M&A Advisor Retainer Fees: 2026 Guide to What Owners Actually Pay

M&A Advisor Retainer Fees: What LMM Business Owners Actually Pay

M&A Advisor Retainer Fees: What LMM Business Owners Actually Pay
M&A Advisor Retainer Fees: 2026 Guide to What Owners Actually Pay

By CT Acquisitions Editorial Team, reviewed by senior M&A advisors. Last reviewed: June 2026.

An m&a advisor retainer in 2026 runs $5,000 to $25,000 per month for lower-middle-market sell-side engagements ($5M to $50M enterprise value), and $15,000 to $50,000 per month for core middle-market deals ($50M to $500M). A separate one-time work-product fee of $25,000 to $100,000 typically funds the confidential information memorandum (CIM), financial model, teaser, and buyer target list. The single lever that decides whether the retainer costs you nothing or costs you six figures is one word in the engagement letter: creditable. This guide walks the monthly ranges by deal size, the creditable-versus-non-creditable math with dollar examples, what the retainer actually funds during the six-to-twelve-month sale process, when a creditable retainer is worth paying, and how tail provisions interact with retainer credits after termination. Every range is anchored to public 10-K filings, industry association benchmarking, and engagement-letter conventions in the LMM.

What is an m&a advisor retainer and what does it actually pay for

An m&a advisor retainer is a recurring monthly fee, typically $5,000 to $25,000 in the lower-middle-market, that funds the advisor’s team hours during the sale process. It is not the advisor’s payday. The retainer covers analyst, associate, and senior banker time spent on financial cleanup, CIM drafting, buyer list construction, outreach management, and process coordination during a six to twelve month engagement. The success fee at closing is the real revenue event. The retainer keeps the lights on while the deal is worked.

Public filings confirm this two-part revenue structure. Houlihan Lokey’s 10-K describes its Corporate Finance segment revenue as “retainer fees, milestone fees, and completion fees” (Houlihan Lokey 10-K, SEC EDGAR). Lazard describes financial advisory revenue as retainer fees plus success fees “typically contingent upon consummation of a transaction” (Lazard 10-K, SEC EDGAR). Moelis & Company reports engagement fees, retainer fees, and “transaction announcement or completion fees” (Moelis 10-K, SEC EDGAR). PJT Partners uses similar language across retainer, milestone, and completion revenue lines (PJT Partners 10-K, SEC EDGAR).

The concrete work the retainer buys during a typical LMM engagement:

None of this is billed hourly. The retainer is a fixed monthly commitment. A nine-month process at a $15,000 monthly retainer means $135,000 of paid-in retainers before the success fee triggers. That number matters because it drives the creditability question.

Monthly retainer ranges by deal size in 2026

Monthly retainer ranges scale with deal size and advisor tier. In the lower-middle-market ($5M to $50M enterprise value), monthly retainers run $5,000 to $25,000. In the core middle-market ($50M to $500M), retainers jump to $15,000 to $50,000. Bulge-bracket banks working transactions over $500M often waive monthly retainers entirely, or charge a one-time engagement fee of $250,000 to $1,000,000 instead. The sub-$5M end of the market is generally served by business brokers who charge a flat listing fee plus commission, not by traditional M&A advisors.

Retainer benchmark table by deal size and advisor type

Deal size (EV) Advisor type Monthly retainer range Work-product fee Typical engagement length
Under $2M Business broker $0 to $2,500 $0 to $5,000 6 to 12 months
$2M to $5M Boutique M&A advisor $5,000 to $10,000 $15,000 to $35,000 6 to 10 months
$5M to $25M (LMM) LMM M&A advisor $10,000 to $20,000 $25,000 to $75,000 7 to 12 months
$25M to $50M (upper LMM) LMM M&A advisor $15,000 to $25,000 $50,000 to $100,000 8 to 12 months
$50M to $250M (core MM) Middle-market bank $25,000 to $50,000 $75,000 to $200,000 8 to 14 months
$250M to $500M Middle-market or bulge bracket $25,000 to $75,000 or waived $100,000 to $500,000 10 to 18 months
Over $500M Bulge bracket Typically waived, or $250K+ upfront $250,000 to $1,000,000+ 12 to 24 months

These bands sit inside the ranges reported by the International Business Brokers Association (IBBA) Market Pulse Report, which surveys hundreds of transactions across the Main Street and lower-middle-market segments each quarter (IBBA Market Pulse Report). Pepperdine’s Private Capital Markets Report tracks banker fee structures across similar size bands each year (Pepperdine Private Capital Markets Report). The Alliance of Merger & Acquisition Advisors (AM&AA) covers similar benchmarks for its lower-middle-market membership (Alliance of Merger & Acquisition Advisors).

