HomeRoll-Up Acquisition Financing Guide (2026): How PE Platforms Fund Add-Ons

Roll-Up Acquisition Financing Guide (2026): How PE Platforms Fund Add-Ons

Quick Answer

Roll-up acquisition financing in 2026 relies on five primary capital sources structured to fund both the initial platform acquisition and subsequent add-on velocity over a 5-7 year hold. Platform-level capital structure: 50-65% senior debt + mezzanine (Term Loan B from banks like Antares Capital, Madison Capital, Golub Capital, Ares Capital BDC; mezz from MidCap Financial, Twin Brook, Monroe Capital, Crescent Capital) + 35-50% PE equity + 10-30% seller rollover equity + 10-25% seller financing (sub note) + 0-20% earn-out (contingent). Add-on funding sources: (1) platform’s delayed draw term loan (DDTL) or revolver capacity sized to support 3-8 add-ons; (2) incremental term loans drawn at each add-on close; (3) sponsor equity follow-on commitments; (4) seller financing at each add-on (10-25% of price typically); (5) earn-outs for performance-contingent value capture. The largest US sponsor debt providers in 2026 include Apollo Global Management, Ares Capital BDC (NASDAQ: ARCC), Antares Capital (CPPIB), Madison Capital (NewSpring), Golub Capital BDC (NASDAQ: GBDC), MidCap Financial (KKR), Twin Brook Capital Partners, Monroe Capital BDC (NASDAQ: MRCC), Crescent Capital Group BDC (NASDAQ: CCAP), and Owl Rock BDC (NASDAQ: OBDC). Add-on financing cadence: most PE platforms close 1-3 add-ons per draw cycle, sized 0.5-2x EBITDA per add-on. CT Strategic Partners runs retained mandates for PE platforms doing add-on acquisitions.

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Roll-up acquisition financing in 2026 is its own discipline within PE capital markets. The platform’s initial capital structure (debt + equity) supports the platform’s standalone operations. The add-on financing layer (delayed-draw facilities, incremental term loans, sponsor follow-on equity) supports the 3-8 add-on cadence over a 5-7 year hold.

Active acquirers building roll-up platforms must structure both layers correctly. Under-sized add-on capacity constrains deal velocity; over-leveraged platforms can’t service debt during integration ramp.

This guide covers the capital sources, structures, and sizing logic for both platform and add-on financing in 2026.

What this guide covers

  • Roll-up financing has two layers: platform capital structure + add-on funding sources.
  • Platform: 50-65% senior debt + mezz + 35-50% PE equity + 10-30% seller rollover + 10-25% seller financing + 0-20% earn-out.
  • Add-on funding: DDTL or revolver capacity, incremental term loans, sponsor equity follow-on, per-deal seller financing, earn-outs.
  • Largest US sponsor debt providers: Apollo, Ares Capital BDC (NASDAQ: ARCC), Antares (CPPIB), Madison, Golub Capital BDC (GBDC), MidCap Financial (KKR), Twin Brook, Monroe (MRCC), Crescent BDC (CCAP), Owl Rock BDC (OBDC).
  • Add-on sizing: 0.5-2x EBITDA per add-on; 3-8 add-ons per hold.
  • CT Strategic Partners runs retained mandates for PE platforms doing add-on acquisitions.
Named M&A activity Sponsor / acquirer Year Notes
Apollo direct-lending growth Apollo Global Management 2020-2026 Largest US direct lender by AUM.
Ares Capital BDC growth (ARCC) Ares Management 2020-2026 ~$22B AUM, largest publicly-traded BDC.
Antares Capital CPPIB ownership Canada Pension Plan Investment Board 2015-2026 ~$55B AUM middle-market direct lender.
Golub Capital BDC (GBDC) Golub Capital 2020-2026 ~$55B AUM.
MidCap Financial under KKR KKR 2018-2026 ~$55B AUM, KKR’s direct-lending platform.
Apex Service Partners 2024 recap Alpine Investors + Brightstar Capital Partners 2024 Alpine + Brightstar recapitalized Apex HVAC platform.
Roll-Up Platform Capital Structure (2026) % of platform purchase price by funding source 0x 5x 10x 15x 20x 25x 30x 35x 40x 45x 50x Senior debt (Term Loan B / DDTL) 35-50% Mezzanine / unitranche 5-15% Sponsor equity (PE + co-invest) 25-40% Seller rollover equity 10-30% Seller financing (sub note) 5-20% Earn-out (contingent) 0-20% x EBITDA · bars show typical transaction ranges · Platform capital structure on $50-100M initial PE deal. Mix varies by sector and PE sponsor.

