Leveraged Buyout of a Small Business in 2026: How an LBO Actually Works at Small Scale
Quick Answer
A leveraged buyout (LBO) is an acquisition funded mostly with borrowed money, the acquired business’s own assets and cash flow secure and repay the debt, so the buyer puts in relatively little equity. For a small business, an LBO usually looks like: a senior acquisition loan (an SBA 7(a) loan for deals under about $5 million, or a conventional bank loan) for 60-90% of the price, plus a seller note for 10-25%, plus a modest buyer equity injection (~10-25%). The math that makes it work: the business throws off enough free cash flow to service the debt with cushion (a debt-service-coverage ratio comfortably above 1.0x, often 1.25x+), and as the debt amortizes, the buyer’s equity stake grows even if the business value stays flat. The returns come from three levers, debt paydown (the equity slice grows as the loan shrinks), EBITDA growth (a more valuable business), and multiple expansion (selling at a higher multiple than you bought at). The risk: too much leverage on a business with thin or volatile cash flow, a normal downturn can leave you unable to cover debt service, so the discipline is the DSCR, not the maximum leverage you can technically get.

A leveraged buyout at small scale is the same idea private equity uses on big deals, buy a business mostly with debt the business itself repays, just executed with an SBA loan and a seller note instead of syndicated bank debt and mezzanine. It’s how most search-fund, ETA, and individual-buyer acquisitions actually work, even if nobody calls it an ‘LBO.’ This page covers the structure, the math, the returns, and where it goes wrong.
We are CT Acquisitions, a buy-side M&A advisory firm, we source and screen acquisition targets for buyers running exactly these structures. This is general orientation, not lending or legal advice; work with an SBA-preferred lender and a transactional M&A attorney. For the financing details, see business acquisition loan, SBA 7(a) loan to buy a business, and how to buy a business with little or no money down; for the math, acquisition loan calculator. If you’re an owner whose buyer is doing a leveraged deal, our free valuation tool is the place to start.
What this guide covers
- An LBO = an acquisition funded mostly with debt the acquired business itself secures and repays, so the buyer puts in relatively little equity
- Small-business LBO structure: senior acquisition loan (SBA 7(a) or conventional) for 60-90% + seller note for 10-25% + buyer equity ~10-25%
- The math: the business covers debt service with cushion (DSCR comfortably above 1.0x, often 1.25x+), and the equity slice grows as the debt amortizes
- The returns, three levers: debt paydown (equity grows as the loan shrinks), EBITDA growth, multiple expansion
- The risk: too much leverage on thin or volatile cash flow, a normal downturn can break the cushion
- The discipline: structure to the DSCR, not the maximum leverage you can technically obtain
What a leveraged buyout actually is
An LBO is an acquisition where most of the purchase price comes from borrowed money, and the borrowed money is secured by, and repaid out of, the acquired business’s own assets and cash flow. The buyer (the ‘sponsor’ in PE terms, the searcher or holdco in small-business terms) contributes a relatively small slice of equity. The leverage amplifies returns: if you buy a $1M business with $200K of your equity and $800K of debt, and the business is later worth $1.5M after the debt is paid down, your equity has gone from $200K to $1.5M, a 7.5x return on a 50% increase in business value. The same leverage amplifies losses: if the business value drops to $800K, your equity is wiped out. That trade-off, amplified upside, amplified downside, is the essence of an LBO at any scale.
The small-business LBO structure
| Layer | Typical % of purchase price | What it is |
|---|---|---|
| Senior acquisition loan | 60-90% | An SBA 7(a) loan (deals under ~$5M) or a conventional bank acquisition loan; secured by the business assets and a personal guaranty; first claim on the business’s cash flow |
| Seller note (subordinated) | 10-25% | A promissory note from the seller; subordinated to the senior loan; sometimes on full standby for an SBA-required period; secured by the business assets or stock behind the senior lien |
| Buyer equity | ~10-25% | The buyer’s (searcher’s, holdco’s, or PE sponsor’s) cash into the deal; in SBA deals as little as ~10%, part of which can be a standby seller note |
| Seller rollover equity (sometimes) | varies | The seller keeps a minority stake instead of cashing out fully; reduces the cash and debt needed; common in PE-backed deals, less so in pure SBA deals |
| Mezzanine / junior debt (larger deals) | varies | For deals above SBA limits ($3M+ EBITDA); fills the gap between senior debt and equity; higher rate, often with warrants or a PIK component |
A typical small-business LBO might be 80% SBA 7(a) loan + 10% standby seller note + 10% buyer equity, that’s a leveraged buyout, even though the buyer is an individual or a small holdco rather than a PE firm.
The math that makes it work (and the math that breaks it)
What makes it work:
- The DSCR is comfortable. The business’s free cash flow, after a reasonable owner salary and a maintenance-capex reserve, covers all the layered debt service with cushion (a debt-service-coverage ratio comfortably above 1.0x, often 1.25x+). This is the test of whether the leverage is sustainable.
