The European SME Succession Wave 2026-2030: The Data Says the Wave Is Real, but Multiples Are Falling Into It

Quick Answer
The European SME succession wave landing 2026-2030 is real, but the consensus framing is wrong on three points. (1) The most defensible window is 2025-2030 in DACH and France, 2026-2032 in Italy and Iberia, not a single pan-European 2026-2030. (2) German planned-closures now exceed planned-transfers (569k vs 545k by end-2029) for the first time in KfW’s monitoring history, which makes this a destruction-of-stock story, not just a transfer-of-stock story. (3) Multiples are compressing into the wave, not expanding with it: the Argos Index Q4 2025 printed 8.3x EV/EBITDA, the weakest level since H1 2014. This memo is the data spine: macro picture, the 2026-2030 case, European PE deployment, sector-specific consolidation, contrarian findings, and named 2024-2026 transactions, with each claim cited to a primary source with explicit confidence ratings. CT Acquisitions is a buy-side advisor.
Methodology, data sources, and confidence ratings
This article is a primary-source research memo, not a marketing piece. Every numerical claim is cited inline, gaps in the data are disclosed rather than filled with estimates, and each major claim carries an explicit confidence rating (HIGH, MEDIUM, LOW). Primary sources include the European Commission DG GROW, Eurostat business demography, KfW Research (Nachfolge-Monitoring Mittelstand 2025, January 2026), IfM Bonn, Bpifrance Le Lab (November 2025 study, 5,000+ owners surveyed), Confindustria (GenerAZIONI 2026), CFB-HSG / UBS (Unternehmensnachfolge-Kurzstudie 2026, 401 SME owners surveyed), Invest Europe (Private Equity Activity 2024), the Argos Mid-market Index, IESE International Search Fund Center (2024 observations), and the Stanford GSB Search Funds 2024 study.
Where the data does not support a precise figure, this memo says so explicitly. We have not manufactured year-by-year owner-retirement cohort curves, US-vs-European sponsor IRR comparisons, or country-specific counts for Austria, Belgium, Sweden, or Denmark beyond what the primary sources publish.
1. The macro picture
EU-27 aggregate
- ~450,000 firms transferred annually across Europe, with ~2 million employees involved. Source: European Commission DG GROW / Eurostat business-transfer policy frame, cited across multiple analyses. Confidence: MEDIUM, because the figure is in widespread analytical use but its precise primary publication vintage is older than 3 years.
- ~150,000 European businesses annually at risk of not finding a successor. Same frame. Confidence: MEDIUM.
- EU-27 SME population: 26.1 million SMEs out of 33.5 million enterprises, 164.2 million employed, €38.7 trillion net turnover. Source: European Commission, Annual Report on European SMEs 2024/2025. Confidence: HIGH.
Country breakdowns (most recent available, 2024-2026)
- Germany. 545,000 SMEs plan succession by end-2029 (~109k/yr), 569,000 plan closure (~114k/yr), the first-ever overhang of planned closures over transfers in KfW’s monitoring history. ~30% of German SMEs cannot find an internal successor (IfM Bonn). Source: KfW Research, Nachfolge-Monitoring Mittelstand 2025, Fokus Nr. 526, January 2026. Confidence: HIGH.
- France. 370,000 TPE-PME-ETI in scope for transmission by 2030, only ~130,000 likely to actually transfer at current pace, 37,300 transmissions completed in 2024, 40% of leaders intend to transfer within 5 years. Source: Bpifrance Le Lab, Transmission et reprise d’entreprise (November 2025). Confidence: HIGH.
- Italy. ~1 million PMI face succession in next 10 years, ~23% of family-business leaders are over 70, only ~15% of successions are formally planned, the long-cited survival curve shows 30% to second generation, 12% to third, 3% beyond fourth. Source: Confindustria GenerAZIONI 2026. Confidence: HIGH on the 1M / 23% / 15%, MEDIUM on the survival curve.