Creditable versus non-creditable: the single most important term in the engagement letter

A creditable retainer means every dollar (or a defined percentage) of monthly retainers paid gets deducted from the success fee at closing. A non-creditable retainer means the advisor keeps both the retainer and the full success fee. Everything else in the retainer conversation is secondary to this single term. On a nine-month process with a $15,000 monthly retainer, the difference between a fully creditable and non-creditable structure is $135,000 in your pocket at closing.

Three common structures appear in LMM engagement letters:

  1. Fully creditable, no cap: 100% of paid retainers reduce the success fee. Owner-favorable.
  2. Partially creditable with cap: A percentage (often 50%) credits against the success fee, capped at a maximum dollar amount ($75,000 to $150,000). Advisor-favorable, but still meaningful savings.
  3. Non-creditable: Retainers stay with the advisor regardless of closing. Owner pays twice, once monthly and once at closing.

Creditability math on three engagement scenarios

Assume a $15 million transaction value, a 3% success fee ($450,000), a $15,000 monthly retainer, and a nine-month engagement. Retainer paid over the process: $135,000. What closes:

Creditability structure Retainer paid Gross success fee Credit applied Net success fee at closing Total advisor fees
Non-creditable $135,000 $450,000 $0 $450,000 $585,000
50% creditable, cap $100,000 $135,000 $450,000 $67,500 $382,500 $517,500
Fully creditable, no cap $135,000 $450,000 $135,000 $315,000 $450,000

The delta between the non-creditable and fully creditable outcome on this single deal is $135,000. On a longer twelve-month process, that gap grows to $180,000. On a shorter six-month process at a $25,000 monthly retainer, the delta is $150,000. This is the negotiation lever most owners never touch because they focus on the success fee percentage instead.

Deloitte’s M&A advisory practice notes that creditability is a “commonly negotiated term” that varies by advisor tier and deal size (Deloitte M&A Services). The Association for Corporate Growth publishes middle-market benchmarking that touches on similar mechanics (Association for Corporate Growth). Divestopedia’s engagement letter primers describe partial creditability as the LMM norm and full creditability as achievable through negotiation (Divestopedia M&A Resources).

Work-product fees: the one-time charge that sits alongside the retainer

The work-product fee is a one-time payment of $25,000 to $100,000 that funds the CIM, financial model, teaser, and buyer target list. It sits separately from the monthly retainer and is usually paid at engagement signing or at CIM delivery. Some advisors bundle the work-product fee into a higher monthly retainer. Others charge it as a distinct milestone fee. On LMM deals, a work-product fee of $25,000 to $50,000 is standard when the retainer sits at the lower end of the $5,000 to $15,000 range.

Work-product fees can be creditable, non-creditable, or partially creditable, on the same logic as the monthly retainer. A $50,000 non-creditable work-product fee is $50,000 the advisor keeps regardless of outcome. A $50,000 fully creditable work-product fee reduces the success fee at closing by $50,000. The Corporate Finance Institute and industry primers describe the work-product fee as the funding mechanism for the deliverables that “get produced whether or not a deal closes” (Corporate Finance Institute).

Ask two questions before signing:

Neither question is standard boilerplate. Both are negotiable.

When a creditable retainer is worth paying (and when it is not)

A creditable retainer is worth paying when the advisor is the right fit, the deal has a realistic path to close, and the retainer level matches the work required. It is not worth paying when the advisor is running a churn-based model that collects retainers on 20 engagements and closes three, or when the retainer level is uncorrelated to the actual analyst hours required to prepare a defensible sale process.

Signals that a retainer is well-priced for your deal

Signals that a retainer is overpriced or misaligned

The AM&AA benchmarks and IBBA Market Pulse Report both document meaningful variance in retainer levels for similar-sized deals, which is why owners should benchmark two or three engagement letters before signing (AM&AA; IBBA Market Pulse Report).

