What Is a Stock Sale? The 2026 Guide to Stock Sale Tax, Liability, and When to Use One

Christoph Totter · Managing Partner, CT Acquisitions

20+ home services M&A transactions across HVAC, plumbing, pest control, roofing · Updated May 19, 2026

A stock sale is one of the two primary structures for selling a business, alongside the asset sale. In a stock sale, the buyer purchases the seller’s stock (or LLC membership interests) directly from the shareholders, becoming the new owner of the target entity. The target continues to exist — same EIN, same operational identity, same contracts, same employees, and same liabilities — just with a new owner. The seller receives cash (and sometimes buyer stock or seller financing) in exchange.

Stock sales are the seller-preferred structure but the buyer-resistant structure, which creates ongoing negotiation in nearly every deal. Sellers want stock sales because of single-level long-term capital gains taxation and simpler exit. Buyers resist stock sales because they inherit all of the target’s liabilities — known and unknown. Understanding when a buyer will accept a stock sale, when to push for one, and when to consider the §338(h)(10) election hybrid can change net seller proceeds by 15-25% on a typical deal.

Stock sale transaction representation: ornate stock certificate being passed from seller's hand to buyer's hand at executive boardroom table, single transaction symbolizing entire entity transfer
In a stock sale, the buyer purchases all of the target’s stock and becomes the new owner of the entire entity — including all assets, contracts, employees, AND liabilities. Single-level LTCG taxation makes it the seller-friendly structure when buyers accept it.

“Stock sale or asset sale — most founders never realize this choice can move 15-25% of their net proceeds. The decision happens at LOI, not at definitive agreement. Get it right early and the rest of the deal flows accordingly.”

TL;DR — the 90-second brief

  • A stock sale is a business sale structure where the buyer purchases the seller’s stock (or LLC membership interests) and becomes the new owner of the entire entity. The target company continues to exist unchanged — same EIN, same contracts, same employees, same liabilities — just with new ownership.
  • Stock sales are seller-friendly: single-level long-term capital gains taxation (23.8% federal) instead of the double taxation of asset sales for C corps. For a $5M sale with $4M gain, a stock sale saves a C corp seller $800K+ in federal tax compared to an asset sale.
  • Stock sales are buyer-unfriendly: the buyer inherits ALL liabilities of the target entity, known and unknown. This is why buyers often prefer asset sales — they can cherry-pick assets and leave behind unknown lawsuits, tax issues, and employment claims.
  • The §338(h)(10) election is a hybrid: legally a stock sale, tax-treated as an asset sale. Used in C corp acquisitions when the buyer wants asset-purchase tax treatment (step-up in basis) but the operational simplicity of a stock sale.
  • CT Acquisitions works with 76+ active buyers and has structured both stock sales and asset sales on dozens of LMM deals. The buyer pays our fee at close — the seller pays nothing. We help founders negotiate the structure that produces the highest net cash.

Key Takeaways

  • In a stock sale, the buyer purchases the target’s stock; the entity continues to exist with new ownership.
  • Stock sales produce single-level LTCG taxation for sellers (20% + 3.8% NIIT = 23.8% federal); much better than asset sales for C corp sellers.
  • Buyers inherit ALL liabilities of the target — known and unknown — which is why many buyers resist stock sales.
  • Contracts and employees typically transfer automatically in stock sales (no third-party consents needed) because the entity remains the same.
  • The §338(h)(10) election lets buyer and seller jointly treat a stock sale as an asset sale for tax purposes — preserving the operational simplicity of a stock sale while giving the buyer step-up basis treatment.
  • Rep & warranty insurance ($25K-$150K premium) can bridge the buyer’s liability concerns and unlock stock-sale structures on deals where buyers would otherwise resist.
  • For S corps that have always been S corps, the tax difference between stock and asset sales is smaller (~5-15%) than for C corps (~20-25%) but stock sales still typically win on net seller proceeds.
Asset Sale vs Stock Sale: Who Wins, Who Loses Asset Sale vs Stock Sale: The Tax Trade-Off Asset Sale Buyer purchases the assets, not the entity Buyer wins Step-up basis, depreciate No legacy liabilities Seller pays more tax Ordinary income on equipment Depreciation recapture Seller after-tax ($5M deal): ~$3.40M After ~32% blended federal + state When it happens: • Most small-business deals (LLC, S-corp) • Buyer wants to avoid hidden liabilities • Default in 70%+ of sub-$10M sales Seller leverage to push for stock sale: weak Stock Sale Buyer purchases the entity itself (shares) Seller wins Long-term capital gains only QSBS may apply (Sec 1202) Buyer takes risk No step-up basis Inherits all liabilities Seller after-tax ($5M deal): ~$3.95M After ~21% blended LTCG + state When it happens: • C-corp targets (most strategic acquisitions) • License/permit transfer matters • ~25% of sub-$10M deals Seller leverage in C-corp: ask for purchase price gross-up ~$550K after-tax difference on the same $5M deal — structure decision matters as much as price
Illustrative tax outcomes. Actual rates depend on entity type, state, holding period, QSBS qualification, and asset mix. Always model with your CPA before signing.

