Selling a business in Hawaii in 2026 typically closes in 60-120 days with a buy-side advisor — vs 9-12 months with a traditional broker. The buyer pays our fee at closing, so Hawaii owners pay zero. Below: who’s buying in Hawaii, what they pay, the state-specific tax and regulatory framework that materially affects deal proceeds, and how to avoid the standard 6-12% broker commission entirely.
Quick Answer
A Hawaii business sale in 2026 typically takes 60-120 days through a buy-side advisor, compared to 9-12 months through a traditional broker. The buyer (not the seller) pays advisor fees at closing, eliminating the standard 6-12% broker commission. Hawaii’s state-specific tax environment, regulatory bodies, industry mix, and SBA lending dynamics all materially affect deal structure, timing, and net proceeds — the sections below walk through each.
Hawaii M&A is small-scale by mainland standards but resilient. Tourism (~21% of state GDP, $16B+ visitor spending) drives recurring activity in hospitality, resort services, restaurants, and tour operators. Defense — Pearl Harbor, Hickam AFB, Schofield Barracks, with ~$13B in annual DoD spend — sustains a steady stream of federal-contracting roll-ups in IT services, logistics, and base support. Agriculture (coffee, macadamia, tropical fruit, aquaculture — Hawaii has a 1,333% location quotient in aquaculture) attracts strategic and PE buyers focused on specialty foods. Cross-state buyer dynamics matter: most acquirers of $1M-$25M EBITDA Hawaii businesses come from California, Texas, or Asia-Pacific, and HARPTA withholding (7.25% on gross proceeds for non-resident sellers of real-property-heavy businesses) requires structuring care.
Hawaii’s tax regime is unusually unfavorable for sellers of mid-market businesses. The state imposes a top personal income tax rate of 11% — the highest in the U.S. — and a corporate income tax of up to 6.4%. Capital gains receive a preferential 7.25% maximum rate that applies to business-sale proceeds regardless of holding period. The signature tax is Hawaii’s General Excise Tax (GET): not a sales tax but a 4% state-level levy on virtually all business gross receipts (4.5% with Honolulu, Maui, Kauai, and Hawai’i County surcharges). B2B wholesale transactions are taxed at 0.5% with a Form G-17 resale certificate. Because GET layers on services, rents, and B2B activity, buyers must model it in every deal. Property taxes are among the lowest nationally (~0.28%), partially offsetting high income costs.
The Hawaii Department of Commerce and Consumer Affairs (DCCA) is the central business regulator, with nine divisions covering Business Registration, Financial Institutions, Insurance, Securities, Professional & Vocational Licensing, and the Regulated Industries Complaints Office. Real estate, contractor, and broker licensing are notoriously strict. The Hawaii Department of Taxation administers GET, income, and capital gains taxes including HARPTA withholding. The Hawaii Tourism Authority oversees the dominant industry. County-level regulators (Honolulu, Maui, Kauai, Hawai’i) layer permitting requirements on top of state rules, and the Department of Land and Natural Resources is critical for any deal touching agricultural land or shoreline assets.
Hawaii’s flagship industries for mid-market M&A are tourism and hospitality (hotels, tour operators, F&B chains) at about 21% of GDP; defense contracting and federal services tied to Pearl Harbor and Indo-Pacific Command; agriculture and specialty food production (Kona coffee, macadamia nuts, papaya, aquaculture); construction and trades, perpetually undersupplied given housing pressure; healthcare services (Kaiser Permanente, Hawaii Pacific Health, Queen’s Health Systems); renewable energy and utility services; and emerging biotech / medical research clustered around the UH Cancer Center and Kapi’olani Medical Center. Film production is a state-incentivized growth sector.
