuySell, BizQuest, LoopNet (highest competition). Treat these as the last resort, not the first stop. If you are only searching on public marketplaces, you are competing against every other buyer seeing the same listings.
What "small business" actually means in 2026
The SBA defines small business broadly (usually under 500 employees or revenue caps by industry), but for practical acquisition purposes, three size bands matter:
Main Street (under $250K SDE): laundromats, small retail, single-location service businesses. Typically valued at 1.5–2.5x SDE. Most are bought by owner-operators who will run the business day-to-day. These are the most accessible deals for first-time buyers.
Lower Middle Market ($250K–$1M SDE): multi-location service businesses, small B2B companies, niche manufacturers. Typically valued at 2.5–4x SDE. Buyer often replaces themselves with a GM over 2–3 years. SBA 7(a) loans commonly fund these acquisitions up to the $5M cap.
Middle Market ($1M+ EBITDA): serious businesses with professional management, typically sold through M&A advisors rather than business brokers. Valued at 4–8x EBITDA. Buyers are usually search funds, family offices, or industry strategic buyers. First-time individual buyers rarely compete here.
Understanding which band you are shopping in determines the channels you use, the valuation multiple you expect, and the financing structure that works.
Due diligence: the 45–90 days that prevent disaster
After a Letter of Intent is signed, the real work begins. Due diligence has three tracks running in parallel:
Financial due diligence: the buyer's CPA reviews 3–5 years of tax returns, monthly P&L statements, bank statements, accounts receivable aging, and tax filings. The goal is to verify that the cash flow the seller claims is actually real. The #1 issue uncovered: owner add-backs that overstate SDE. A "real" SDE number often emerges 15–25% below the broker's pitch deck number.
Operational due diligence: the buyer spends time on-site, observing operations, meeting key employees, and reviewing customer contracts. Red flags include high owner dependence (is the seller the only reason the business works?), customer concentration (does one customer drive >25% of revenue?), and team stability (will key people leave when the seller does?).
Legal due diligence: the buyer's attorney reviews the lease, licenses, employment agreements, supplier contracts, pending litigation, and any environmental issues for physical locations. The lease is the most common dealbreaker — a short remaining term or hostile landlord can kill an otherwise clean deal.
Budget $15,000–$40,000 for a proper due diligence process: CPA ($5K–$15K), attorney ($5K–$15K), business valuation ($3K–$7K), industry expert review ($2K–$5K), and Phase I environmental assessment if real estate is involved ($3K–$5K).
Valuation: what you should actually pay
There is no single "right" price for a small business. There are market ranges, and smart buyers pay at or below the lower end of the range.
For Main Street businesses (under $250K SDE), the market range is 1.5–2.5x SDE. A business with $200K SDE should trade between $300K and $500K. The multiple depends on: business age (older = higher multiple), location quality, customer concentration, owner involvement, and recurring revenue mix.
For Lower Middle Market ($250K–$1M SDE), the range is 2.5–4x SDE. A business with $600K SDE should trade between $1.5M and $2.4M. Higher multiples are justified by: professional management team, documented systems, recurring revenue > 50%, growth trajectory.
The seller's asking price is not the valuation. It is the starting point for negotiation. Independent business valuations (required by the SBA on acquisition loans over $250K) anchor the real number. If the valuation comes in 20% below the asking price, the seller has three choices: reduce the price, lose the financed buyer, or find a cash buyer who does not care about valuation — and most do not exist.
Buyer leverage is highest in the first 30 days after an LOI, before due diligence uncovers problems. Use that window to negotiate hard on price, structure, and representations. After month 30 with no deal, both sides get exhausted and bad compromises happen.
Financing the purchase
Five paths to fund a small business acquisition, from most to least common:
1. SBA 7(a) loan (dominant for deals under $5M). 10% buyer equity, 90% SBA-guaranteed bank loan over 10 years. See our [SBA Loan to Buy an Existing Business](/guides/sba-loan-buy-existing-business) guide for the playbook.
2. Seller financing (common as a supplement). Seller carries 10–30% of the price as a note, bank or SBA covers the rest. Reduces buyer cash requirement, signals seller confidence in the business.
3. ROBS (Rollover for Business Startups). Use retirement funds as equity without early withdrawal penalty. See [How to Buy a Business with No Money Down](/guides/buy-a-business-with-no-money) for the mechanics.
4. Conventional bank loan. Faster closing than SBA, but higher down payment (20–30%) and stricter collateral requirements. Best for deals where speed matters more than leverage.
5. All-cash or private investors. Simpler deal, but ties up significant capital. Relevant for buyers with $500K+ liquid or those targeting smaller businesses.
Most deals combine two or three of these. The classic structure: 10% buyer cash + 10% seller note on standby + 80% SBA 7(a) loan. See [How to Get a Loan to Buy a Business](/guides/loans-to-buy-a-business) for the full breakdown.
The silver tsunami opportunity
Roughly 10 million US businesses are owned by baby boomers, and about 60% of those owners plan to exit within the next decade, according to BizBuySell and SBA Office of Advocacy data. Only a fraction have a succession plan.
This matters because it changes the buyer-seller dynamic. In a normal market, there are more buyers than quality businesses for sale, which compresses deal terms in the seller's favor. In a silver tsunami market, the supply of businesses for sale exceeds the supply of qualified, capitalized buyers. Sellers accept creative structures (standby notes, earnouts, extended due diligence) to get deals done before retirement.
The buyer profile that wins here: 35–55 years old, 10+ years of operational experience, $100K–$300K in liquid equity, relationship-oriented, willing to spend 6–12 months building seller relationships before a deal emerges. This is not the profile of someone bidding on a BizBuySell listing in a 30-day window. It is the profile of someone embedded in an industry, talking to owners about their retirement plans, and positioning themselves as the natural successor.
The Expo audience fits this pattern. Immigrant couples in their 30s and 40s with management experience looking to buy their way into ownership are the natural match for boomers who built successful businesses and need a trustworthy next operator.
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