A stock sale is a transaction in which the buyer purchases all of the seller’s stock (or LLC membership interests) and becomes the new owner of the target entity. The target company continues to exist with the same legal identity — same EIN, same state of incorporation, same operating agreement (modified for new ownership), same name, same physical assets, same contracts, same employees, same insurance policies. From a legal and operational standpoint, the only thing that changes is who owns the equity.

The seller’s receipt in a stock sale is typically cash, sometimes buyer stock, and sometimes a seller-financed promissory note. The cash component is taxed immediately at the seller’s long-term capital gains rate (assuming the stock was held over 12 months, which is virtually always the case for founder-owned businesses). The buyer-stock component, if any, is potentially eligible for tax-free reorganization treatment under IRC §368 if structured correctly. The seller-note component is governed by installment-sale rules under IRC §453.

Stock sale vs asset sale: the side-by-side

Stock sales and asset sales are the two primary structures for private business sales. The choice affects everything: tax outcomes, liability allocation, contract transfers, employee treatment, and operational complexity. Below is the canonical comparison.

Dimension Stock Sale Asset Sale
What’s purchased Stock / LLC interests Specific assets + assumed liabilities
Entity continuity Target persists, new owner Target winds down post-close
Seller tax (C corp) Single LTCG 23.8% Double tax (entity 21% + LTCG 23.8% = 39.8%)
Seller tax (S corp) LTCG 23.8% on gain LTCG + recapture (ordinary income on §1245 PP&E)
Buyer tax shield No step-up in basis Step-up basis, 15-yr §197 amortization
Contract transfer Automatic (mostly) Requires third-party consents
Liability assumption All inherited Buyer chooses which to assume
Employee transition Automatic continuity Terminate + rehire
Common in LMM 20-30% of deals 70-80% of deals
Typical buyer preference Resist Prefer
Typical seller preference Prefer Resist
Component Typical share of price When you actually receive it Risk to seller
Cash at close 60–80% Wire on closing day Low — this is real money
Earnout 10–20% Over 18–24 months, performance-based High — routinely paid out at less than face value
Rollover equity 0–25% At the next platform sale (typically 4–6 years) Variable — can multiply or go to zero
Indemnity escrow 5–12% 12–24 months after close (if no claims) Medium — usually returned, sometimes contested
Working capital peg +/- 2–7% of price Adjustment at close or 30-90 days post High — methodology disputes are common
The headline LOI number is rarely what hits your bank account. Cash-at-close is the only line that lands the day of close; everything else carries timing or performance risk.

Stock sale tax treatment: the single-level LTCG advantage

The biggest seller advantage of a stock sale is tax: single-level long-term capital gains taxation instead of the double taxation that hits C corp asset sales. In a stock sale, the seller’s gain on their stock is taxed at LTCG rates: 20% federal + 3.8% Net Investment Income Tax = 23.8% federal. State tax adds another 0-13% depending on the seller’s state. There is no entity-level tax in a stock sale because the entity itself isn’t selling anything — it just has new owners.

C corp stock sale: why the math is so favorable

For C corp sellers, the difference between stock sale and asset sale is dramatic. C corp asset sale: entity pays 21% on the gain (federal corporate rate), then shareholders pay 23.8% LTCG on the distributed proceeds. Combined effective federal rate: 39.8%. C corp stock sale: shareholders pay 23.8% LTCG, full stop. Combined effective federal rate: 23.8%. On a $5M sale with $4M gain, that’s a $640K+ federal tax savings — before state tax effects, which can add another $100K-$300K savings depending on state.