Hawaii’s population fell to 1,432,820 as of July 2025 — a net loss of 2,132 residents and an extension of the multi-year outmigration trend, with 8,876 net domestic outmigrants partially offset by Asia-Pacific immigration. Median household income was $98,317 (ranked 5th nationally), but cost of living is the highest in the U.S.: August 2024 median home sale price hit $733,800 (+11.7% YoY) and median gross rent of $1,813 runs ~40% above the national mean. About 26.1% of residents face severe housing problems. The consequences for M&A: labor scarcity at every level, premium wages, and dependence on imported goods that inflate cost of goods sold. Sellers should expect buyers to discount for these structural costs.
Hawaii’s SBA market is concentrated among local institutions. For fiscal 2025, the SBA named First Hawaiian Bank, Central Pacific Bank, and Hawaii National Bank as Lenders of the Year — Central Pacific Bank earned its 17th Category II Lender of the Year award since 2004. In FY2024, CPB led the state with 113 7(a) loans totaling $9.5M, and in February 2025 launched Business Express, the state’s first online small-business lending platform. First Hawaiian Bank and Bank of Hawaii anchor the largest SBA originations by dollar value.
Deal activity in Hawaii concentrates in a small number of regional corridors. Here are the metros and regions where we are most active:
Dominant metro with ~1M residents, the state’s financial, professional services, and federal-contracting center; the highest-velocity M&A market in Hawaii.
Resort-driven economy still recovering from the 2023 Lahaina wildfires; hospitality, construction, and specialty agriculture are active deal categories.
Coffee, macadamia, agritourism, and aquaculture concentrate here; large land-asset M&A skews to ranch and ag operations.
Smaller deal scale; tourism, hospitality services, and small-business roll-ups dominate.
The buyer pool acquiring $1M-$25M EBITDA businesses in Hawaii splits into four primary categories:
Often the right fit for a 2-3 DVM medical practice, a 5-10 employee MSP, or an owner-operator services business. Search funders are typically MBA-trained operators backed by committed equity pools who acquire a single business and become the CEO. Independent sponsors raise deal-by-deal capital. Both pay competitive multiples for the right asset.
Single-family and multi-family offices in Hawaii and the surrounding region are active acquirers of recurring-revenue, low-CapEx businesses. They tend to hold longer (10+ years vs 4-6 for PE), value seller-friendly structures, and often retain founders post-close.
Lower middle-market PE platforms with $25M-$300M of committed capital are the most common buyer for $2M-$10M EBITDA targets. Hawaii-active platforms typically source from the surrounding region and pay 5-9x EBITDA for clean recurring-revenue assets.
Industry consolidators (often themselves PE-backed) acquire competitors and tuck-ins. Strategics frequently pay the highest multiples because they can extract synergies that financial buyers cannot, particularly for businesses with strong customer overlap or technical capabilities.
Valuation in Hawaii follows the same EBITDA-tier framework that applies nationally, adjusted for Hawaii-specific tax environment and industry mix. Owner-operator businesses under $1M EBITDA typically clear 3-5x SDE. Growing $1M-$3M EBITDA businesses with documented recurring revenue and a real management bench clear 5-7x EBITDA. Platform-quality $3M-$10M EBITDA assets with low customer concentration, growing markets, and clean financials clear 7-10x EBITDA. Top-of-band specialty assets (specialty B2B services, recurring-revenue SaaS, healthcare-adjacent professional practices) can clear 10-15x EBITDA. Hawaii’s state-specific tax environment affects the seller’s net proceeds materially — particularly when the business is structured as a pass-through and the proceeds flow as ordinary or capital-gain income to a resident.
Our free three-minute valuation survey generates a directional range based on your revenue, EBITDA, customer mix, growth profile, and industry — calibrated to current 2026 Hawaii comparables.
A typical confidential Hawaii sale through CT Acquisitions runs 60-120 days from first call to close:
The buyer pays our fee at close as part of their cost of acquisition. The seller pays no commission, no retainer, no success fee — nothing — and signs no exclusivity contract.