The buy-side process: what actually happens

Platform-level capital structure

Add-on financing structures

Add-on sizing math

Largest US Sponsor Debt Providers (2026) Approximate AUM in $B (rescaled to $10B units) 0x 5x 10x 15x 20x 25x 30x 35x 40x 45x 50x 55x 60x 65x 70x Apollo Global Mgmt (direct lending) ~$700B AUM Ares Capital BDC (NASDAQ: ARCC) ~$22B AUM Antares Capital (CPPIB) ~$55B AUM Golub Capital BDC (NASDAQ: GBDC) ~$55B AUM Madison Capital (NewSpring) ~$22B AUM MidCap Financial (KKR) ~$55B AUM Twin Brook (Angelo Gordon) ~$17B AUM Owl Rock BDC (NASDAQ: OBDC) ~$13B AUM Monroe Capital BDC (NASDAQ: MRCC) ~$6.5B AUM Crescent Capital BDC (NASDAQ: CCAP) ~$5B AUM x EBITDA · bars show typical transaction ranges · Chart values rescaled to $10B units. Top US direct-lending and sponsor-debt providers for PE roll-up financing.

How an M&A advisor adds value (and where they don’t)

Top US sponsor debt providers (direct lending)

Common roll-up financing pitfalls

How CT Strategic Partners coordinates with financing

Dangers and traps when buying a business

1. Under-sized add-on debt capacity

Platform runs out of dry powder for add-ons by year 2 of hold. Size DDTL or revolver for full add-on cadence.

2. Tight covenants

Add-on closings blocked by debt-service coverage or leverage covenants. Negotiate covenant-lite or covenant-flex.

3. Mezzanine PIK accrual

PIK builds at 11-14% per year, eroding equity returns if hold extends.

4. Seller financing concentration

Too many concurrent seller notes create cash-flow drag at platform.

5. Earn-out disputes

Earn-out measurement triggers operational misalignment post-close.

6. Refinancing risk at exit

Need to refinance before exit if leverage isn’t matched to platform cash flow.

7. Over-leverage

6x+ total leverage constrains add-on velocity and exit flexibility.

8. Working-capital target gaps

Insufficient WC at each add-on close drains platform cash.

Our POV in 2026

Roll-up acquisition financing is one of the most-complex disciplines in PE capital markets. Getting the platform capital structure right + the add-on financing layer right is the difference between a 3x MOIC outcome and a sub-1x outcome.

The biggest pattern we see in struggling roll-ups: under-sized add-on debt capacity. Platform runs out of dry powder by year 2-3 of a planned 5-7 year hold. Size the DDTL or revolver accordingly.

For PE platforms building roll-ups in 2026, partnering with a retained buy-side advisor for add-on sourcing means the sourcing engine doesn’t get ahead of the financing capacity (or vice versa).

Preparing to acquire: 6-12 months out

  1. Size the platform capital structure: senior debt + mezz + equity + seller rollover + seller financing + earn-out.
  2. Plan add-on debt capacity: DDTL or revolver sized for 3-8 add-ons over the hold.
  3. Identify the right debt provider: Apollo, Ares, Antares, Golub, MidCap, Madison, Twin Brook, Owl Rock, Monroe, Crescent.
  4. Negotiate covenant flex / covenant-lite structures.
  5. Pre-line incremental term loan capacity.
  6. Plan sponsor equity follow-on commitments per add-on.
  7. Engage a retained buy-side advisor (CT Strategic Partners) for add-on sourcing aligned to financing capacity.
  8. Build a 100-day post-close integration plan per add-on.
  9. Set quarterly leverage / covenant compliance reviews.
  10. Plan refinancing timing relative to exit horizon.