S corp stock sale: smaller but still meaningful advantage

S corps don’t have entity-level tax, so the structural tax difference between stock and asset sales is smaller. Always-S corps: stock sale produces LTCG 23.8% on the gain. Asset sale also produces LTCG 23.8% on goodwill — BUT depreciation recapture on equipment is taxed as ordinary income (up to 37%). On a service business with $200K of recapture exposure, that’s ~$25K-$50K more tax in an asset sale than a stock sale. For S corps recently converted from C corp status (within the 5-year BIG window), asset sales also trigger Built-in Gains tax under IRC §1374, dramatically increasing the asset-sale tax disadvantage.

QSBS exclusion: when stock sales become almost tax-free

Qualified Small Business Stock (QSBS) under IRC §1202 can make a stock sale almost completely federal-tax-free for the seller. QSBS rules: stock must be in a C corp with gross assets under $50M at time of issuance, must be held 5+ years, and must be in an active business. Exclusion: up to $10M or 10x basis (whichever is greater) of gain is excluded from federal tax. For founders whose C corp qualifies, a $10M stock sale can have $0 federal tax. This single provision is why QSBS planning is essential for high-growth founders. Asset sales do NOT qualify for QSBS — the exclusion only works on stock sales.

Negotiating stock vs asset sale on your business?

CT Acquisitions works with 76+ active buyers and has structured both stock and asset sales on dozens of LMM deals. We’ll walk through the tax math for your specific structure, coordinate with your CPA and tax counsel, and negotiate the optimal structure into the LOI. The buyer pays our fee at close — the seller pays nothing.

Book a 30-Min Call

Liability inheritance: why buyers resist stock sales

In a stock sale, the buyer inherits 100% of the target entity’s liabilities — every contract, every lawsuit, every unpaid tax, every employment claim, every environmental issue. This is the central buyer concern. A target may look clean in due diligence, but liability exposures can hide: unfiled tax positions, latent product liability, undisclosed litigation threats, employment misclassification claims, environmental contamination from decades ago. In an asset sale, the buyer can leave these behind. In a stock sale, the buyer takes them on.

  • Known liabilities: the financial statements show payable balances, debt, lease obligations, etc. These are quantifiable and priced into the deal.
  • Disclosed contingent liabilities: pending lawsuits, regulatory inquiries, customer disputes. Quantified during diligence, addressed via reps and warranties, indemnification, and escrow.
  • Unknown contingent liabilities: product liability claims that haven’t emerged yet, tax positions IRS hasn’t challenged, environmental contamination not yet discovered, employment claims not yet filed. These are the buyer’s big stock-sale worry.
  • Successor liability via specific statutes: environmental (CERCLA), product liability (in some states), certain employment laws transfer regardless of structure. Both stock and asset buyers face these.
  • Pre-close working capital adjustments: handled the same in stock and asset sales — buyer typically gets a target working-capital level that’s settled within 60-90 days post-close.

When buyers accept stock sales

Despite buyer resistance, stock sales happen in 20-30% of LMM deals. Below are the five scenarios where buyers consistently accept stock-sale structures.

  1. Heavy change-of-control contract exposure. When the target has 10+ critical contracts (customer agreements, software licenses, supplier agreements, real estate leases, franchise agreements) with change-of-control clauses, asset-sale consent collection can take 6+ months. Stock sales preserve continuity — many contracts don’t trigger change-of-control on stock transfer.
  2. Software and IP-heavy businesses. Software licenses, patents, trademarks, and similar IP often have restrictive change-of-control clauses. Stock sales preserve these without renegotiation.
  3. Regulated industries. Licensed businesses (healthcare, government contracting, financial services, certain transportation) often have license-transferability constraints. Stock sales preserve the license; asset sales typically require re-licensing.
  4. Strong R&W insurance. Rep & warranty insurance ($25K-$150K premium, covers up to 10% of EV) protects the buyer against unknown liabilities. With R&W insurance, buyers are more willing to accept stock-sale liability risk.
  5. §338(h)(10) election available. For C corp targets, the §338(h)(10) election lets the buyer get asset-sale tax treatment (basis step-up + 15-yr amortization) on a legally stock-purchase transaction. This is often the deal that gets done when buyer wants asset-sale tax and seller wants stock-sale simplicity.
Buyer type Cash at close Rollover equity Exclusivity Best fit for
Strategic acquirer High (40–60%+) Low (0–10%) 60–90 days Sellers who want a clean exit; competitor or upstream consolidator
PE platform Medium (60–80%) Medium (15–25%) 60–120 days Sellers willing to hold rollover for the second sale; bigger deals
PE add-on Higher (70–85%) Low–Medium (10–20%) 45–90 days Sellers folding into existing platform; faster process
Search fund / ETA Medium (50–70%) High (20–40%) 90–180 days Legacy-conscious sellers wanting an owner-operator successor
Independent sponsor Medium (55–75%) Medium (15–30%) 60–120 days Sellers OK with deal-by-deal capital and longer financing closes
Different buyer types structure LOIs differently because their economics differ. A search fund’s earnout-heavy 50% cash deal looks worse than a strategic’s 60% cash deal—but the search fund’s rollover often pays back at multiples in 5-7 years.

