A surprising share of small-business sales aren't paid for entirely in cash at closing — the seller carries part of the price as a note, repaid over time. Seller financing is common for good reasons: it bridges the gap between what a buyer can fund up front and what the business is worth, it signals real confidence in the business, and it often raises the total a seller ultimately nets. It also carries genuine risk. Here's what a seller note is, the terms you'll typically see, the trade-offs on both sides, and how it fits alongside bank and SBA financing — written plainly, so you can take an informed question to your own advisors.
In a seller-financed deal, the buyer pays part of the price at closing and signs a promissory note for the rest — a written promise to repay the balance, with interest, over an agreed term. The note is usually secured against the assets of the business and backed by the buyer's personal guarantee. In effect, the seller becomes a lender to the buyer for a slice of the deal. Owners offer it because it does three things at once: it expands the pool of buyers who can afford the business, it tells every buyer that the seller believes the business will keep performing, and it can lift the headline price a buyer is willing to agree to.
Why sellers offer it
What to weigh against it
*Installment-sale tax treatment is specific to your situation and not automatic — confirm with your own tax advisor.
Every note is negotiated for the specific transaction; the figures below are commonly observed ranges, not an offer of terms.
Seller financing and bank financing aren't either/or — they routinely stack. A common main-street structure pairs a buyer's cash down payment, an SBA-backed bank loan for the bulk of the price, and a seller note for a final slice, sometimes on standby to satisfy the lender's equity requirement. The lender's underwriting timeline is often the longest single stretch in how long the sale takes, so how the financing is assembled shapes both the price and the calendar. The cleaner and more verifiable the business — see how to prepare your business for sale — the more financing options a buyer can bring to the table.
Start a confidential inquiry — two sentences about the business, no documents — and we'll walk through the structures a buyer would realistically bring, and where a seller note tends to help or hurt for your situation. Want your number first? Run the free valuation calculator and see how a business is valued. Any specific note terms are a matter for your own legal and tax advisors.
Not necessarily — often the opposite over the full term. You receive less cash at closing, but the carried balance earns interest and the willingness to finance frequently supports a higher agreed price and a wider buyer pool. The real question is your need for cash now versus return over time, weighed against the risk of carrying the note.
That's the core risk, which is why structure matters. A well-drafted note is secured against the business's assets and personally guaranteed, giving the seller remedies — but enforcement takes effort and isn't guaranteed to make you whole. Vetting the buyer up front (see qualifying buyers) and having counsel draft the security properly are the best protections.
It can be — installment-sale treatment may let you recognize gain as payments arrive rather than all at once — but the rules are specific and not automatic. This is a question for your tax advisor on your actual numbers, not something to assume.
This page is an educational overview of a common deal structure. It is not an offer of financing or financing terms, not tax, legal, accounting, or financial advice, and not a recommendation of any particular structure for any transaction. Rate, term, and percentage figures describe commonly observed market patterns and vary widely by deal; individual transactions differ. Decisions about seller financing should be made with your own legal, tax, and financial 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.