- Debt amortizes, equity grows. Every payment reduces the loan balance. Even if the business value stays flat, the buyer’s equity (business value minus net debt) grows as net debt shrinks, this is the ‘debt paydown’ return lever, and at small scale it’s often the biggest one.
- EBITDA can grow. If the buyer improves the business, more revenue, better margins, add-on acquisitions, the business becomes more valuable, amplifying the equity return.
- The multiple can expand. If the buyer scales the business enough that it sells at a higher multiple than it was bought at (because larger businesses command higher multiples), that’s pure ‘multiple expansion’ return.
What breaks it:
- Too much leverage on thin cash flow. If the DSCR is barely above 1.0x, a normal business hiccup, a lost customer, a soft quarter, a rate increase on the variable SBA loan, can push the business below break-even on debt service, and then you can’t make payroll.
- An over-priced deal. Paying a multiple well above sector norms means more debt for the same business, more debt service, a thinner DSCR, and more downside if anything goes wrong.
- Volatile or cyclical cash flow. A business with big seasonal swings or cyclical demand is dangerous to leverage heavily, the debt service is constant but the cash flow isn’t.
- Owner-dependency you can’t replace. If the business needs the departing owner and the new owner can’t fill the gap, the cash flow erodes, and the leverage that amplified the upside now amplifies the decline.
- A variable-rate environment moving against you. SBA 7(a) loans are usually variable; if rates rise meaningfully after closing, your debt service rises, and a deal that penciled at 1.25x DSCR might drop below 1.1x.
A worked example
Target: a service business with $250,000 of normalized SDE, priced at $850,000 (3.4x SDE).
- Structure: $675,000 SBA 7(a) loan (~80%) + $75,000 standby seller note (~9%) + $100,000 buyer equity (~12%).
- Year 1: SBA loan debt service ~$111,000/year (10-year amortization at ~11%); seller note on standby, $0. Cash flow available for debt service: $250,000 SDE − $90,000 owner salary − $15,000 capex reserve − $5,000 working-capital reserve ≈ $140,000. DSCR ≈ 1.26x. Financeable with reasonable cushion.
- Years 1-5: the buyer grows SDE modestly to $320,000 and pays down ~$300,000 of SBA principal. Net debt drops from ~$750,000 to ~$450,000.
- Year 5 exit: the business now sells at ~3.8x SDE (a bit better, modestly larger and more diversified) = ~$1.2M enterprise value. Equity value = $1.2M − $450,000 net debt ≈ $750,000.
- Return: $100,000 of equity in, ~$750,000 out (plus whatever distributions were taken along the way) ≈ a ~7.5x equity return over 5 years, from debt paydown (~$300K), EBITDA growth (~$70K of SDE × the multiple), and modest multiple expansion. That’s the LBO math at small scale.
Now run the downside: SDE drops to $200,000 in year 2 (a key customer leaves). Cash flow available for debt service ≈ $90,000, below the ~$111,000 debt service. Now you’re funding the shortfall out of reserves or pocket, and if it persists, the deal is in trouble. Same structure, different outcome, which is why the DSCR cushion, not the maximum leverage, is the thing to optimize.
How to do a small-business LBO without blowing it up
- Structure to a comfortable DSCR, not the maximum leverage. A DSCR of ~1.25x+ after a reasonable owner salary gives cushion; a DSCR barely above 1.0x is a fragile deal regardless of how much you can technically borrow.
- Don’t overpay. An over-market price means more debt, more debt service, a thinner DSCR, and more downside. Re-trade the price; see our note on determining a fair acquisition price.
- Avoid heavily leveraging volatile or cyclical cash flow. The debt service is constant; if the cash flow isn’t, the leverage is dangerous.
- Make sure you can run the business. Owner-dependency you can’t replace turns the leverage from an amplifier of upside into an amplifier of decline.
- Use a standby seller note to reduce near-term cash strain and (in SBA deals) satisfy part of the equity injection.
- Stress-test the DSCR. Revenue down 10-20%, rate up 1-2 points, key customer lost, if the deal goes underwater under a realistic stress, it’s too leveraged.
- Keep a working-capital reserve. Don’t put every dollar of equity into the purchase; keep a cushion for operating needs and surprises.
- Use a transactional M&A attorney and an SBA-preferred lender, the senior loan, the seller note, the standby agreement, and the purchase agreement all have to fit together.
For finding deals, see how to find businesses for sale and how to source acquisition deals; for the searcher’s path, entrepreneurship through acquisition; for what PE does at larger scale, private equity value creation. If you’re an owner being offered a leveraged deal, our free valuation tool tells you whether the price is reasonable.
Related: business acquisition loan, acquisition loan rates, acquisition loan calculator, SBA 7(a) loan to buy a business, leveraged buyout for a small business, how to finance a small business acquisition, how to buy a business with little or no money down, how to determine a fair acquisition price.
