Working Capital Target in a Business Sale: The 2026 Founder’s Guide
Christoph Totter · Managing Partner, CT Acquisitions
20+ home services M&A transactions across HVAC, plumbing, pest control, roofing · Updated May 19, 2026
The working capital target is the buyer-required level of working capital that must be delivered at closing. Working capital is calculated as: Accounts Receivable + Inventory − Accounts Payable − Accrued Liabilities. In a cash-free, debt-free deal structure (standard in LMM M&A), the seller keeps all cash and pays off all debt at close; working capital target normalizes for the operational liquidity needed to run the business post-close.
Most sellers underestimate how much the working capital target affects net proceeds. Sophisticated sellers negotiate the target during LOI — averaging window (12-month vs 24-month), components (which items are in/out), seasonality adjustment, and dispute-resolution mechanism. Done right, this can move $500K-$3M+ at close. Done badly, the seller writes an unexpected $500K-$2M check at the working capital settlement.

“Working capital target is the most-overlooked LOI provision and one of the highest-leverage. A 12-month vs 24-month averaging window can move $1M+ in real cash at close — and most sellers never negotiate it.”
TL;DR — the 90-second brief
- The working capital target is the buyer-required level of working capital delivered to the buyer at closing. Above target = additional cash to seller; below target = seller writes check for the shortfall.
- Components: A/R + inventory − A/P − accrued liabilities. Excludes cash and debt (treated separately in cash-free, debt-free deal structure).
- Most deals use trailing 12-month average; some use trailing 24-month for cyclical businesses.
- The target negotiation can move $500K-$3M+ in seller’s favor on a $10-30M deal.
- CT Acquisitions negotiates working capital target as standard in every LMM sale process. The buyer pays our fee at close — the seller pays nothing.
Key Takeaways
- Working capital target = required working capital delivered at close. Above target = cash to seller; below = seller writes check.
- Calculation: A/R + Inventory − A/P − Accrued Liabilities. Cash and debt excluded (separate in cash-free, debt-free deals).
- Most common averaging: trailing 12-month average. Cyclical businesses: 24-month average or season-adjusted.
- Negotiating leverage: target methodology and components. Both negotiable at LOI stage.
- Settlement timing: typically 60-90 days post-close, after audit of closing balance sheet.
- True-up payment: difference between target and actual WC at close. Can swing $500K-$3M+ on LMM deals.
- Seasonality matters: Q4 sellers may have inflated WC; Q1 sellers depressed.
- Dispute resolution: typically handled by accounting arbitrator (Big 4 or specialty firm) if buyer-seller can’t agree.
What is working capital target?
The working capital target is the agreed-upon level of working capital that must be in the business at closing. In a typical cash-free, debt-free LMM deal: the buyer pays Enterprise Value (negotiated multiple of EBITDA), the seller keeps all cash, pays off all debt, and delivers the business with working capital at the target level. Difference between target and actual = true-up payment between buyer and seller at the post-close settlement.
Why the target exists: working capital normalization. Cash and debt are excluded from EV-based pricing because each can vary materially close-to-close. Working capital varies too — but unlike cash, it can’t be fully extracted by the seller before close (A/R is owed to the business, A/P must be paid by the business, inventory must be there to ship). The working capital target normalizes for the operational liquidity the business needs to function post-close.
Negotiating working capital target on your business sale?
CT Acquisitions negotiates working capital target as standard in every LMM sale process — averaging methodology, components, dispute resolution. The buyer pays our fee at close — the seller pays nothing.
How working capital is calculated
Standard working capital formula in LMM M&A. Working Capital = Accounts Receivable + Inventory − Accounts Payable − Accrued Liabilities. Most LMM deals exclude: cash and equivalents (already settled), debt (paid off at close), deferred revenue (typically treated as liability to roll forward), and certain other items by negotiation.
Components in detail. Accounts Receivable: usually included at gross with allowance for doubtful accounts (depending on definition). Inventory: finished goods, work-in-progress, raw materials, all valued at cost. Accounts Payable: trade payables to vendors. Accrued Liabilities: payroll accruals, sales tax, customer deposits, warranty reserves, vacation accruals.
| Component | Counts as WC? | Negotiation note |
|---|---|---|
| Cash on hand | No (typically) | Excluded in most LOIs — seller keeps the cash |
| Accounts receivable (current) | Yes | Push to exclude AR over 90 days as “non-current” |
| Inventory | Yes | Negotiate exclusion of obsolete or slow-moving stock |
| Prepaid expenses | Yes | Often the seller’s most-disputed line |
| Accounts payable | No (deducted) | Subtracted from working capital |
| Accrued expenses | No (deducted) | Includes accrued payroll, vacation, sales tax |
| Customer deposits / unearned | No (deducted) | Treated as a liability for unfulfilled service |
| Debt (short or long-term) | Excluded entirely | Handled separately under “debt-free, cash-free” mechanic |
Averaging methodology: 12-month vs 24-month
The averaging window for setting the target dramatically affects seller proceeds. Trailing 12-month average is most common; cyclical businesses use 24-month average. The choice affects whether closing balance is above or below target.