Tail provisions and how they interact with retainer credits

A tail provision keeps the success fee (and any earned retainer credit) alive after the engagement terminates. Standard tail language: if the seller closes with a buyer the advisor introduced within 12 to 24 months of termination, the advisor is entitled to the full success fee, subject to the same creditability rules that would have applied at engagement close. Tail periods of 18 months are typical in the LMM. Twenty-four months is common at the upper LMM and core middle-market.

Two questions determine how the tail interacts with retainer credits:

  1. Do previously paid retainers still credit against a tail-triggered success fee? In owner-friendly engagement letters, yes. In advisor-friendly letters, sometimes no.
  2. What defines an “introduced buyer” for tail purposes? The engagement letter should require a written buyer list delivered at termination, with the advisor’s tail rights limited to buyers on that list.

Without a written buyer list at termination, tail claims become fact-heavy disputes years later. Skadden’s M&A guides describe tail-clause litigation as a foreseeable outcome when buyer lists are undocumented (Skadden Insights). Cooley’s private-company M&A resources treat the introduced-buyer definition as a core negotiation point in advisor engagement letters (Cooley LLP).

Tail-clause math on a nine-month tail scenario

Assume the same $15M deal above closes eight months after termination, with a buyer the advisor introduced during month four of the original engagement. Retainer paid during the original nine-month process: $135,000. What happens under different tail structures:

Tail structure Success fee owed post-tail Retainer credit applied Net advisor payment at tail closing
Tail active, credits preserved $450,000 $135,000 $315,000
Tail active, credits NOT preserved $450,000 $0 $450,000
Tail active, 50% credits capped $100K $450,000 $67,500 $382,500
Tail expired $0 N/A $0

The lesson: negotiate credit preservation into the tail clause at the front end. It is much harder to argue for after termination.

How to negotiate a monthly retainer down (or up) with cause

Retainers are negotiable. Advisor engagement letters are drafted from templates, and the template’s default numbers reflect the advisor’s opening position, not the market clearing price. Owners with a defensible deal, clean financials, and multiple advisor conversations in flight have real leverage. Owners with unclear financials, unrealistic price expectations, or no comparable advisor pitches have less.

Levers that reduce your monthly retainer

  1. Full creditability of the retainer against the success fee. This is often easier to negotiate than a lower monthly number.
  2. Full creditability of the work-product fee. Same logic.
  3. A capped total retainer. Cap total retainers at, e.g., $150,000 regardless of process length.
  4. A stepped retainer. Higher retainer in months 1 to 4 (heavy CIM prep), lower in months 5 to 12 (buyer outreach and negotiation).
  5. Retainer holiday clause. Pause retainer once an LOI is signed and diligence begins, until closing.
  6. Milestone-linked retainer. Small monthly retainer with milestone payments at CIM completion, first IOI received, and LOI execution.

When you should offer to pay a higher retainer

Pepperdine’s Private Capital Markets Report notes that advisor pricing is meaningfully sensitive to deal complexity and process length (Pepperdine Private Capital Markets Report). Bain’s M&A reports similarly track the relationship between deal characteristics and banker economics (Bain M&A Report).

What happens to your retainer if you terminate the engagement

Paid retainers are generally non-refundable. The advisor performed the work each month. What matters at termination is what happens next: whether unpaid retainers accrue, whether the tail is triggered, whether documents produced (CIM, model, buyer list) transfer to the owner or stay with the advisor, and whether the retainer credit survives into any tail-period success fee.

Standard termination clause components in LMM engagement letters

Latham & Watkins’ private M&A resources discuss engagement termination as a standard part of the sale process negotiation cycle (Latham & Watkins). Weil, Gotshal & Manges publishes engagement-letter primers that treat the buyer list as a critical termination artifact (Weil, Gotshal & Manges).

How the retainer fits into total advisor cost for a $15M sale

The retainer is one line in a five-line fee structure. On a $15M sale with a 3% success fee, the retainer is roughly 15% to 25% of total advisor economics. Success fee dominates. Below is the full stack in a typical LMM engagement.