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What is a leveraged buyout of a small business?
An acquisition funded mostly with borrowed money, the acquired business’s own assets and cash flow secure and repay the debt, so the buyer puts in relatively little equity. At small scale it usually looks like a senior acquisition loan (an SBA 7(a) loan for deals under ~$5M, or a conventional bank loan) for 60-90% of the price, plus a seller note for 10-25%, plus a modest buyer equity injection (~10-25%). It’s how most search-fund, ETA, and individual-buyer acquisitions work, even if nobody calls it an ‘LBO.’ The leverage amplifies returns on the upside and losses on the downside; the discipline is keeping the debt-service-coverage ratio comfortable.
How does an LBO make money at small scale?
Three levers. (1) Debt paydown: every loan payment reduces the balance, so the buyer’s equity (business value minus net debt) grows even if the business value stays flat, at small scale this is often the biggest return driver. (2) EBITDA growth: if the buyer improves the business (more revenue, better margins, add-on acquisitions), it becomes more valuable. (3) Multiple expansion: if the buyer scales the business enough that it sells at a higher multiple than it was bought at (larger businesses command higher multiples), that’s pure multiple-expansion return. A well-executed small-business LBO can produce a 5-10x equity return over a 5-7 year hold, mostly from debt paydown plus modest growth.
How much equity do I need for a small-business leveraged buyout?
Roughly 10-25% of the purchase price, depending on the financing. With an SBA 7(a) acquisition loan, as little as ~10% (and part of that can be a seller note on full standby rather than your own cash). With a conventional bank loan, ~20-30%+. The rest comes from the senior loan (60-90%) and a seller note (10-25%). The real constraint isn’t the equity percentage, it’s the debt-service-coverage ratio: the business’s cash flow has to cover all the layered debt with cushion after a reasonable owner salary, or the leverage isn’t sustainable regardless of how little equity you put in.
Is a leveraged buyout risky for a small business?
It can be, the leverage that amplifies the upside also amplifies the downside. The danger is too much leverage on a business with thin or volatile cash flow: the debt service is constant, but if the cash flow drops (a lost customer, a soft quarter, a rate increase on a variable SBA loan), the business can fall below break-even on debt service, and then the owner is funding the shortfall out of pocket or facing default. The discipline is structuring to a comfortable debt-service-coverage ratio (~1.25x+ after a reasonable owner salary), not the maximum leverage you can technically obtain, and avoiding heavily leveraging cyclical or owner-dependent businesses.
What’s the difference between an LBO and a regular business acquisition loan?
There isn’t really a difference, an LBO is a business acquisition funded mostly with debt, and a business acquisition loan is the debt that funds it. ‘LBO’ is the term private equity uses for the structure; ‘business acquisition loan’ is what an SBA lender or a commercial banker calls the financing. A small-business buyer using an SBA 7(a) loan plus a seller note plus a modest equity injection is doing a leveraged buyout, whether or not they use the term. The mechanics, the math, and the risks are the same; only the scale and the vocabulary differ.
Can you do a leveraged buyout with an SBA loan?
Yes, that’s the standard structure for a small-business LBO. An SBA 7(a) loan finances up to ~90% of the project cost (for deals broadly under ~$5M), with the buyer providing ~10% equity (part of which can be a seller note on full standby), making it a highly leveraged acquisition by definition. The SBA’s lower down payment and longer amortization (10 years for a business-only acquisition) make the leverage more sustainable than a conventional structure would. The same discipline applies: structure to a comfortable debt-service-coverage ratio, don’t overpay, and don’t heavily leverage volatile or owner-dependent cash flow.
How do I avoid blowing up a small-business LBO?
Structure to a comfortable debt-service-coverage ratio (~1.25x+ after a reasonable owner salary), not the maximum leverage you can get; don’t overpay (an over-market price means more debt and a thinner cushion, re-trade the price); avoid heavily leveraging volatile or cyclical cash flow (the debt service is constant; the cash flow isn’t); make sure you can actually run the business (owner-dependency you can’t replace turns leverage from an amplifier of upside into an amplifier of decline); use a standby seller note to reduce near-term cash strain; stress-test the DSCR under a downturn scenario; keep a working-capital reserve; and use a transactional M&A attorney and an SBA-preferred lender to make all the pieces fit.
What returns can I expect from a small-business leveraged buyout?
A well-executed small-business LBO can produce roughly a 5-10x equity return over a 5-7 year hold, though that’s a target, not a guarantee, and many deals do worse (or fail). The return comes mostly from debt paydown (the equity slice grows as the loan amortizes, often the biggest driver at small scale), plus modest EBITDA growth, plus some multiple expansion if the buyer scales the business. The downside: a poorly structured or over-priced deal, or a business whose cash flow drops, can wipe out the equity entirely, leverage cuts both ways. The returns depend on buying well, structuring conservatively, running the business competently, and exiting at the right time.
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