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About the Author

Christoph Totter is the founder of CT Acquisitions, a buy-side partner headquartered in Sheridan, Wyoming. We work directly with 100+ buyers, search funders, family offices, lower middle-market PE, and strategic consolidators, including direct mandates with the largest consolidators that other intermediaries cannot access. The buyers pay us when a deal closes, not the seller. No retainer, no exclusivity, no contract until close. Connect on LinkedIn · Get in touch

Frequently asked questions

How is a roll-up platform financed?

Platform-level capital structure: 35-50% senior debt (Term Loan B from Apollo, Ares, Antares, Golub, MidCap, Madison, Twin Brook, Owl Rock, Monroe, Crescent) + 5-15% mezzanine + 25-40% sponsor equity + 10-30% seller rollover equity + 5-20% seller financing + 0-20% earn-out.

How are add-on acquisitions funded?

Add-on funding sources: (1) Delayed Draw Term Loan (DDTL) or revolver capacity sized for 3-8 add-ons; (2) incremental term loans drawn at each add-on; (3) sponsor equity follow-on commitments; (4) seller financing at each add-on (10-25%); (5) earn-outs per add-on. Add-on sizing: 0.5-2x EBITDA per add-on.

Who are the top US sponsor debt providers?

Largest US sponsor debt providers in 2026: Apollo Global Management (~$700B AUM), Ares Capital BDC (NASDAQ: ARCC, ~$22B), Antares Capital (CPPIB-owned, ~$55B), Madison Capital Funding (NewSpring, ~$22B), Golub Capital BDC (NASDAQ: GBDC, ~$55B), MidCap Financial (KKR, ~$55B), Twin Brook Capital Partners (Angelo Gordon, ~$17B), Owl Rock BDC (NASDAQ: OBDC, ~$13B), Monroe Capital BDC (NASDAQ: MRCC, ~$6.5B), Crescent Capital BDC (NASDAQ: CCAP, ~$5B).

What’s a typical add-on debt sizing?

Per-add-on debt sizing: 0.5-2x add-on EBITDA in incremental debt. Total add-on funded by debt + sponsor equity + seller financing + earn-out. Equity contribution per add-on: 30-50% of price. Platform tracks debt / EBITDA ratio against credit facility covenants at each add-on close.

What’s a Delayed Draw Term Loan (DDTL)?

DDTL is a pre-committed senior debt facility drawn at each add-on close. Typical DDTL size: 1-3x EBITDA above initial platform debt. Tenor matches Term Loan B. Allows platform to scale acquisition velocity without re-shopping lenders for each add-on.

What pricing does sponsor debt cost in 2026?

Senior debt: SOFR + 450-650 bps (current SOFR ~5.3% as of late 2025, declining to ~3.5-4% expected 2026, so all-in ~8-10%). Mezzanine: 11-14% (cash + PIK). Unitranche (combines senior + mezz): 9-12% all-in.

What’s the biggest financing risk in roll-ups?

Under-sized add-on debt capacity is the #1 financing risk. Platform runs out of dry powder for add-ons by year 2-3 of a planned 5-7 year hold. Size DDTL or revolver for full add-on cadence at structuring.

How does CT Strategic Partners coordinate with financing?

CT runs retained buy-side mandates for PE platforms doing add-on acquisitions. We coordinate add-on sourcing with platform’s debt-draw cycles, ensure deals fit leverage capacity, and coordinate QoE / legal / tax integration with debt-side diligence requirements. Negotiate buyer-favorable working-capital targets to prevent post-close cash drag.



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