- Switzerland. ~168,000 SMEs expected to undergo ownership transfer by end-2030 (~1/3 of all Swiss SMEs), ~112,000 family businesses targeting generational change, ~73,000 effectively completed family transfers expected over five years (at a 65% transfer rate). Source: CFB-HSG / UBS Unternehmensnachfolge-Kurzstudie 2026 (401 SME owners surveyed). Confidence: HIGH.
- Spain, Catalonia. 17,023 Catalan SMEs face succession in the coming 10 years, 54% of Catalan SME CEOs are over 60, 88% of 35,823 Catalan 10-250-employee SMEs are family businesses, 27% of family businesses have no succession plan. Confidence: HIGH at Catalonia level, MEDIUM for the methodology behind the 17k figure.
- Spain, national. Only ~11% of SMEs and self-employed have established a succession plan (Hiscox 2023, cited 2024-2025). Confidence: MEDIUM, with 2023 vintage flagged.
- Netherlands. SME-acquisition annual count has “more than doubled since the financial crisis” per ABN AMRO sector commentary, and ABN AMRO launched MKB Overnamedesk October 2025 (financing from €250k). Confidence: MEDIUM directional, with a specific national-transfer count not surfaced.
- Austria, Belgium, Sweden, Denmark, UK. Gap disclosed. No 2024-2026-vintage succession-specific national counts for these five countries were verified in this research wave with comparable methodology to KfW or Bpifrance. Confidence: LOW. We have not manufactured numbers to fill these gaps.
Trajectory of the last five years
- Germany. The 2025 edition of KfW Nachfolge-Monitoring is the first in the series to report a small overhang of planned-closures over planned-transfers. Earlier editions (2020-2024) had transfers ≥ closures. This is a directional inflection that KfW itself flagged in its press release.
- France. The intention-vs-realisation gap (370k in scope by 2030 vs ~130k likely to actually transfer at current pace) is the trajectory story. 80% of leaders say they would stay longer at the helm if they cannot transfer at the target horizon.
- Italy, Spain. No annual-series quantitative national tracker comparable to KfW or Bpifrance was located. Gap disclosed.
2. The 2026-2030 window: does the data hold?
The consensus claim that 2026-2030 is the peak transition window is partially correct, but the data points to a slightly earlier and more uneven window:
- Germany: KfW projects 545k transfers and 569k planned closures by end-2029, so the bulk of the activity falls in 2025-2029, not 2026-2030.
- France: Bpifrance’s 370k figure is anchored to horizon 2030, with 40% of leaders intending to transfer in the next 5 years measured from late 2025 (i.e., 2025-2030).
- Switzerland: UBS/HSG explicitly: ~168,000 SMEs expected to undergo ownership transfer by the end of 2030. This matches the 2026-2030 framing most precisely.
- Italy: Confindustria’s “next 10 years” framing in 2026 implies roughly 2026-2035, so the Italian wave is broader and later-skewed than the German one.
Refined framing: “2025-2030 in DACH and France, 2026-2032 in Italy and Iberia” is a more precise statement than a single pan-European 2026-2030 window. Confidence: HIGH, anchored to four named primary sources.
What we cannot publish: A year-by-year owner-retirement cohort curve from 2024 through 2032 in a comparable cross-country methodology. None of KfW, Bpifrance, UBS/HSG, or Confindustria publishes such a curve in the format the original brief requested. Constructing one would require either KfW microdata access or a primary Eurostat owner-age dataset we have not verified. Gap disclosed.
3. European PE deployment into LMM succession deals
Dry powder, AUM
Gap: A precise sub-€100M EV LMM allocation of European dry powder is not published in the public Invest Europe summary. The €278B buyout aggregate is the most defensible figure.
US sponsor entries into Europe 2023-2026
The cleanest verified examples are:
- Thoma Bravo: Launched a €1.8B / ~$1.89B fund dedicated to European software deals, its first dedicated Europe fund, targeting mid-market software firms across Europe (2025). Confidence: HIGH.
- Heron View Partners: Launched January 2026 as an independent global LMM platform with offices in Hong Kong, London, Mexico City, New York, and Zurich, with ~$2.5B AUM at launch. Confidence: HIGH.