The §338(h)(10) election: the hybrid structure

The §338(h)(10) election is a tax election available in certain stock-sale transactions involving C corp targets. It allows the buyer and seller to jointly treat what is legally a stock purchase as if it were an asset purchase for federal tax purposes. The buyer gets the tax benefit of an asset purchase (step-up in basis, 15-year §197 amortization on goodwill); the seller pays asset-sale level tax. The transaction is structurally a stock sale (entity persists, contracts transfer, employees stay), giving both sides the structural benefits of a stock sale while resolving the buyer-side tax disadvantage.

Eligibility: the target must be a C corp (S corps and partnerships can’t do §338(h)(10), though S corps have analogous mechanisms). The buyer must be a C corp. Stock must be acquired in a 12-month period totaling at least 80% of the target. The buyer must hold the stock at the deemed asset sale moment. Election is made jointly by buyer and seller on Form 8023, filed by the 15th day of the 9th month after closing. Late or improper elections can’t generally be fixed.

Rep & warranty insurance: how it unlocks stock sales

Rep & warranty (R&W) insurance is a specialized M&A insurance product that covers the buyer against breaches of the seller’s representations and warranties. Coverage typically ranges from 10-20% of enterprise value (the ‘policy limit’). Premium is 2.5-4% of policy limit ($25K-$150K typical for LMM deals). The policy steps in if a representation turns out to be inaccurate post-close — e.g., undisclosed lawsuit, mis-stated financials, hidden tax liability. R&W insurance dramatically reduces the seller’s indemnification exposure and is increasingly common in $5M+ EBITDA deals.

Why R&W insurance unlocks stock sales: it transfers unknown-liability risk from the buyer to the insurer. Without R&W: the buyer worries about unknown liabilities and demands an asset sale. With R&W: the insurer covers unknown breaches, so the buyer is willing to accept the stock-sale structure. Premium is typically split between buyer and seller (50/50) or paid by the seller alone. The economic burden is small relative to the tax savings from getting a stock sale structure done. R&W is now standard on $5M+ EBITDA deals and increasingly common down to $2M EBITDA.

How to negotiate for a stock sale structure

Sellers who want a stock sale need to negotiate for it at LOI, not later. By the time you’re in definitive agreement, the structure is locked. Below are the six negotiating moves that consistently get stock-sale structures done.

  1. Open with a stock sale proposal in the teaser/CIM. Don’t wait for the buyer to propose asset sale. Set the expectation early.
  2. Offer R&W insurance as part of the package. Propose to split the premium 50/50 or pay 100% of it as a seller concession. The total cost ($25-150K) is small relative to the tax savings.
  3. Highlight contract continuity advantages. If the target has 10+ contracts with change-of-control clauses, frame stock sale as the buyer-favorable option (avoids consent collection delays).
  4. Offer §338(h)(10) election for C corp targets. The election gives the buyer asset-sale tax treatment on a stock-sale transaction. Often the deal that gets done.
  5. Be willing to accept stronger reps and warranties + longer survival periods. Standard stock-sale reps survive 12-24 months for general reps and 6+ years for tax/fundamental reps. Long survival is the buyer’s comfort layer.
  6. Accept a higher escrow. Stock-sale buyers often want 10-15% of purchase price in escrow for 18-24 months. Sellers willing to agree to this typically get the stock-sale structure.

Numerical example: stock sale vs asset sale on a $5M deal

Below is the apples-to-apples comparison for a C corp seller on a $5M sale. Same headline price, very different net cash to the founder.

