HomeQuestions to Ask When Selling a Business (2026)

Questions to Ask When Selling a Business (2026)

Quick Answer

The most important questions to ask when selling a business fall into five categories. Of yourself: am I really ready to exit, financially and emotionally; what would I do post-sale. Of your advisor: which buyer pools fit my business, what realistic price range, what timeline, what is the fee structure and who pays it, what are your conflicts. Of buyers: what is their thesis for the business, their financing certainty, their plans for employees and customers, their integration timeline. Of your CPA: what is the after-tax net under different structures (asset vs stock sale), what is my tax basis, do I qualify for any deferrals or exclusions. Of your attorney: what indemnification, non-compete, and earnout terms are normal in deals like mine, where is the negotiation leverage.

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Selling a business is a once-or-twice-in-a-lifetime decision, and the right questions are the difference between a clean exit and an expensive regret. Most owners ask the wrong things, focused on price, while the answers that actually shape the outcome live in structure, buyer fit, after-tax net, and post-close transition. This page lays out the questions worth asking, in the order you should ask them.

We are CT Acquisitions, a buy-side M&A advisory firm. With the buyer-paid model, sellers pay no advisory fee, the buyer pays at closing. See our how to sell your business guide and our pre-sale decision framework for the full picture.

What this guide covers

  • Ask yourself first. Am I ready, financially and emotionally; what would I do post-sale; what is my actual number
  • Ask the advisor. Buyer pools, realistic price, timeline, fee structure, conflicts, references
  • Ask the buyer. Thesis, financing certainty, employees, customers, integration timeline
  • Ask the CPA. After-tax net under different structures, basis, deferrals/exclusions, state tax
  • Ask the attorney. What is normal in deals like yours, where the negotiation leverage is
  • Know your number before you ask anyone. Use our free 90-second valuation

Questions to ask yourself before going to market

Questions to ask a sell-side advisor or business broker

Questions to ask a prospective buyer

Questions to ask your CPA

Questions to ask your transactional attorney

How we know this: the ranges, timelines, and patterns on this page reflect the transactions we work on and the buyer mandates in our network of 100+ active capital partners. They are informed starting points, not guarantees, your actual outcome depends on the specifics. For a sector-adjusted estimate, use our free 90-second valuation tool.

Questions to ask before signing the LOI

The LOI is the most consequential document in the deal even though it is mostly non-binding. Before signing, ask:

Related: what to think about before selling, steps to selling a business, best way to sell a business, legal documents needed.

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Frequently asked questions

What questions should I ask before selling my business?

Start with yourself: am I ready (financially and emotionally), what would I do post-sale, what is the after-tax net I need. Then ask your sell-side advisor about buyer pools, realistic price range, timeline, fees, conflicts, and references. Ask prospective buyers about their thesis, financing certainty, plans for employees and customers, transition expectations. Ask your CPA about after-tax net under different structures. Ask your transactional attorney what terms are normal for deals like yours.

What should I ask a business broker before signing?

Their fee structure (and who pays it); their engagement length, retainer, and tail provision (the period after engagement ends during which they’re still owed a fee for introduced buyers); their realistic indicative valuation and what would push it up or down; the buyer pools they target and how; their active buyer relationships in your sector and size range; references from three sellers they’ve worked with in the last 18 months; their conflicts of interest; who on their team actually runs your deal; and what happens if you want to terminate the engagement.

What should I ask a potential buyer of my business?

Their thesis (what are they actually buying); their source of funding with proof of funds; their plans for employees, customers, brand, and location post-close; what your transition looks like (time, role, compensation, authority); their experience with similar businesses and references from one or two of those sellers; their typical earnout, holdback, escrow, and non-compete terms; their diligence timeline; their past deal-breakers in similar situations; and whether they’re direct (principal capital) or an intermediary.

What should I ask my CPA before selling my business?

After-tax net under both asset-sale and stock-sale structures at the proposed price; your tax basis in the business; QSBS (Section 1202) eligibility; whether installment-sale treatment (IRC 453) makes sense; state-tax implications and your state of residence at closing; F-reorganization options for tax-deferred rollover equity; 338(h)(10) election relevance; goodwill allocation strategy; charitable/estate/family-office structures before closing; and how seller financing or earnouts affect the timing of your tax bill vs cash.

What should I ask my attorney about selling my business?

Their fee structure and realistic total estimate; what deal terms are normal for deals like yours (indemnification cap, survival, basket, escrow size); earnout language that protects you if you cede operational control; the buyer’s counsel reputation; the worst clauses in the first draft of the purchase agreement and their push-back strategy; required third-party consents (leases, IP, key contracts); your non-compete scope, geography, duration, and carve-outs; R&W insurance cost and value on your deal; and the closing checklist.

What questions should I ask myself before selling my business?

Why am I really selling, what would I do the day after closing, what is the after-tax net I need to be free of this business, what am I emotionally attached to that buyers don’t value, who depends on me that I haven’t prepared to replace, what customer/vendor/employee relationships run through me, what would my financials look like under a microscope, what known issues have I been postponing that diligence will find, and what is my downside if the sale falls through, can I live with it?

How do I evaluate a sell-side advisor?

Ask about their fee structure and who pays (seller-paid vs buyer-paid); their tail provision; their realistic indicative valuation and what drives it; their active buyer relationships in your sector; their process (public listing vs off-market sequential); their references from recent sellers; their conflicts of interest; who specifically will run your deal; and what happens if you want to terminate. Then judge whether the realistic valuation, buyer access, and process fit your specific situation, the right advisor for one business is the wrong advisor for another.

What is the most important question to ask before selling?

Two are tied: ‘What is my after-tax net under this structure?’ (because the headline price isn’t your take-home, and the answer changes everything) and ‘What would I actually do the day after closing?’ (because owners who haven’t answered this honestly often torpedo their own deals in the final stretch). Everything else, buyers, advisors, attorneys, is downstream of those two answers.

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