Sample fee stack for a $15M LMM sale, nine-month process

Fee component Assumption Dollar amount % of total advisor fees
Monthly retainer (creditable) $15,000 x 9 months $135,000 (fully credited at close) 0% net (credit offsets)
Work-product fee (creditable) One-time $50,000 (fully credited at close) 0% net (credit offsets)
Success fee 3.0% of $15M $450,000 ~100% net
Expense reimbursement Actuals, capped $25K $15,000 to $25,000 3% to 5%
Total net advisor cost at closing Sum of above net $465,000 to $475,000 100%

Now the same deal, non-creditable retainer and non-creditable work-product fee:

Fee component Assumption Dollar amount
Monthly retainer (non-creditable) $15,000 x 9 months $135,000
Work-product fee (non-creditable) One-time $50,000
Success fee 3.0% of $15M $450,000
Expense reimbursement Actuals, capped $25K $15,000 to $25,000
Total net advisor cost at closing Sum of above $650,000 to $660,000

Same deal. Same advisor. Same success fee percentage. The only differences are the two words “non-creditable” versus “creditable” in the engagement letter, and the outcome moves by $185,000. That is why the retainer conversation deserves the same attention as the success fee percentage. For a deeper walk-through of the full fee stack including Lehman formulas and minimum success fees, our companion guide covers M&A advisor fee structures end-to-end.

Retainer benchmarks: LMM boutique vs middle-market bank vs bulge bracket

Retainer levels do not scale linearly with advisor tier. The relationship between advisor size, deal size, and retainer level follows a pattern that most owners misread.

Advisor tier comparison

Advisor tier Typical deal size Monthly retainer Work-product fee Success fee range Creditable retainer norm
Business broker Under $2M $0 to $2,500 $0 to $5,000 10% to 12% Usually not applicable
Boutique LMM advisor $2M to $15M $5,000 to $15,000 $25,000 to $50,000 3% to 8% Partial to full creditability common
LMM specialist $5M to $50M $10,000 to $25,000 $50,000 to $100,000 2% to 5% Full creditability negotiable
Middle-market bank $50M to $500M $25,000 to $50,000 $100,000 to $250,000 1% to 3% Partial creditability standard
Bulge bracket $500M+ Often waived, or $250K+ upfront $250,000 to $1,000,000+ 0.5% to 1.5% Typically not creditable

Named firms that publish revenue by segment give useful data points. Houlihan Lokey reported Corporate Finance revenue growth driven by transaction completion fees in its most recent 10-K (Houlihan Lokey 10-K, SEC EDGAR). Lazard’s Financial Advisory segment reports retainer plus completion fee revenue (Lazard 10-K, SEC EDGAR). Evercore’s advisory revenue mirrors this two-part structure (Evercore 10-K, SEC EDGAR). Perella Weinberg Partners provides similar segment breakouts (Perella Weinberg 10-K, SEC EDGAR).

Industry-specific retainer patterns: SaaS, healthcare, industrials, home services

Retainer levels within the same enterprise-value band shift by industry vertical. Advisors specializing in a specific sector often charge a modestly higher retainer to reflect the deeper diligence work and buyer-network curation required. The premium is generally $2,000 to $5,000 per month on LMM engagements, and it usually pays for itself in tighter buyer targeting and stronger IOI competition.

Vertical retainer premium patterns in the LMM

Vertical Typical LMM retainer Vertical-specific work included Success fee band
SaaS and technology $15,000 to $25,000 ARR / NRR normalization, cohort analysis, tech stack audit 2% to 5%
Healthcare services (dental, vet, med spa) $12,000 to $20,000 Payor-mix analysis, DSO / VSO buyer targeting, compliance review 2% to 5%
Industrials and manufacturing $10,000 to $20,000 Customer concentration analysis, capex normalization, environmental review 2% to 5%
Home services (HVAC, plumbing, electrical, roofing) $10,000 to $18,000 Route density analysis, service contract review, PE roll-up buyer targeting 3% to 6%
Distribution and B2B services $10,000 to $20,000 Vendor concentration, gross margin normalization, working capital analysis 2% to 5%
Business services (MSP, staffing, marketing) $10,000 to $18,000 Recurring revenue analysis, customer retention audit, key-person risk review 3% to 6%

PitchBook’s private-market reports track sector-specific transaction economics that inform advisor pricing (PitchBook Data). GF Data’s LMM deal reports document quarterly transaction multiples and process characteristics by industry (GF Data). Axial’s deal reports cover LMM transaction origination patterns across verticals (Axial).