Component Stock Sale Asset Sale §338(h)(10) Hybrid
Sale price $5,000,000 $5,000,000 $5,000,000
Adjusted basis $1,000,000 $1,000,000 $1,000,000
Gain $4,000,000 $4,000,000 $4,000,000
Entity tax (21% C corp) $0 ($840,000) ($840,000)
Individual LTCG (23.8%) ($952,000) ($752,080)* ($752,080)*
R&W insurance premium ($75,000) $0 ($75,000)
Total federal tax ($1,027,000) ($1,592,080) ($1,667,080)
Net to seller $3,973,000 $3,407,920 $3,332,920
Advantage vs asset sale +$565,000 −$75,000

Why §338(h)(10) is worse for the seller than pure stock

The §338(h)(10) election produces the SAME tax outcome as an asset sale for the seller (entity-level + individual-level tax), so it’s tax-worse than a pure stock sale. Why offer it? Because it can unlock buyer acceptance when pure stock sale would be rejected. The buyer gets asset-sale tax treatment (step-up basis, amortization shield); the seller gives up the pure stock-sale tax benefit but at least gets a closed deal. Often the negotiated middle ground for C corp targets where the buyer would walk on pure stock-sale terms. In the table above, §338(h)(10) is $565K worse for the seller than pure stock sale; if pure stock was unattainable, §338(h)(10) is still $75K worse than asset sale due to the R&W premium, but operationally simpler.

Common mistakes in stock sale negotiations

Five mistakes consistently cost sellers the stock-sale structure they could have gotten. Each is avoidable with the right preparation and negotiating posture.

  • Letting the buyer set the LOI structure unopposed. Most buyer LOIs default to asset sale. If you don’t push back with a stock-sale counter, you’re locked in.
  • Not offering R&W insurance. Most stock-sale resistance evaporates when R&W insurance is on the table. Sellers who don’t propose it leave a structural option on the floor.
  • Failing to clean up known liabilities pre-sale. Outstanding lawsuits, unfiled tax positions, employment claims — clean these up 12-18 months before sale and you remove buyer objections to stock-sale structure.
  • Hidden related-party transactions. Loans to/from owner, related-party real estate leases, family-member compensation above market — these surface in diligence and undermine seller credibility, making stock-sale acceptance harder.
  • No tax modeling before LOI. Sellers who don’t model net-proceeds under different structures don’t know what they’re giving up by accepting an asset sale. Run the math first.

Conclusion

A stock sale is the seller-friendly structure for most lower-middle-market business sales — single-level LTCG taxation, simpler operational continuity, and cleaner exit. The challenge is that buyers resist stock sales because they inherit all liabilities, and most LOIs default to asset sale unless the seller actively pushes back. Sellers who negotiate well — proposing stock sale early, offering R&W insurance, highlighting contract-continuity advantages, and considering the §338(h)(10) hybrid for C corp targets — frequently get stock-sale structures done. The dollar difference is real: $500K-$800K on a typical $5M C corp sale. CT Acquisitions runs sale processes for founder-owned businesses and helps negotiate the optimal structure into the LOI. The buyer pays our fee at close — the seller pays nothing.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a stock sale in business?

A stock sale is a business sale structure where the buyer purchases the seller’s stock (or LLC membership interests) directly from the shareholders, becoming the new owner of the entire entity. The target company continues to exist unchanged — same EIN, same contracts, same employees, same liabilities — just with new ownership. Stock sales are taxed at single-level long-term capital gains rates for the seller (23.8% federal), making them more tax-favorable than asset sales for C corps.

What is the difference between a stock sale and an asset sale?

In a stock sale, the buyer purchases the target’s stock and inherits the entire entity including all liabilities. In an asset sale, the buyer purchases specific assets and explicitly assumes only listed liabilities; the seller retains all other liabilities. Tax outcomes differ significantly: stock sales produce single-level LTCG for sellers (~24%); asset sales produce double taxation for C corps (~40%) and depreciation recapture for S corps. Contract and employee transfers are automatic in stock sales; they require consent in asset sales.

Why do sellers prefer stock sales?

Three reasons: (1) Single-level LTCG taxation (23.8% federal vs ~40% for C corp asset sales), saving $500K-$800K on a typical $5M deal. (2) Simpler operational exit — entity persists, no wind-down complications. (3) Shorter rep & warranty survival periods in many cases. The trade-off: sellers may face longer indemnification tails because all liabilities transfer to the buyer, but rep & warranty insurance addresses this.

Why do buyers resist stock sales?

Buyers inherit 100% of the target’s liabilities in a stock sale — known and unknown. This means pending lawsuits, unfiled tax positions, latent product liability, undisclosed environmental issues, and employment claims all transfer to the buyer. Buyers also lose the tax shield of asset-purchase basis step-up and 15-year §197 amortization. These two factors — unknown liability risk and tax-shield loss — drive most buyer resistance to stock sales.

