Things to Think About Before Selling Your Business (2026)
Quick Answer
Before selling your business, work through five areas in roughly this order: (1) personal, why are you selling, what would you do post-sale, what after-tax net do you need; (2) financial, get on accrual accounting, document your add-backs, run a sell-side quality-of-earnings on larger deals; (3) operational, reduce owner dependency, diversify customer concentration, secure key-employee retention, document SOPs; (4) legal/tax, resolve known exposures (worker classification, sales-tax nexus, licensing), get your CPA to model after-tax net under asset vs stock structures, decide on deal structure before the LOI; (5) market, get a defensible valuation, understand which buyer pools fit, decide on the right advisory model (buyer-paid sell-side vs traditional broker). Most sellers under-prepare on personal and operational, and over-focus on price.

Selling a business well is months of preparation followed by a few weeks of negotiation, not the other way around. The owners who get the highest prices and the cleanest closes did the work before going to market, on themselves, on their financials, on their operational dependencies, on their legal and tax exposures, and on understanding which buyers actually fit. This page is the working pre-sale checklist, in the order it actually matters.
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. For specific next steps, see steps to sell a business, due diligence checklist, and questions to ask.
What this guide covers
- Personal first. Why, post-sale life, after-tax net you actually need
- Financial. Accrual books, documented add-backs, 2-3 year review, sell-side QoE on larger deals
- Operational. Reduce owner dependency, diversify customers, lock in key-employee retention, document SOPs
- Legal/tax. Resolve known exposures, model after-tax net under different structures with your CPA, decide structure before the LOI
- Market. Defensible valuation, which buyer pools fit, which advisory model (buyer-paid vs traditional broker)
- Pre-sale timeline: ideally 12-24 months of preparation produces the highest seller net
1. Personal: the questions only you can answer
- Why are you really selling? Retirement, burnout, opportunity, health, partnership issues, the answer shapes which buyers fit and how much transition you can offer.
- What would you do the day after closing? Sellers without a credible answer often torpedo their own deals in the final stretch. Have a real plan.
- What is your financial number? Not the headline price, the after-tax net you need to be free of this business and fund your next chapter. Reverse-engineer everything else from this.
- How much transition will you offer? Three months, twelve months, two years. This shapes valuation and buyer pool.
- Who else needs to be on board? Co-owners, spouse, key employees. Get alignment before going to market.
2. Financial: the cleanup that determines the price
- Get on accrual accounting if you are still cash-basis. Buyers and lenders use accrual; cash-basis books invite re-trades.
- Document your add-backs, owner above-market comp, personal expenses run through the business, one-time items. Every undocumented add-back gets struck in diligence and the price drops with it.
- Get a 2-3 year financial review by a CPA. Reviewed financials are the minimum credibility bar.
- Consider a sell-side quality-of-earnings (QoE) on larger deals. Find and fix issues before the buyer’s QoE does.
- Build the AR/AP aging, working-capital history, and customer-concentration analysis. Buyers will ask; have it ready.
- Resolve any below-market related-party transactions, owner-owned real estate, family on payroll. Normalize, document.
3. Operational: where multiple expansion lives
- Reduce owner dependency. Push relationships to your team, document SOPs, get yourself out of day-to-day sales and operations. Going from owner-dependent to owner-independent adds 0.5-1.5 turns of multiple. This is a 12-24 month project.
- Diversify customer concentration. Get your top customer below 15% of revenue. Above 25-30% often kills deals. Also: surface and disclose concentration proactively, disclosed is negotiable, discovered is a deal-killer.
- Lock in key-employee retention. Identify your 3-5 most important employees, put them on retention agreements with stay bonuses payable at sale. Buyers will ask for proof; without it, they discount or walk.
- Document the operations. SOPs, routes, customer agreements, vendor terms, employee handbooks. The buyer needs to run the business without your memory.
- Grow recurring revenue percentage. Every point you can shift from transactional to contracted/subscription increases the multiple. Usually the single largest swing factor.
4. Legal and tax: the structure that determines what you keep
- Resolve known exposures. Worker classification (1099 vs W-2), sales-tax nexus, lapsed licenses, pending disputes, IP-assignment gaps. Address 12+ months before listing.
- Corporate housekeeping. Minute books, resolutions, good-standing certificates, cap table, prior equity issuances. Diligence breaks on these.
- Run after-tax modeling with your CPA. Asset sale vs stock sale, installment-sale treatment (IRC 453), QSBS (Section 1202) eligibility, F-reorganization for rollover equity, state-tax residency. Decide structure before the LOI; re-trading later is expensive.
- Start third-party consent work early. Lease assignments, IP licenses, key customer contracts with change-of-control clauses, each can take weeks.
- Get your trust/estate structure right pre-close. Charitable remainder trusts, intentionally defective grantor trusts, GRATs, family-office structures, easier to set up before the sale than after.
- Engage a transactional M&A attorney, not a generalist. Ask about deal experience in your size range and industry.
5. Market: who buys, at what price, through which process
- Get a defensible valuation. Use a sector-adjusted estimate (our free 90-second tool) or an indicative valuation from a sell-side advisor. Walking into negotiations without a number is the most expensive mistake.