For sector-specific sale processes, CT Acquisitions has dedicated guides for HVAC business M&A, SaaS M&A, dental practice M&A, manufacturing M&A, and MSP M&A.

Retainer treatment in dual-track processes and auction sales

A dual-track process runs a private M&A sale in parallel with preparation for an IPO or a public-market alternative. An auction process runs a structured, timed competitive bidding process (typically 2 to 4 rounds). Both structures alter the retainer conversation because they require more advisor hours and often more than one advisory relationship.

In a dual-track, the M&A advisor and IPO underwriters run parallel workstreams. The M&A advisor’s retainer typically runs at the high end of the standard range ($20,000 to $50,000 per month for LMM/MM) because the advisor is producing both a CIM for private buyers and financial materials that will be repurposed for an S-1 filing if the IPO path is selected. Latham & Watkins and Sullivan & Cromwell publish extensively on dual-track mechanics (Latham & Watkins; Sullivan & Cromwell).

In an auction process, the retainer typically runs at the standard LMM/MM level but with a compressed timeline (4 to 8 months instead of 9 to 12), a milestone-heavy structure, and often a higher work-product fee to reflect the more intensive marketing materials required for multi-round bidding. Bain’s private-equity reports document auction economics in the middle-market (Bain Global Private Equity Report). McKinsey covers similar auction-process mechanics in its M&A insights (McKinsey M&A Insights).

Buy-side retainers: how they differ from sell-side

Buy-side M&A advisor retainers work differently. A buyer engaging an advisor to source and negotiate acquisitions pays a monthly retainer of $5,000 to $30,000, a search fee per identified target of $10,000 to $50,000, and a success fee of 1% to 5% on completed acquisitions. Because buyer engagements produce many target evaluations for each closed deal, the retainer plus per-target search fees are the primary economics, not the success fee. Creditability logic still applies but is structured differently.

Buy-side vs sell-side retainer structure

Structure element Sell-side LMM Buy-side LMM
Monthly retainer $10,000 to $25,000 $5,000 to $30,000
Work-product / search fee $25,000 to $100,000 one-time $10,000 to $50,000 per identified target
Success fee 2% to 5% of enterprise value 1% to 5% of enterprise value per closed acquisition
Engagement length 6 to 12 months 12 to 36 months (rolling)
Creditability norm Full or partial creditability common Search fees typically non-creditable; retainer credits vary
Tail period 12 to 24 months 12 to 24 months per identified target

Additional reading on the buy-side dynamic: buy-side M&A advisor engagement structure.

How to read the retainer clause in an engagement letter

The retainer clause typically runs one to three paragraphs. Read it with a specific checklist. Every clause below has a right answer for the seller.

Retainer clause checklist

  1. Monthly amount and payment date. Should specify dollar amount and calendar day of payment.
  2. Creditability language. “Creditable against the success fee” or “credited against and reducing the success fee at closing.” Owner-friendly.
  3. Creditability cap. If capped, cap should be at least $100,000 on a LMM deal.
  4. Creditability percentage. 100% is best. 50% is acceptable. Below 50% deserves pushback.
  5. Work-product fee treatment. Should be addressed explicitly, separately, with its own creditability language.
  6. Refundability of unearned retainers. Usually paid retainers are non-refundable; this is standard.
  7. Suspension clause. Some engagement letters allow retainer suspension between LOI and closing.
  8. Cap on total retainers paid. Rare but negotiable.
  9. Interaction with tail provision. Does the retainer credit survive into a tail-period success fee? This is often silent in engagement letters and should be made explicit.

Skadden’s M&A insights and Kirkland & Ellis’s private-equity commentary treat engagement-letter mechanics as first-order deal economics, on par with the LOI negotiation (Skadden Insights; Kirkland & Ellis). Wilson Sonsini’s private-company M&A resources include engagement letter templates that show typical retainer clause language (Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati).

