Buying a business is the rare purchase where the thing you're buying is mostly a set of promises about the future — that last year's earnings will show up again next year, that the customers stay, that the work doesn't walk out the door with the seller. Every step of a well-run acquisition exists to test those promises before your money is committed. What follows is the honest, end-to-end map: how to search, qualify, value, structure, finance, and close — and the questions at each stage that separate a sound acquisition from an expensive lesson.
Stage 1 · before you look
The best buyers narrow before they search. Decide what you can actually operate — industry, size, location, owner involvement — and what you can afford to put at risk. A business you can run well and finance conservatively beats a larger one you'd have to learn on the job while servicing debt you can barely cover. Write the box down; it's the filter that keeps a long search from turning into an emotional one.
Stage 2 · sourcing
Most small and lower-middle-market businesses reach buyers through a broker who represents the seller, often first as a blind teaser — a one-page anonymous summary that lets you gauge fit before either side knows the other. Direct outreach and your own network surface the deals that never get listed. Either way, expect to sign a non-disclosure agreement before you see real financials; confidentiality protects the seller's business and signals that you're a serious party.
Stage 3 · the first real read
Once you're under NDA and looking at financials, build your own view of what the business earns for an owner — not the headline revenue. The free valuation calculator turns a target's seller's discretionary earnings into a range in a couple of minutes, and how a business is valued explains what moves a multiple. Sellers and their brokers are qualifying you in return — being ready to show that you're financeable and serious gets you to the real numbers faster.
Stage 4 · agreeing the shape of the deal
Price is only half of a deal; structure is the other half. A letter of intent records the headline number alongside how it's paid — cash at close, a bank or SBA loan, an earn-out tied to future performance, and often seller financing that keeps the departing owner invested in a clean handoff. The LOI is usually non-binding on price but sets the exclusivity window in which you'll run diligence, so it's worth getting the structure roughly right before the clock starts.
Stage 5 · confirming the promises
This is where you test whether the earnings are real and transferable to you. Reconcile the financial statements against tax returns and bank deposits; look hard at customer concentration, owner-dependence, the lease, key contracts, employees, and any legal, tax, or licensing exposure. The point isn't to find a flawless business — there's no such thing — but to price the risks you uncover and decide which ones are dealbreakers and which are just negotiating leverage.
Stage 6 · paying for it
Few buyers pay all cash. A typical acquisition stacks buyer equity, a bank or SBA-backed loan, and seller financing — which means the cash you bring to closing is often a fraction of the price, and the business's own cash flow services most of the debt. The discipline is to size that debt so the business can cover it comfortably in a normal year, not a perfect one. Line up your financing in parallel with diligence so a clean diligence result can move straight to a close.
Stage 7 · the handoff
Closing is a legal event — purchase agreement, funding, and the transfer of assets or stock, handled with your own attorney and accountant. But the deal isn't really done at the signing table. A thoughtful transition period, with the seller available to introduce customers and document how the business actually runs, is what turns a set of purchased promises into a business that keeps performing under your ownership.
Start a confidential inquiry — tell us in two sentences what you're looking to buy and the size you can finance, no documents — and we'll give you an honest read on fit and process. Sizing up a specific target? Run its numbers through the free valuation calculator, then see what sellers look for in a buyer so you reach the real financials faster.
From a signed letter of intent to a close, many small and lower-middle-market deals run roughly two to four months through diligence and financing, and the search that precedes it can take much longer. The same forces that set a seller's timeline shape the buyer's — see how long a sale takes for the moving parts.
They're different risks, not simply different prices. An established business costs more upfront but comes with existing customers, cash flow, and a team; a startup costs less to begin but carries the risk that the revenue never arrives. Buyers who value cash flow and a running operation over building from zero tend to favor acquisition — and pay for the earnings that already exist.
Yes. A broker who listed the business represents the seller and owes their primary duty to that side, however fair the process. As the buyer you should retain your own attorney for the purchase agreement and your own accountant for diligence — their job is to protect your interests specifically.
Nothing on this page is investment, legal, tax, or financial advice, a recommendation or solicitation to buy any particular business, or a representation about the availability, financing, performance, or returns of any acquisition. Process descriptions reflect commonly observed patterns; individual transactions vary widely, and past patterns do not predict future results. Always retain your own legal, tax, and financial advisors before entering into any transaction.
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.