Beyond these two named entrants, the broader pattern reported by Roland Berger and Ropes & Gray is that global sponsors, especially US firms, deploy capital actively in Europe, with rising US LP allocations to Europe-focused strategies. A precise count of US-based PE firms that opened a first European office in 2023-2026 is not something this memo asserts. Blackstone, KKR, Carlyle, TPG, Bain, and Apollo all already have established European operations from before 2023. Gap disclosed.
Search funds in Europe
- 320 international search funds tracked across 40 countries (IESE 2024 study).
- 146 completed international acquisitions, 85 of those in Europe (vs 54 Latin America, 5 APAC, 1 Middle East, 1 Africa).
- Spain leads in first-time fund launches (67), ahead of Mexico (50), UK (35), Brazil (34). The European epicenter for search funds is Spain, not the UK.
- 2023 set records: 59 new core search funds plus 31 acquisitions internationally.
- Source: IESE International Search Funds 2024, Selected Observations. Confidence: HIGH.
Family-office direct investment
4. Sector-specific consolidation patterns
Heaviest deployment
- Veterinary (HEAVY). European vet market: ~$16.92B in 2025, projected $23.32B by 2030 (Mordor Intelligence). Named European platforms include IVC Evidensia (EQT), which acquired Animed (Lisbon, March 2025) among many add-ons, plus VetPartners, Medivet, CVS Group plc, AniCura (Mars), Premier Veterinary Group, and VetFamily. Confidence: HIGH for the corporate set, MEDIUM for current sponsor confirmation of every non-EQT name.
- Dental (HEAVY). 149 European dental deals in 2025 (after 137 add-ons, 6 buyouts, and 18 growth investments in 2024), with 95% of 2025 deals add-ons by PE-owned platforms. Named transactions include UK-based Dental Directory Group (Sun European Partners) acquiring Italy’s Elident Group in April 2025. Other platforms: Colosseum Dental Group, BUPA Dental Centres, Smile Brands. Confidence: HIGH on the deal count, MEDIUM on the per-platform sponsor table.
- MSP / IT services (HEAVY). 107 MSP transactions in Q1 2025, 92 in Q2 2025, MSP+MSSP at 40% of tech-services deal activity, PE-led above 60% of disclosed (Drake Star MSP Report Q3 2025). European platforms include Sopra Steria (17 acquisitions tracked, including Starion and Nexova in 2025-2026), Bechtle, and Cegeka. Confidence: HIGH.
Moderate deployment
- Home services (MODERATE). Europe HVAC services market: $15.72B in 2025 rising to $23.59B by 2031 at ~7% CAGR (Mordor). Germany, UK, and France lead. Named platforms: Thermondo (Germany), Germany’s largest heat pump installer, with Brookfield, HV Capital, Vorwerk, and Rocket Internet among investors, secured €50M for an installment-purchase scheme in July 2025 and acquired FEBESOL (PV) in April 2024. A US-style pure-HVAC PE roll-up at scale (the Apex Service Partners equivalent) does not yet exist in Europe, which is itself a finding (see Contrarian #2 below).
Under-penetrated
- Eldercare / specialty healthcare: regulatorily fragmented across EU member states, so pan-European platforms are rarer than in vet or dental. Gap disclosed on a named-platform table.
- Industrial services / MRO / facility services: dominated by strategic distributors (Bunzl, Rexel), with PE platforms thinner than in the US. Gap disclosed.
5. Contrarian findings backed by data
Contrarian #1: Multiples are compressing into the wave, not expanding with it.
The consensus narrative says “wave of succession demand leads to seller’s market leads to multiple expansion.” The Argos Mid-market Index data contradicts it directionally:
- Q4 2024: 9.8x EV/EBITDA.
- Q1 2025: 9.5x (down 3% QoQ).
- Q3 2025: 8.7x (lowest since 2017).
- Q4 2025: 8.3x (weakest level since H1 2014).
- Q1 2026: 8.6x (slight recovery, supported by financial-sponsor pricing).
Sources: Argos Mid-market Index Q4 2025 and quarterly editions. Confidence: HIGH. The succession wave is happening into a buyer’s market, not a seller’s.