| Methodology | Best For | Seller Impact |
|---|---|---|
| Trailing 12-month average | Stable, non-cyclical businesses | Neutral to slightly positive |
| Trailing 24-month average | Cyclical businesses (construction, retail) | Smooths out seasonal effects |
| TTM at specific close date (no averaging) | Buyer-favorable | Often disadvantages seller during low season |
| Season-adjusted (12-month with seasonality) | Highly seasonal businesses (retail, agriculture) | Most seller-favorable for seasonal businesses |
| Methodology | How peg is set | Bias | When it favors seller |
|---|---|---|---|
| Trailing 12-month average | Average of monthly WC for the 12 months before close | Neutral | Default; smooths seasonal swings |
| Trailing 3-month average | Average of the most recent 3 months only | Seller-friendly when business is growing | Recent growth = higher peg, but seller leaves more |
| Same-month-prior-year | Use the WC level from the same month last year | Buyer-friendly for seasonal businesses | Push back if your business is seasonal |
| Buyer-adjusted (no methodology) | Buyer picks; methodology unspecified in LOI | Heavily buyer-friendly | RED FLAG — require explicit methodology before signing |
Closing day mechanics
On closing day: an estimated working capital amount is delivered, calculated by management. Typical sequence: 5-7 days before close, seller delivers estimated WC schedule + supporting documents. Buyer reviews and either accepts estimate or proposes adjustments. At close, estimated WC vs target shortfall/excess is built into closing wire (seller receives more or less than initial expectation).
Post-close settlement: the true-up
True-up is the post-close settlement of working capital target vs actual closing balance. Timeline: typically 60-90 days post-close, after audit of closing balance sheet. Process: (1) buyer engages auditor to prepare closing balance sheet, (2) seller reviews and either accepts or disputes, (3) if disputed, accounting arbitrator (Big 4 typical) resolves. True-up payment can be material — $500K-$3M+ on LMM deals.
Negotiating the working capital target
Six specific negotiating moves consistently improve seller outcomes. Each is buyer-negotiable at LOI stage.
- Use seller-favorable averaging window. For stable businesses, 12-month average is fair. For seasonal businesses, push for 24-month or season-adjusted.
- Define components carefully. Include or exclude specific items (deferred revenue, warranty reserves, contingent liabilities) carefully. Each affects target.
- Negotiate dispute resolution mechanism. Big 4 audit at buyer expense, arbitration timeline (60-90 days), seller right to participate in process.
- Pre-close balance sheet audit. Seller hires independent auditor to validate WC before close; reduces post-close dispute risk.
- Establish caps on true-up. Cap maximum buyer claim at 1-2% of EV. Protects seller from buyer-favorable methodology disputes.
- Accept buyer’s draft only with full review. Buyer typically drafts WC definition; seller should negotiate every component.
Common WC target mistakes
Five recurring mistakes destroy WC target value for sellers. Each is correctable with proper LOI negotiation.
- Accepting buyer’s default 12-month average without seasonality adjustment. Cyclical businesses suffer dramatically.
- Not auditing pre-close. Closing-day surprises ($500K-$2M underestimates) are common when sellers don’t audit.
- Ignoring deferred revenue treatment. Including/excluding deferred revenue can move $500K+ on subscription/service businesses.
- Accepting buyer’s accounting policies. Buyer may use stricter inventory reserves, larger doubtful-account allowances than seller historical practice.
- Not capping true-up. Without a cap, buyer can claim large adjustments based on disputed methodology.
Seasonal businesses: special considerations
Highly seasonal businesses (retail, agriculture, summer/winter services) need season-adjusted WC targets. 12-month averaging penalizes sellers closing in low season (WC at close is below 12-month average → seller writes check) and rewards closing in high season. Season-adjusted methodology: adjust target by historical month-specific pattern. Cleaner: 24-month averaging smooths out seasonal effects entirely.
Deferred revenue and customer deposits
Subscription and service businesses have deferred revenue (cash received for future services). In WC target: typically treated as accrued liability that reduces working capital. The choice matters: a SaaS business with $2M deferred revenue has $2M less working capital (and thus $2M less seller payment) under buyer-favorable definition. Negotiate carefully — argue deferred revenue should be excluded entirely (treated separately as ‘debt-like item’).
Working capital target by industry
Industries vary widely in normal working capital levels. Below are typical WC-to-revenue ratios.
| Industry | Typical WC/Revenue Ratio | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Manufacturing | 15-30% | Higher = inventory + receivables |
| Distribution / wholesale | 20-35% | Heavy inventory + accounts receivable |
| Service businesses | 5-15% | Receivables main component |
| SaaS / subscription | 5-10% | Often negative due to deferred revenue |
| Retail | 10-20% | Inventory heavy |
| Construction | 20-40% | WIP receivables, retainage |
| Healthcare services | 10-20% | Receivables + insurance billing |
| Professional services | 5-15% | Receivables main component |
Settlement disputes: how they resolve
5-10% of LMM deals have meaningful WC settlement disputes. Most disputes resolve through: (1) management discussion (first 30 days), (2) auditor review (30-60 days), (3) arbitration (60-90 days). Costs: $25K-$200K typically (split between buyer and seller). Outcome: typically split-the-difference plus settlement cost allocation.
