The honest answer: commonly six to twelve months from going to market to closing — and the part owners picture as "selling" is usually the shorter half. What follows is the stage-by-stage reality, what compresses each stage, and where deals actually stall. Every figure here is a commonly observed range, not a promise; industry, price point, and preparation move every number.
Before market · weeks to years — you control this one
Cleaning the books, documenting the add-back schedule, reducing owner dependence, fixing the issues diligence would otherwise find. This stage is elastic: a prepared business compresses it to weeks; an unprepared one either spends months here or pays for the skip later, in price. The exit-readiness checklist is the working document for this stage.
Typically 2–4 weeks
Normalizing earnings, selecting comparables, settling the go-to-market price, and building the blind profile and the confidential information memorandum a qualified buyer sees after an NDA. Pricing is the decision that sets the whole clock: priced to the market, the marketing stage works; priced on hope, the listing sits.
Typically 2–6 months — the widest variable
The business goes to market anonymously — a blind profile, not a name. Inquiries are NDA-gated and financially qualified before they see the books. The right comparison for this stage is fishing with a sorted net: most inquiries are not real buyers, and the discipline of sorting them is what protects both the timeline and the confidentiality.
Typically 2–6 weeks of negotiation
Offers arrive as letters of intent or purchase agreements; price, structure (cash at close, seller financing, earnouts), training period, and non-compete terms get negotiated. More than one interested buyer at the same time is the single strongest accelerant — and the strongest negotiating position — a seller can have.
Typically 30–90 days; SBA financing often 45–90 on its own
The buyer verifies everything: financials, taxes, leases, licenses, contracts, equipment. If the deal is SBA-financed — as many main-street deals are — the lender's underwriting runs in parallel with its own document appetite. This is where unprepared deals go to die: every surprise restarts a clock, and every slow document response stretches one.
Typically 2–4 weeks
Final agreements, lease assignment, license transfers, escrow, and the handoff plan. Most sales include a training period — commonly two to four weeks of the seller teaching the buyer the business, sometimes longer by agreement. Employees are usually told at or after closing, as part of a planned confidentiality sequence, not before.
Start a confidential inquiry — describe the business in two sentences and we'll tell you honestly what's realistic given your industry, your numbers, and your goal date. Planning ahead instead? Start with the exit-readiness checklist and the free valuation calculator.
It happens — typically when a prepared, fairly priced business meets a buyer who was already looking in that exact niche, often paying cash. It's the favorable tail of the distribution, not a plannable outcome.
More than any other factor. Buyers comparison-shop within an industry, and a listing priced far above its earnings support doesn't generate lowball offers — it generates silence. Stale listings then face the "what's wrong with it?" discount.
Businesses sell best on their numbers' schedule, not the calendar's: three years of rising revenue is worth more than any season. The practical move is to start preparation early so that when your window opens — personal, market, or industry — the business is ready to walk through it.
Nothing on this page is an appraisal, a broker price opinion, or a commitment that any business will sell within any period of time, at any price, or at all. Timeline figures describe commonly observed market patterns and individual results vary widely. Nothing on this page is legal, tax, or financial advice; consult your own advisors.
Dom Dominguez, MBA, MS is a Florida-licensed business broker. As required by Florida Real Estate Commission Rule 61J2, the broker license is registered with Hedgestone Business Advisors, a trade name of Steinberg Re Holdings, LLC, a Florida limited liability company (collectively, "Hedgestone"). Hedgestone neither owns nor operates this Site; this disclosure appears solely for brokerage-licensure compliance. Vaultolio is a brand name for the website only and is not itself a legal entity or licensed brokerage. Florida Broker License No. FL BK3529743. Mailing address: 2431 NW 92nd Ave, Coral Springs, FL 33065. Phone: 813-389-9466. Vaultolio does not claim or represent licensure in any other state.