Contrarian #2: The German data is a destruction-of-stock story, not just transfer-of-stock.
For the first time in KfW’s monitoring history, planned closures exceed planned transfers: 569,000 closures vs 545,000 transfers by end-2029. KfW’s own headline: “Immer mehr Mittelständler wollen nach altersbedingtem Rückzug der Chefs schließen,” meaning more and more Mittelstand owners want to close after age-driven withdrawal. Source: KfW Research press release, January 2026. Confidence: HIGH. For PE buyers, the real addressable market is ~545k transfer-intending owners, not ~1.1M.
Contrarian #3: “US sponsors outperform European sponsors in European LMM” is folklore.
We located no primary-source dataset proving US sponsors outperform European LMM peers on European succession deals on a comparable-basis-adjusted IRR / MOIC. What the data does show: European mid-market multiples remain higher than US (Europe 11-12x vs US ~10x per PitchBook synthesis, 2025-2026), European buyout dry powder is at a record €278B, and US LP allocation to Europe is “rising” qualitatively. None of that indicates US-led deals outperforming European-led ones. A cleaner narrative is that European LMM sponsors (Capvis, Ufenau, Equistone, Afinum, IK Partners, Bridgepoint mid-market) have a structural advantage on European succession because of language, network, and Mittelstand cultural fit. Confidence: HIGH on the absence of supporting data, MEDIUM on the proposed alternative interpretation.
Contrarian #4: Italian family-handover survival is worse than the headline implies.
Confindustria cites that only 30% of Italian family businesses survive to the second generation, 12% to the third, and 3% beyond the fourth, and only ~15% of generational changes are formally planned. The familiar “Italian family-business model” headline obscures the fact that a clear majority of Italian family businesses do not successfully transition even one generation. Confidence: MEDIUM-HIGH.
Contrarian #5: Ufenau VIII vs the Argos Index is a story about LP appetite, not seller scarcity.
Ufenau Capital Partners closed Ufenau VIII Asset Light at its €2.12B hard cap in under four months in June 2025, one of the fastest large LMM-services raises in recent European PE history. This happened into the same market that produced the Argos Q4 2025 8.3x print. Institutional LPs are crowding into LMM-services platforms with succession-deal sourcing engines precisely because entry multiples are compressing. Confidence: HIGH on the facts, MEDIUM on the causal interpretation.
6. Named recent transactions (2024-2026)
The original research brief asked for 10-15 specific transactions. We list nine verified here and explicitly disclose the gap rather than fabricate to fill 15. Where transaction sizes were not disclosed, we say so, and where structure was not visible, we say so.
| Target |
Sponsor / Buyer |
Sector |
Country |
Date |
Size / Structure |
Confidence |
| Elident Group |
Dental Directory Group (Sun European Partners) |
Dental supplies / equipment distribution |
Italy |
April 2025 |
Not disclosed |
HIGH |
| Animed (Lisbon) |
IVC Evidensia (EQT) |
Veterinary (24/7 ER + GP) |
Portugal |
March 2025 |
Not disclosed |
HIGH |
| Ufenau VIII Asset Light fund close |
Ufenau Capital Partners (LMM services PE fund directly funding DACH succession deals) |
LMM services PE |
Switzerland / DACH |
June 2025 |
€2.12B hard cap, under 4-month raise |
HIGH |
| Ergon Informatik (stake) |
Afinum |
Software |
Switzerland |
January 2026 |
Stake, size not disclosed |
HIGH |
| Starion + Nexova |
Sopra Steria |
Space-systems engineering + cybersecurity |
France / pan-European |
Announced Dec 2025, completed April 2026 |
Not disclosed |
HIGH |
| Mister Spex (stake) |
The Platform Group |
Optical retail |
Germany |
2024-2025 |
Stake, size not disclosed |
MEDIUM-HIGH |
| Thermondo €50M facility |
Unnamed international partner bank (debt), equity backers include Brookfield, HV Capital, Vorwerk, Rocket Internet, 10x |
HVAC / heat pumps |
Germany |
July 2025 |
€50M loan facility |
HIGH |
| FEBESOL (photovoltaic) |
Thermondo |
HVAC adjacent (PV) |
Germany |
April 2024 |
Not disclosed |
HIGH |
| SYNLAB.vet GmbH |
Mars Incorporated |
Veterinary diagnostics |
Germany (vet diagnostics) |
September 2023 |
Not disclosed (historical context) |
HIGH |
Gap disclosed: A clean list of 10-15 European LMM founder-succession transactions across DACH, France, Italy, and Iberia with seller name, sponsor, and disclosed-or-undisclosed size requires a targeted Mergermarket or Unquote DACH pull. We have not manufactured additional entries to reach 15.
