Attorney Fees for Selling a Business (2026): What to Expect
Quick Answer
Attorney fees for selling a business in 2026 typically run between $5,000 and $50,000+ for the seller’s side, depending on deal size and complexity. As a rough orientation: very small asset sales under $500K often cost $3,000-$8,000 in seller legal fees; small business sales in the $500K-$3M range usually cost $8,000-$25,000; lower-middle-market deals of $3M-$15M typically run $25,000-$75,000; and complex deals with multiple entities, regulated industries, or contested terms can exceed $100,000. Most M&A attorneys bill hourly at $400-$900/hr, though some offer flat-fee engagements for smaller, simpler deals. The biggest cost drivers are complexity (asset vs stock structure, earnouts, rollover equity), the volume of disclosure work, third-party consents, and how aggressively the buyer’s counsel negotiates.

Legal fees on a business sale are unpredictable for sellers who have never done one, and predictable for sellers who have. The fee follows the work, and the work follows the deal complexity, the entity structure, the contracts that need consents, the schedule of disclosures, and how hard the buyer’s counsel pushes. This page lays out realistic fee ranges by deal size, where the work piles up, and how sellers control the bill without skimping on the protection they need.
We are CT Acquisitions, a buy-side M&A advisory firm. We are not your attorney, this is general orientation; engage a transactional M&A attorney for the legal work. With the buyer-paid model, sellers pay no advisory fee to us, the buyer does. For related context, see our broker alternative guide and legal documents checklist.
What this guide covers
- Very small asset sale (under $500K): typically $3,000-$8,000 in seller legal fees
- Small business sale ($500K-$3M): typically $8,000-$25,000
- Lower-middle-market ($3M-$15M): typically $25,000-$75,000
- Complex / regulated / contested: $75,000-$150,000+
- Hourly rates: $400-$900/hr at most M&A boutiques and larger firms; some offer flat fees for smaller deals
- The biggest cost drivers: asset vs stock structure, earnouts, rollover equity, third-party consents, disclosure work, buyer-counsel aggressiveness
Realistic fee ranges by deal size
| Deal size | Typical seller legal fees | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Under $500K (asset sale) | $3,000 to $8,000 | Often a flat-fee engagement; light disclosure; minimal third-party consents |
| $500K to $3M | $8,000 to $25,000 | More disclosure schedules; some lease/IP/customer consents; SBA-financed deals add work |
| $3M to $15M | $25,000 to $75,000 | Real reps-and-warranties negotiation; working-capital mechanics; possible escrow/earnout |
| $15M to $50M | $75,000 to $200,000 | Often R&W insurance, more complex tax structuring, multiple entities |
| Complex / regulated / contested | $100,000+ | Healthcare, defense, financial services, government contracts, contested deal terms |
These are seller-side ranges only. Buyer-side legal fees are typically similar in size, paid separately by the buyer.
What drives the bill up
- Stock sale (or MIPA) vs asset sale. Stock sales carry heavier reps and warranties and broader indemnification, more drafting and negotiation hours.
- Earnouts. Defining the metric, period, accounting methodology, and buyer operating obligations precisely takes time, and earnouts are a frequent source of post-closing disputes.
- Rollover equity. When the seller keeps a minority stake, that adds a separate set of documents (LLC agreement amendments, equity terms, securities-law work).
- Disclosure schedules. Thorough disclosure is protective but takes hours, and it scales with the complexity of the business.
- Third-party consents. Lease assignments, IP licenses, key customer contracts with change-of-control clauses. Each one is its own mini-project.
- Regulatory overlays. Healthcare (HIPAA, Stark, anti-kickback), government contracts (CFIUS, FAR/DFARS), financial services, alcohol licensing, all add specialized work.
- Aggressive buyer’s counsel. The other side’s drafting style controls how much your counsel has to push back. A 100-page first draft with adversarial defaults will run higher than a 60-page balanced draft.
- Multiple entities. Holding companies, sister LLCs, foreign subsidiaries, real estate held in a separate entity, each adds documents and tax considerations.
- R&W insurance. Reps-and-warranties insurance, common above $10M, adds underwriting work but reduces post-closing indemnification exposure.
Hourly vs flat fee, what to expect
Most M&A attorneys at boutiques and larger firms bill hourly, typically $400-$900 per hour for partner time and $300-$500 for associate time. Some firms offer flat-fee engagements for smaller, simpler deals (asset sales under $1M-$2M with limited diligence), often in the $7,500-$20,000 range. A few will offer capped engagements, hourly to a cap, with overruns billed only on agreed scope changes. Whatever the structure, ask for a written engagement letter that names the scope, the rate(s), and the expected range, and a cadence for billing updates (weekly or biweekly).
Where sellers waste money on legal fees
- Hiring a generalist instead of an M&A attorney. A general business attorney without transactional experience will take longer, miss issues, and cost more in total. Always hire a transactional M&A attorney.
