Last updated: 2026-04-13

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What is a PE Roll-Up Strategy?

A PE roll-up strategy is when a private equity firm acquires multiple small to mid-sized companies in the same industry, combines them under one holding company, and improves operations to increase overall value. For example, a PE firm might buy five independent plumbing companies generating $2-5M revenue each, consolidate them into a single $15-20M platform, then acquire 10-15 additional companies over 3-5 years, creating a $50M+ regional or national operator before selling to a larger buyer or going public.

New Research

2026 Lower Middle Market Buyer Demand Report — we analyzed buy-box data from 76 PE firms, family offices, and search funders actively deploying capital in the U.S. LMM. See which industries, EBITDA tiers, and deal structures the active buyer pool is actually targeting in 2026.

How Roll-Ups Work in Home Services

Home services are ideal for roll-up strategies because the market is highly fragmented. There are over 100,000 HVAC, plumbing, electrical, and landscaping companies in the U.S., most owner-operated with $1-10M revenue. A PE-backed roll-up identifies a geographic region or service line, acquires the first “platform company” (usually $5-15M revenue), then systematically buys competitors and bolt-on companies.

The PE firm typically:

  • Installs professional management and financial reporting
  • Implements shared back-office functions (accounting, HR, compliance)
  • Standardizes pricing, scheduling, and service delivery
  • Cross-sells services across the customer base
  • Reduces overhead by 15-25% through consolidation
  • Grows revenue 20-30% annually through add-on acquisitions

Real Home Services Examples

HVAC: Lennox acquired over 80 independent HVAC contractors between 2010-2022, building a $3B+ service division. Plumbing: Roto-Rooter (owned by Asplundh) rolled up regional plumbing and drain cleaning companies into a national brand with 500+ locations. Electrical: Wyle Electronics and other roll-ups consolidated electrical contractors across multiple states.

A typical roll-up timeline: Year 1-2, acquire platform and 2-3 bolt-ons (reach $15-25M). Year 3-4, acquire 5-10 additional companies (reach $40-60M). Year 5, sell to a larger roll-up, strategic buyer, or financial sponsor at 6-8x EBITDA.

Why PE Firms Choose Roll-Ups

Roll-ups create value through operational improvements (EBITDA margin expansion) and revenue growth (add-on acquisitions). A roll-up that grows from $5M to $50M EBITDA over 5 years and improves margins from 10% to 18% creates 4-5x equity returns even before accounting for multiple expansion.

What This Means for You

If you own a home services business, understanding roll-ups matters. You can sell to a roll-up platform as the initial acquisition (getting 4-6x EBITDA), stay on as a regional operator, and earn additional returns through earnouts tied to growth targets. Alternatively, you can remain independent but negotiate more favorable terms knowing your buyer’s growth strategy. CT Acquisitions connects home services owners with PE firms actively building roll-ups, ensuring you understand the buyer’s plan for your business.

FAQ

What’s the difference between a roll-up and a traditional acquisition?

A traditional acquisition typically buys one company and integrates it into an existing operation. A roll-up buys multiple companies over time and builds a new, larger platform. Roll-ups target fragmented markets with many small operators; traditional acquisitions target established competitors. Roll-ups create value through add-on acquisitions; traditional acquisitions create value through cost-cutting and revenue synergies with existing operations.

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Christoph Totter, Founder of CT Acquisitions

About the Author

Christoph Totter is the founder of CT Acquisitions, a buy-side partner headquartered in Sheridan, Wyoming. We work directly with 76+ buyers — search funders, family offices, lower middle-market PE, and strategic consolidators — including direct mandates with the largest home services consolidators that other intermediaries can’t 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

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