What is the §338(h)(10) election?

The §338(h)(10) election is a tax election available in certain stock-sale transactions involving C corp targets. It allows the buyer and seller to jointly treat what is legally a stock purchase as if it were an asset purchase for federal tax purposes. The buyer gets asset-sale tax benefits (step-up in basis, 15-yr §197 amortization); the seller pays asset-sale level tax. Operationally it’s a stock sale (entity persists, contracts transfer, employees stay), giving both sides the structural benefits without the buyer-side tax disadvantage.

How is a stock sale taxed for the seller?

Stock sales produce single-level long-term capital gains taxation for the seller: 20% federal LTCG + 3.8% Net Investment Income Tax = 23.8% federal. State tax adds 0-13% depending on state. For C corp sellers, this is dramatically better than asset sale (which incurs entity-level 21% PLUS individual 23.8% = ~40% combined). For S corp sellers, the advantage is smaller (~5-15%) because S corps don’t have entity-level tax, but stock sales still avoid depreciation recapture on equipment.

What is QSBS and how does it interact with stock sales?

Qualified Small Business Stock (QSBS) under IRC §1202 can make a stock sale almost completely federal-tax-free. Rules: stock must be in a C corp with gross assets under $50M at issuance, must be held 5+ years, and must be in an active business. Exclusion: up to $10M or 10x basis (whichever is greater) of gain excluded from federal tax. For founders whose C corp qualifies, a $10M stock sale can have $0 federal tax. QSBS only applies to stock sales — asset sales don’t qualify.

What is rep & warranty insurance and why does it matter for stock sales?

Rep & warranty (R&W) insurance covers the buyer against breaches of seller representations and warranties post-close. Premium: 2.5-4% of policy limit; policy limit typically 10-20% of EV. Cost: $25K-$150K for LMM deals. R&W insurance transfers unknown-liability risk from buyer to insurer, which often unlocks stock-sale structures buyers would otherwise reject. The premium is small relative to the tax savings from getting a stock sale done; usually well worth the investment.

When will a buyer accept a stock sale?

Five scenarios consistently produce stock-sale acceptance: (1) heavy change-of-control contract exposure where asset-sale consents would take 6+ months, (2) software/IP-heavy businesses with restrictive licenses, (3) regulated industries with non-transferable licenses, (4) R&W insurance in place to cover unknown liabilities, (5) §338(h)(10) election available for C corp targets. Sellers who proactively address these factors typically get stock-sale structures done.

Are stock sales common in LMM M&A?

Stock sales account for approximately 20-30% of lower-middle-market deals; asset sales account for 70-80%. The asset-sale dominance reflects buyer preference for limited liability exposure and tax-shield benefits. Stock sales become more common above $10M EBITDA where R&W insurance is standard and contract-continuity matters more. For C corp targets with QSBS-eligible stock, stock sales are strongly preferred by sellers and increasingly common.

Can I do a stock sale if I’m an LLC?

Yes — LLC membership interest sales are functionally equivalent to stock sales (transfer of equity ownership). Tax treatment depends on how the LLC is taxed: single-member LLCs are disregarded entities and taxed like asset sales; multi-member LLCs taxed as partnerships have specific partnership-sale rules; LLCs that elected C corp taxation are treated like stock sales. Consult your tax counsel for the specific treatment of your LLC.

Why work with CT Acquisitions on stock-vs-asset structure negotiation?

CT Acquisitions runs sale processes for founder-owned businesses and has structured both stock and asset sales on dozens of LMM deals. We model the net-proceeds difference between structures for your specific situation, coordinate with your CPA and tax counsel, and negotiate the optimal structure into the LOI. We work with 76+ active buyers and the buyer pays our fee at close — the seller pays nothing. No exclusivity, no contracts.

Related Guide: Asset Sale vs Stock Sale: The Difference Explained — Side-by-side tax, liability, and structural comparison

Related Guide: S Corp Asset Sale Goodwill: 2026 Playbook — Personal goodwill structuring for S corp asset sales

Related Guide: Merger vs Acquisition: 2026 Guide — Four common deal structures explained

Related Guide: Installment Sale Tax Treatment 2026 — Spreading capital gains across multiple years

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CT Acquisitions is a trade name of CT Strategic Partners LLC, headquartered in Sheridan, Wyoming.
30 N Gould St, Ste N, Sheridan, WY 82801, USA · (307) 487-7149 · Contact






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