The traditional path for selling a $1M-$25M EBITDA Hawaii business is to hire a state-licensed business broker who charges 6-12% of the sale price as commission, plus typically a $5K-$25K retainer. On a $5M deal that’s $300K-$600K out of the seller’s proceeds. A buy-side advisor like CT Acquisitions offers the same buyer pool, the same documentation quality, the same negotiation discipline — but charges the buyer instead of the seller. The economics work because qualified institutional buyers value access to off-market, advisor-vetted deal flow, and they pay our fee as part of their cost of acquisition. The result for a Hawaii seller: full sale proceeds, no commission, no retainer, no contract.
The strongest 2024-2026 buyer demand for Hawaii businesses concentrates in recurring-revenue and tech-enabled services: managed IT services (MSP), commercial HVAC, insurance agencies, CPA and accounting firms, wealth management and RIAs, veterinary practices, fire and life-safety protection, pool service, and paving and asphalt. These verticals all have active PE-backed platform consolidators paying 5-12x EBITDA depending on size and quality, and most platforms acquire across all 50 states, so Hawaii-headquartered targets in these verticals see a competitive bidder pool. Each sub-guide above walks through the named PE buyers, current valuation multiples, and Hawaii-specific deal mechanics for that vertical.
If you operate in one of these verticals, our state-specific sub-guides walk through the named PE buyers actively acquiring in Hawaii, current valuation multiples, and deal mechanics specific to that vertical. Each guide is research-backed with verified 2024-2026 platform deals and Hawaii-specific regulatory factors:
Companion guides:
Book a confidential 30-minute call or take the free three-minute valuation survey. No fee, no retainer, no contract.
What is your Hawaii business actually worth in 2026?
CT Acquisitions runs a confidential, buy-side process. No broker commission, no retainer, no exclusivity contract — the buyer pays our fee.
It depends on size, industry, recurring revenue, growth, and customer concentration. Owner-operator businesses under $1M EBITDA typically clear 3-5x SDE in Hawaii. $1M-$3M EBITDA businesses clear 5-7x EBITDA. $3M-$10M EBITDA platform-quality assets clear 7-10x EBITDA. Top-of-band specialty assets reach 10-15x. Our free three-minute valuation survey generates a directional range calibrated to current 2026 Hawaii comparables. Hawaii’s state-specific tax environment also materially affects what the seller actually nets — see the tax section above for the rate detail.
A confidential Hawaii business sale through a buy-side advisor typically runs 60-120 days from first call to close. A traditional broker process usually runs 9-12 months. The 60-120 day window includes 1-2 weeks of materials prep, 2-4 weeks of confidential buyer outreach, 4-8 weeks to indications of interest and letter of intent, and 8-16 weeks of diligence and closing — including any state-specific premise permit, license transfer, or regulatory body notification that Hawaii requires.
No. The traditional path is to hire a state-licensed business broker who charges 6-12% of the sale price as commission, plus typically a $5K-$25K retainer. A buy-side advisor like CT Acquisitions offers the same buyer pool, the same documentation quality, the same negotiation discipline — but charges the buyer instead of the seller. The seller pays no commission, no retainer, no success fee, and signs no exclusivity contract.
Not until you want them to. The CT Acquisitions process is confidential by default: no public listing, no broker network, no email blast, no auction process. We approach a curated, qualified buyer pool quietly and only share the company name after the buyer has signed an NDA and confirmed serious interest. Particularly important for tighter Hawaii markets where word travels fast.
$0. The buyer pays our advisor fee at closing as part of their cost of acquisition. We don’t charge Hawaii sellers a retainer, success fee, or any other fee at any stage. If a deal doesn’t close, you owe us nothing.
Our network is most active for businesses with $1M to $25M of EBITDA, which translates roughly to $3M to $100M+ in revenue depending on margins. If your business is smaller, we may still have qualified search-fund or family-office buyers for it, but the alternative is also good: many smaller Hawaii businesses do well selling directly to a key employee or competitor with a transactional attorney handling the paperwork. Start a 15-minute conversation and we’ll tell you honestly which path fits your situation best.