Business Buy-Sell Agreement: What It Is and Why You Need One (2026)
Quick Answer
A business buy-sell agreement is a contract among the co-owners of a privately held business that controls what happens to an owner’s interest when a triggering event occurs, death, disability, divorce, bankruptcy, retirement, or a voluntary exit. It specifies who can (or must) buy the departing owner’s share, how the price is set (fixed value, formula, or appraisal), and how the purchase is funded (often life and disability insurance for the death and disability triggers, installment notes for others). It is not the same as the agreement to sell the whole company to an outside buyer, but a well-drafted buy-sell makes that eventual sale far cleaner. Have an attorney draft it and a valuation professional set the methodology.

The legal documents in a business sale do one job: they turn a handshake into an enforceable, defensible transfer of ownership. Get them right and the deal closes cleanly and stays closed. Get them wrong, vague price terms, missing reps and warranties, a sloppy non-compete, no indemnification cap, and you’ve created a lawsuit waiting to happen, on either side. This guide walks through what each document does, what the key clauses are, and where sellers and buyers most often get burned.
This guide explains what a buy-sell agreement does, the trigger events it covers, the valuation and funding mechanisms, and how it intersects with eventually selling the whole business. It’s general orientation, not legal or tax advice. We’re CT Acquisitions, a buy-side M&A advisory firm, when the time comes to sell the company, sellers pay nothing and the buyer pays our fee at closing. For valuation methodology, see our valuation resources; for the full company-sale process, how to sell your business.
What this guide covers
- This is not legal advice. Every business sale needs a transactional M&A attorney, this page is orientation, not a substitute
- The core documents: letter of intent, purchase agreement (asset or stock), bill of sale, assignment/assumption agreements, disclosure schedules, and (often) employment/consulting and non-compete agreements
- Asset sale vs. stock sale changes the entire document set and the tax outcome, decide this early with your CPA and attorney
- The clauses that cause the most fights: purchase-price adjustments (working capital true-ups, earnouts), reps and warranties, indemnification caps and survival periods, and restrictive covenants
- Free valuation: before you negotiate any document, know what the business is worth, use our 90-second tool
- Buyer-paid advisory: sellers working with us pay nothing, the buyer pays our fee at closing
What a buy-sell agreement does
A buy-sell agreement (also called a buyout agreement or, when it stands alone, a “business will”) answers one question in advance: when an owner exits, on death, disability, divorce, bankruptcy, retirement, or a voluntary sale, who buys their stake, at what price, and with what money? Without one, the surviving owners can end up in business with a deceased owner’s heirs, a divorcing owner’s spouse, or a creditor, and fighting in court over what the interest is worth. It’s foundational for any business with more than one owner.
The structures
- Cross-purchase agreement: the remaining owners individually buy the departing owner’s interest. Common with a small number of owners. Often funded with life insurance policies each owner holds on the others.
- Entity-purchase (stock redemption) agreement: the company itself buys back the departing owner’s interest. Simpler with more owners; the company holds the insurance.
- Hybrid (wait-and-see): gives the company the first option, then the remaining owners, then the company again, flexibility to optimize the tax outcome at the time of the event.
Trigger events to cover
- Death: usually mandatory buyout, funded by life insurance.
- Disability: mandatory or optional after a defined waiting period; funded by disability buyout insurance or installments.
- Divorce: a right (often a mandatory one) for the company or other owners to buy any interest a court awards to a spouse, keeps the business out of the divorce.
- Bankruptcy or creditor claim: a buyout right so a creditor can’t end up as an owner.
- Voluntary transfer / retirement: typically a right of first refusal, the other owners can match any outside offer.
- Termination of employment, loss of license, or breach: often a buyout right at a discounted price.
How the price gets set
- Fixed price (certificate of value): the owners agree on a value and update it annually. Simple, but routinely goes stale, an out-of-date certificate is a classic source of disputes.
- Formula: a multiple of EBITDA, SDE, revenue, or book value. Predictable but can drift from real market value as the business changes.
- Appraisal: an independent business valuation at the time of the event, often a single appraiser, or each side picks one and a third breaks ties. Most defensible; costs money and time when triggered.
- Hybrid: formula as a floor or ceiling with an appraisal mechanism, common and sensible.
Whatever the method, the agreement should also address discounts for lack of control and marketability, the valuation date, and whether the price differs by trigger (for example, a “bad leaver” discount).
Funding the buyout
- Life insurance: the standard funding for the death trigger, the policy proceeds provide the cash to buy out the heirs. Ownership structure (who owns/pays for which policy) has tax consequences, coordinate with your advisors.
- Disability buyout insurance: for the disability trigger.