Retainer vs no-retainer models: which is really cheaper

Some advisors and brokers market “no retainer” or “contingency only” engagements. The offer sounds owner-friendly. It rarely is. A no-retainer advisor typically charges a higher success fee (2 to 4 percentage points above market) and a larger work-product fee to offset the cash-flow risk they are absorbing during the sale process. On a $15M deal, that swap can cost the owner $300,000 to $600,000 at closing.

Cost comparison on a $15M LMM sale

Engagement type Monthly retainer Work-product fee Success fee Total advisor fees at close
Standard retainer, fully creditable $15,000 x 9 = $135,000 (credited) $50,000 (credited) 3.0% = $450,000 ~$465,000
Standard retainer, non-creditable $15,000 x 9 = $135,000 $50,000 3.0% = $450,000 ~$650,000
No-retainer, contingent-only $0 $25,000 5.5% = $825,000 ~$865,000

The no-retainer structure looks cheaper monthly. It is more expensive at close. It also introduces selection risk. Advisors on pure contingency have an incentive to close fast at any price, not close best. That misalignment shows up in transaction outcomes.

The IBBA Market Pulse Report tracks median transaction outcomes by advisor engagement structure and consistently shows that retained engagements deliver higher enterprise value multiples than pure-contingency engagements at similar deal sizes (IBBA Market Pulse Report).

For a broader comparison of business brokers versus M&A advisors, our detailed side-by-side breaks down the fee, service, and outcome differences: how much a business broker charges to sell a business.

Retainer treatment in Rule 10b-5, engagement letter disclosure, and tax

Retainer payments are generally treated as ordinary business expenses for the seller, deductible in the year paid. At closing, the success fee (and any capitalized portion of the retainer or work-product fee) is typically treated as a transaction cost that reduces the seller’s amount realized on the sale, per the M&A tax rules under IRC Section 263(a) and related Treasury Regulations (Internal Revenue Service). Sellers should confirm capitalization treatment with their tax advisor before signing, particularly for stock sales where the tax treatment differs materially from asset sales.

On the disclosure side, when the seller is a public company or the deal is a going-private transaction, the engagement letter and retainer economics are frequently disclosed in SEC proxy filings (Schedule 14A) and in fairness opinions delivered to the board. The SEC’s public search interface EDGAR has thousands of publicly filed banker engagement letters as exhibits to merger proxies (SEC EDGAR Full-Text Search). Private-company sellers do not face public disclosure requirements, but board-approved engagement letters remain the standard governance artifact for private M&A processes. The American Bar Association’s M&A Committee publishes standard engagement letter provisions in its private target M&A deal points studies (ABA Business Law Section M&A Committee).

For an owner considering a QSBS-eligible sale under Section 1202, transaction cost treatment interacts with the QSBS exclusion in ways that make advance planning worth the effort: our detailed guide on QSBS Section 1202 small business stock covers the mechanics. Working capital adjustments and escrow holdbacks also flow through the retainer/success-fee accounting in ways worth reviewing: see net working capital adjustment mechanics and escrow holdback structures.

Data sources: where retainer benchmarks come from

Retainer ranges cited in this guide are triangulated from four data sources: SEC 10-K filings from publicly traded advisory firms, industry association surveys, private-market research reports, and law-firm M&A insight publications. The specific sources:

Cross-referencing across these sources produces the ranges cited above. Individual engagement letters vary within (and occasionally outside) these bands, but the LMM $5,000 to $25,000 monthly retainer, $25,000 to $100,000 work-product fee, and 2% to 5% success fee are the reliable central bands for a $5M to $50M enterprise value sale in 2026.

The CT Acquisitions approach to retainer structure

CT Acquisitions works exclusively with lower-middle-market sellers ($5M to $50M enterprise value) and structures every engagement around transparency and owner-alignment. Monthly retainers are set at the LMM-appropriate level ($10,000 to $20,000 depending on deal complexity), fully or partially creditable against the success fee, and paired with a defined off-ramp so owners are never locked into a stalled process. The engagement letter names the senior advisor personally, not just the firm. Buyer lists are documented at the start of outreach and updated monthly. Tail-period credit preservation is explicit, not implied.