- Trying to save by skipping disclosure work. Thin schedules cost more later in indemnification claims than they ever saved in legal fees.
- Re-trading the LOI in the definitive agreement. The same fights re-litigated in the purchase agreement double the cost. Get the structure and major economics right in the LOI.
- Not preparing the data room. Diligence stretches because of missing documents, every hour your attorney spends chasing your records is billable. Assemble the data room before going to market.
- Last-minute scope changes. Adding rollover equity or an earnout structure after the LOI requires re-papering. Decide structure early.
- Choosing the cheapest quote. Hourly rate is not the bill, total hours times rate is the bill. A higher-rate experienced attorney who closes in 60% the hours costs less.
How to control the legal cost
- Get the structure right in the LOI, asset vs stock, working-capital target, earnout/rollover/escrow framework. Re-negotiating in the definitive agreement is expensive.
- Build the data room before going to market. See our due diligence checklist for the layout.
- Identify third-party-consent issues early. Leases with assignment provisions, key customer contracts with change-of-control clauses, IP licenses, start working these before diligence starts.
- Hire a real M&A attorney, not a generalist. Ask about deal experience in your size range and industry.
- Ask for a written engagement letter with scope and estimated range. And a billing-update cadence.
- Run a competitive process so you negotiate from strength. Terms follow leverage; legal fees rise when there is only one buyer and they push every point.
Related context: legal documents needed, the contract for selling a business, due diligence checklist, buyer-paid broker alternative.
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How much does it cost to have an attorney sell my business?
Roughly $3,000 to $8,000 for very small asset sales under $500K; $8,000 to $25,000 for sales of $500K to $3M; $25,000 to $75,000 for $3M to $15M deals; and $75,000 to $200,000+ for $15M to $50M or complex deals (regulated industries, multiple entities, R&W insurance, contested terms). The biggest cost drivers are deal structure (stock vs asset), earnouts and rollover equity, the volume of disclosure work, third-party consents, and how aggressively the buyer’s counsel negotiates.
Do business sale attorneys charge hourly or flat fee?
Most charge hourly, typically $400-$900 per hour for partner time and $300-$500 for associate time at M&A boutiques and larger firms. Some attorneys offer flat-fee engagements for smaller, simpler deals (asset sales under $1M-$2M with limited diligence), commonly $7,500-$20,000. A few offer capped engagements, hourly to a cap with overruns only on agreed scope changes. Whichever structure, ask for a written engagement letter with scope, rate(s), expected range, and a billing-update cadence.
Are seller attorney fees negotiable?
The rate is usually less negotiable than the scope and structure. Ask for a flat or capped fee on smaller deals, push for a defined scope, and clarify what counts as a scope change. The biggest savings come from preparation: a clean data room, pre-secured third-party consents, and a well-negotiated LOI all reduce hours. Choosing an experienced M&A attorney over a generalist also reduces total hours even at a higher rate.
Who pays the legal fees in a business sale, buyer or seller?
Each side typically pays its own legal fees. The seller pays seller-side counsel; the buyer pays buyer-side counsel. The two are usually similar in magnitude. In some structures, escrow or indemnification provisions can effectively shift certain costs after closing, but during the deal, each side bears its own legal expense unless otherwise negotiated.
Can I sell my business without an attorney?
Practically, no, even very small sales involve tax structuring, representations and warranties, indemnification, restrictive covenants, and third-party consents that materially affect what the seller nets and what they are exposed to afterward. A template is a starting point, not a finished contract; a bad agreement costs far more than the legal fee saved. The right move is hiring a transactional M&A attorney scaled to your deal size.
What is included in business sale attorney fees?
Typically: drafting and/or negotiating the LOI; drafting and negotiating the purchase agreement and ancillary documents (bill of sale, assignment-and-assumption agreements, restrictive covenants, employment/consulting agreement, escrow agreement, promissory notes); preparing or reviewing disclosure schedules; managing third-party consents (lease, IP, customer); coordinating with the buyer’s counsel; advising on tax structure (with your CPA); and managing the closing. Tax filings, post-closing dispute work, and significant scope changes are usually separate.
How can I reduce attorney fees when selling my business?
Get the deal structure right in the LOI (so it is not re-litigated in the definitive); build the data room before going to market; identify and start working third-party consents (leases, key contracts) early; hire a transactional M&A attorney rather than a generalist (lower total hours even at higher rate); request a written engagement letter with scope and estimated range; and run a competitive process so you negotiate from strength rather than conceding every point.
Is it worth paying for a top M&A attorney for a small deal?
Not always, very small asset sales often work fine with a competent local transactional attorney charging less. But for any deal where the structure is non-trivial (stock sale, earnout, rollover equity, regulated industry, multiple entities) or the price is above $1M-$2M, the marginal cost of an experienced M&A attorney is usually justified by faster closes, fewer post-closing disputes, and more protective documents. Ask candidates about deal experience in your size range and industry.
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