- Understand which buyer pools realistically fit. Individual operator-buyers (SBA-financed), strategic acquirers, PE-backed platforms, family offices, search funds. Different pools, different prices, different processes.
- Decide on the advisory model. Traditional broker (seller pays 8-15%) vs buyer-paid sell-side advisor (buyer pays, seller pays nothing). See our broker alternative guide.
- Decide on the process. Public listing vs off-market sequential vs known-buyer direct. Public listings broadcast the sale; off-market protects employees and customers.
- Time the market carefully but do not over-optimize. Selling at peak valuations is real, but personal readiness usually matters more than perfect timing.
The realistic timeline
- 12-24 months before listing: personal alignment, financial cleanup (accrual, add-backs, review), operational improvements (recurring revenue, customer diversification, owner-dependency reduction), legal/tax cleanup.
- 3-6 months before listing: data room assembly, key-employee retention agreements, third-party consent work, valuation, advisor engagement, after-tax modeling.
- Going to market: teaser, NDA, CIM, sequential or curated buyer process, LOI, diligence, definitive agreement, close (commonly 90-180 days for prepared off-market sales, 9-18 months for unprepared broker listings).
Related: steps to sell a business, questions to ask, due diligence checklist, best way to sell a business, broker alternative.
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What should I think about before selling my business?
Five areas in order: personal (why you’re selling, what you’d do post-sale, after-tax net needed), financial (accrual accounting, documented add-backs, 2-3 year review, possible sell-side QoE), operational (reduce owner dependency, diversify customer concentration, key-employee retention, documented SOPs, grow recurring revenue), legal/tax (resolve known exposures, model after-tax net under different structures, third-party consents), and market (defensible valuation, which buyer pools fit, which advisory model).
How long before selling should I start preparing?
Ideally 12-24 months. The highest-leverage pre-sale work, growing recurring revenue, reducing owner dependency, diversifying customer concentration, building a management team, cleaning up financials, and resolving legal/tax exposures, takes that long. Sellers who rush to market with under-prepared businesses routinely accept lower multiples or watch deals collapse in diligence. The next-best timeline is 3-6 months of focused preparation (data room, retention agreements, third-party consents, valuation, advisor engagement).
What is the most important thing to consider before selling?
After-tax net, not headline price. The number that lands in your account depends on deal structure (asset vs stock sale), tax structuring (QSBS, installment sale, 338(h)(10), state-tax residency), and contingent terms (earnout, holdback, seller note, rollover equity), not just the price on the LOI. The same headline price can produce materially different after-tax proceeds. Model this with your CPA before any LOI.
Should I tell my employees I’m selling?
Usually no, not until the deal is far along (commonly at or just after signing the definitive agreement), with a few exceptions: a very small inner circle of key employees may need to know earlier so they help carry the deal rather than walk, and they should be on confidentiality agreements with retention/stay bonuses. The broader team typically learns at signing, with a confident message about continuity. Telling everyone early causes turnover that hurts the valuation right when buyers are scrutinizing it.
How much is my business worth before I sell?
Most owner-operated businesses sell for roughly 2x-4.5x Seller’s Discretionary Earnings (SDE); larger businesses with a management team are typically 4x-8x+ EBITDA. The multiple depends most on recurring revenue percentage, customer concentration, owner dependency, growth, and margin trends. For a sector-adjusted estimate before going to market, use our free 90-second valuation tool; for tax, divorce, or dispute purposes you need a credentialed appraisal.
Do I need a sell-side advisor?
Depends on your size and complexity. Very small owner-operated businesses (under ~$300K SDE) sold to individual operator-buyers often work with a traditional broker. Lower-middle-market and larger businesses ($1M+ EBITDA) typically benefit from a sell-side advisor, especially a buyer-paid one (the buyer pays the fee at closing, seller pays nothing), because the buyer pool, strategic and PE-backed, generally pays better multiples and prefers working with advisors. Match the model to the buyer pool that fits your business.
What kills business sales after the LOI?
The recurring deal-killers: financials that don’t reconcile across the P&L, tax returns, and bank statements; undocumented add-backs that get struck and drop the price; customer-concentration surprises discovered in diligence; non-assignable key contracts; worker-classification exposure; sales-tax nexus liability; IP the company doesn’t actually own; sloppy corporate records; and owner dependency that diligence reveals. Almost every one is fixable or at least disclosable before going to market.
Can I sell my business if I’m not ready emotionally?
Often the sale closes despite the owner’s emotional unreadiness, but the price and terms suffer. Owners who haven’t truly committed to leaving often reject reasonable offers, re-trade signed LOIs, or undermine diligence by being slow and contradictory. The work isn’t optional: spend time getting honest with yourself about why you’re selling, what you’ll do next, and what you’d regret. Owners who do this work get cleaner closes at better prices.
Related research
- Free Business Valuation Tool, your business is worth in 90 seconds
- The Business Broker Alternative Guide (national pillar)
- Business Brokers by State, with a free alternative
- The Complete Guide to Selling Your Business in 2026
- What’s My Business Worth? Founder’s Valuation Guide
- Who Buys These Companies? Buyer Types Explained
- How to Sell to Private Equity, A Founder’s Walkthrough
- Owner’s Pre-Exit Checklist, 90 Days Before You List
- CT Commentary, Founder & M&A Insights