The full curated outreach approach (direct calls to 200 to 400 vetted strategic and financial buyers, not passive marketplace listing) is what the retainer actually funds. The industry-vertical specialization (deep PE-buyer contact networks in niche verticals) is what generates the buyer competition that drives closing multiples. The LMM-only focus (turning away deals outside the $5M to $50M band rather than treating them as junior training grounds) is what keeps senior banker attention on every seller.

To discuss whether your business fits our engagement model, and what a retainer-plus-success-fee structure would look like for your specific situation: schedule a 30-minute exit-readiness call at ctacquisitions.com/contact-us.

For additional context on our advisory model and how we approach sell-side engagements: why hire an M&A advisor, sell-side advisory to maximize exit value, and how to sell a business in 2026.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much is a typical m&a advisor retainer?

A typical m&a advisor retainer for a lower-middle-market sale ($5M to $50M enterprise value) runs $5,000 to $25,000 per month, plus a one-time work-product fee of $25,000 to $100,000 for the CIM, financial model, and buyer list. Core middle-market retainers ($50M to $500M deals) run $25,000 to $50,000 per month. Retainer levels scale with deal complexity, process length, and advisor tier, per IBBA and Pepperdine industry benchmarks.

Is an m&a advisor retainer creditable against the success fee?

An m&a advisor retainer may be fully creditable, partially creditable (typically 50% with a $75,000 to $150,000 cap), or non-creditable, depending entirely on how the engagement letter is written. Creditable means every dollar paid in retainers reduces the success fee at closing. Non-creditable means the advisor keeps both. On a $15M deal with a $15,000 monthly retainer over nine months, the difference is up to $135,000. This term is always negotiable before signing.

Are m&a advisor retainers refundable if the deal does not close?

Paid m&a advisor retainers are generally non-refundable because the advisor performed the work each month the retainer was paid. Standard engagement letters treat retainers as compensation for services rendered, not as a deposit. If a deal fails to close, the paid retainers stay with the advisor. However, unearned retainers (billed but not yet paid) may be waived on termination in some engagement letters. Read the termination clause carefully.

What does the m&a advisor retainer actually pay for?

The m&a advisor retainer funds the analyst, associate, and senior banker hours required to prepare and run the sale process. Concretely: financial cleanup and normalization, CIM drafting (a 40 to 80 page marketing document), financial model construction, buyer target list development (100 to 500 vetted buyers), teaser distribution, NDA management, IOI and LOI negotiation, diligence coordination, and legal documentation support. The success fee at closing is separate from and larger than the retainer.

How long does an m&a advisor retainer last?

An m&a advisor retainer runs for the length of the engagement, typically six to twelve months for a lower-middle-market sale. Most LMM engagement letters cap the initial term at 12 months with a mutual right to extend. Retainer payments continue monthly through the engagement until closing, termination, or the term expiration. Some engagement letters include a retainer suspension clause between LOI signing and closing, during the diligence window.

Can I negotiate a lower m&a advisor retainer?

M&A advisor retainers are negotiable, especially the creditability terms. Owners with clean financials, realistic price expectations, and multiple advisor conversations underway have real leverage. The most productive negotiation levers are full creditability of the retainer and work-product fee, a cap on total retainers paid, a stepped retainer that lowers after month four, and a retainer holiday between LOI and closing. Success fee percentages are harder to negotiate than retainer terms.

What is a work-product fee and how does it differ from the retainer?

A work-product fee is a one-time payment of $25,000 to $100,000 that funds the CIM, financial model, teaser, and buyer target list, paid at engagement signing or CIM delivery. It sits separately from the monthly retainer. Both fees can be creditable, non-creditable, or partially creditable against the success fee, on the same logic. The work-product fee is essentially the CIM-production fee; the monthly retainer is the ongoing process-management fee.

Do bulge-bracket investment banks charge retainers?

Bulge-bracket investment banks (Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, JPMorgan, Citi, Bank of America) often waive monthly retainers on large deals ($500M and up) but charge substantial one-time engagement fees of $250,000 to $1,000,000 or more, plus success fees of 0.5% to 1.5%. These economics only work at scale, which is why bulge brackets rarely take on LMM sub-$100M mandates. Middle-market banks (Houlihan Lokey, Piper Sandler, William Blair, Lincoln International, Raymond James) charge structured retainers alongside success fees on deals below $500M.

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