Conclusion
Working capital target is the most-overlooked LOI provision and one of the highest-leverage for the seller. Done right, target negotiation can move $500K-$3M+ at close. Done badly, the seller writes an unexpected check at post-close settlement. CT Acquisitions negotiates working capital target as standard in every LMM sale process. The buyer pays our fee at close — the seller pays nothing.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is working capital target in a business sale?
The working capital target is the buyer-required level of working capital that must be in the business at closing. If actual working capital exceeds target, seller receives additional cash; if below target, seller writes a check for the shortfall. Working capital = A/R + Inventory − A/P − Accrued Liabilities (excluding cash and debt, treated separately).
How is working capital target calculated?
Standard methodology: trailing 12-month average of working capital, calculated as A/R + Inventory − A/P − Accrued Liabilities. Cyclical businesses use 24-month average to smooth seasonal effects. Specific deals may use TTM (trailing twelve months at close date) or season-adjusted methodology. Choose carefully — the methodology can move $500K-$3M at close.
Why does working capital target matter?
Because it can shift $500K-$3M+ in the seller’s favor or against the seller at the post-close settlement. The negotiation happens at LOI stage and affects: averaging window, components included/excluded, dispute resolution, and cap on adjustments. Most sellers don’t negotiate the target carefully and lose money as a result.
When is the working capital target paid?
Post-close, after audit of the closing balance sheet (typically 60-90 days post-close). Sequence: (1) buyer engages auditor to prepare closing balance sheet, (2) compare actual WC to target, (3) settle difference between buyer and seller. Disputes can extend to 90-180 days.
What’s included in working capital for M&A purposes?
Standard: Accounts Receivable + Inventory − Accounts Payable − Accrued Liabilities. Excluded: cash and equivalents (treated separately), debt (paid at close), deferred revenue (often debt-like), and various non-operating items. Specific definition negotiated at LOI; seller should review every component carefully.
Is deferred revenue included in working capital?
Variable. Buyer-favorable interpretation: deferred revenue is an accrued liability reducing working capital. Seller-favorable: deferred revenue is a debt-like item separate from WC calculation. For SaaS, subscription, and prepaid-service businesses, the deferred revenue treatment can move $500K-$2M at close. Negotiate explicitly at LOI.
What if working capital at close is below target?
Seller writes a check for the shortfall at the post-close settlement. Typical timeline: 60-90 days post-close. Common scenarios: business closed in a low season (WC naturally low), large customer payments collected pre-close, or aggressive A/R collection by seller pre-close. Seller can avoid surprise by auditing pre-close.
What if working capital at close is above target?
Buyer pays seller additional cash for the excess. Typical timeline: 60-90 days post-close. Sellers seeking to maximize this typically: collect A/R aggressively in last 30 days pre-close, manage A/P payment timing, retain inventory close to target levels. Some buyers cap the upside in LOI; negotiate against this if possible.
How can I negotiate a better working capital target?
Six specific moves: (1) use seller-favorable averaging window (24-month for seasonal businesses), (2) define components carefully (deferred revenue, warranty reserves, contingent liabilities), (3) negotiate dispute resolution mechanism, (4) hire pre-close balance sheet auditor, (5) cap true-up at 1-2% of EV, (6) review buyer’s draft definition before signing LOI. Each move can save $250K-$1M.
Who pays for the working capital settlement audit?
Typically the buyer (especially in PE deals). The buyer engages Big 4 or specialty accounting firm to audit closing balance sheet. Seller may engage own auditor at seller’s expense to validate the buyer’s findings. If dispute escalates to arbitration, costs are typically split 50/50 between buyer and seller, with arbitrator decisions binding.
What’s the difference between working capital target and net working capital?
Same concept, different language. Net Working Capital (NWC) = Current Assets − Current Liabilities. Working Capital Target is the specific NWC level required at closing. Some deals use ‘Net Working Capital Adjustment’ instead of ‘Working Capital Target’ but the mechanics are identical.
Why work with CT Acquisitions on working capital target negotiations?
CT Acquisitions negotiates working capital target as standard in every LMM sale process — averaging methodology, components, seasonality adjustment, dispute resolution. The buyer pays our fee at close — the seller pays nothing. No exclusivity, no contracts.
Related Guide: No-Shop Clause in Business Sale — LOI exclusivity provisions
Related Guide: Rep and Warranty Insurance — Post-close protection structure
Related Guide: What Is a Stock Sale? — Deal structure context
Related Guide: Difference Between Merger and Acquisition — Deal-structure fundamentals
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