- Sinking fund: the business sets aside money over time.
- Installment note: the buyer pays over years, common for retirement and voluntary exits; protect the seller with security and acceleration provisions.
- Outside financing: a bank or SBA loan to fund the buyout.
How the buy-sell interacts with selling the whole company
A good buy-sell agreement makes an eventual sale of the entire business cleaner, the cap table is clear, transfer restrictions are documented, and there’s no surprise minority holder. But it usually shouldn’t block a sale: include “drag-along” rights so a majority can compel minority owners to join a bona fide third-party sale on the same terms, and “tag-along” rights so minority owners can join (and not be left behind with a new majority partner). Review the buy-sell before you take the company to market, stale valuation certificates, missing drag-along provisions, or restrictive transfer clauses can complicate or delay a deal. When you’re ready to sell the company, that’s a different process and a different set of documents, see our how to sell your business guide and our broker alternative guide.
How we know this: the ranges, timelines, and dynamics on this page come from the transactions we’ve worked on and the buyer mandates in our network of 100+ active capital partners. They’re informed starting points, not guarantees, your actual outcome depends on the specifics of your business and your situation.
Where the buyer-paid model fits
A sell-side advisor doesn’t replace your attorney, the attorney drafts and negotiates the legal documents. The advisor’s job is everything around them: positioning the business, finding and qualifying buyers, running a competitive process so you have leverage in those negotiations, and managing the deal so it actually closes. With the buyer-paid model, the seller pays no advisory fee, the buyer pays at closing. See our broker alternative guide for how the model works and our about page for who we are.
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Start a Confidential Conversation →Frequently asked questions
What is a business buy-sell agreement?
It’s a contract among the co-owners of a privately held business that controls what happens to an owner’s interest when a triggering event occurs, death, disability, divorce, bankruptcy, retirement, or a voluntary exit. It says who can or must buy the departing owner’s share, how the price is determined, and how the purchase is funded. It’s sometimes called a buyout agreement or a ‘business will.’
Do I need a buy-sell agreement if I have a partner?
Almost certainly yes. Without one, if a co-owner dies, becomes disabled, divorces, goes bankrupt, or simply wants out, you can end up in business with their heirs, their ex-spouse, or a creditor, and fighting over what the interest is worth. A buy-sell sets the rules in advance, while everyone is rational, rather than during a crisis. It’s standard practice for any multi-owner business.
How is the price set in a buy-sell agreement?
Three common methods: a fixed price (a ‘certificate of value’ the owners update annually, simple but prone to going stale); a formula (a multiple of EBITDA, SDE, revenue, or book value, predictable but can drift from market value); or an independent appraisal at the time of the event (most defensible, but costs time and money when triggered). Many agreements use a hybrid, a formula as a floor or ceiling, with an appraisal mechanism.
How is a buy-sell agreement funded?
Most commonly with life insurance for the death trigger (the proceeds give the buyers cash to purchase the deceased owner’s interest from the estate) and disability buyout insurance for the disability trigger. Other triggers, retirement, voluntary exit, are often funded with an installment note, a sinking fund, or outside financing such as a bank or SBA loan. The funding mechanism should be matched to each trigger event.
What is the difference between a cross-purchase and an entity-purchase buy-sell?
In a cross-purchase agreement, the remaining individual owners buy the departing owner’s interest (often using life insurance policies they hold on each other), common with a small number of owners. In an entity-purchase (stock redemption) agreement, the company itself buys back the interest and the company holds the insurance, simpler when there are many owners. A ‘wait-and-see’ hybrid lets the parties choose at the time of the event for the best tax result.
Does a buy-sell agreement stop me from selling my company?
It shouldn’t, if it’s well drafted. Include ‘drag-along’ rights so a majority can compel minority owners to join a genuine third-party sale on the same terms, and ‘tag-along’ rights so minority owners can come along rather than be stuck with a new majority partner. Review the buy-sell before going to market, stale valuation certificates, missing drag-along provisions, or restrictive transfer clauses can complicate or delay a sale of the whole business.
How often should a buy-sell agreement be updated?
At least every one to two years for the valuation component (especially if it uses a fixed-price certificate), and whenever there’s a material change, a new owner, a significant change in the business’s size or profitability, a change in tax law, or a change in the insurance funding. A buy-sell with a five-year-old value certificate is a lawsuit waiting to happen.
Is a buy-sell agreement the same as a contract to sell my business?
No. A buy-sell agreement governs transfers of ownership among the existing co-owners when something happens to one of them. A contract to sell your business (an asset or stock purchase agreement) transfers the whole company to an outside buyer. They’re related, a clean buy-sell makes an eventual company sale smoother, but they’re different documents serving different purposes.
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