Limitations of this analysis
- We have not constructed a year-by-year owner-retirement cohort 2024-2032. None of the primary sources publishes such a curve.
- We have not asserted an LMM-specific (sub-€100M EV) European dry-powder sub-allocation. The €278B buyout aggregate is what is defensible from the public Invest Europe summary.
- Country-specific succession counts for Austria, Belgium, Sweden, Denmark, and the UK were not verified with comparable methodology in this research wave.
- The US-vs-European sponsor performance comparison is asserted as folklore, not refuted with data we cannot find. The contrarian claim is the absence of supporting evidence, not the presence of refuting evidence.
- Multiple ranges cited reflect observed transaction data and trade-press / index coverage. Specific transaction outcomes vary with deal structure, sector, recurring-revenue mix, and buyer fit.
- The Argos Mid-market Index covers the Eurozone, not the entirety of Europe. UK transaction multiples are not in the Argos series.
- This is not investment advice. CT Acquisitions is a buy-side advisor.
Sources and references
Every numerical claim above is sourced to a primary firm publication, government statistical agency, or named industry-research publisher. Where a primary source bot-blocks default User-Agent requests but remains human-readable in a browser, we note that. We do not assert claims we cannot defend with a primary source.
- KfW Research, Nachfolge-Monitoring Mittelstand 2025 (Fokus Nr. 526, January 2026), the primary anchor for the German succession numbers and the closure-overhang finding
- KfW Research press release: more Mittelstand owners want to close
- Bpifrance Le Lab, Transmission et reprise d’entreprise (November 2025)
- Confindustria GenerAZIONI 2026
- CFB-HSG / UBS Unternehmensnachfolge-Kurzstudie 2026
- European Commission DG GROW, Annual Report on European SMEs 2024/2025
- Eurostat business demography statistics
- Invest Europe, Private Equity Activity 2024 report
- Invest Europe, Capital Under Management & Dry Powder 2024
- PwC Private Equity Trend Report 2026
- Argos Mid-market Index Q4 2025
- Argos Mid-market Index Q3 2025
- BeBeez International: Europe 1Q25 mid-market multiples down to 9.5x
- IESE International Search Funds 2024, Selected Observations
- Stanford GSB Search Funds (2024 study: 681 qualifying funds, 35.1% aggregate pre-tax IRR, 4.5x ROIC)
- CNBC Family Office 15 (FINTRX data), family-office direct-investing surge corroboration
- Ufenau VIII fund-closing press release (June 2025)
- EQT portfolio: IVC Evidensia
- Ansarada: DACH succession drivers and strategic consolidation 2026
- Roland Berger European Private Equity Outlook 2026
- Ropes & Gray European Private Equity Market Recap Q3 2025
- Bain Healthcare Private Equity Market 2025
- Lincoln International, Dental’s Global Sector Health in 2025
- Quo Vadis: Is Corporatisation Reshaping Companion Animal Veterinary Care in Europe? (MDPI Veterinary Sciences 2024, peer-reviewed)
- Drake Star MSP Report Q3 2025
Last verified: June 1, 2026. Next refresh: quarterly (target 2026-09-01).
Disclaimer: This article is general buyer-landscape and macro-research intelligence, not investment, legal, or tax advice. Country-level figures are point-in-time and reflect the most recent available primary-source publications. CT Acquisitions is a buy-side advisor.