What does a business broker do and what do they charge?
A business broker finds buyers, manages the process, and guides you to a closed sale. Here's what they handle, what it costs, and what to watch for.
March 21, 2026
May 17, 2026
For most trades business owners selling a business worth $500K or more, using a business broker produces better outcomes than going solo. Not because brokers are magic, but because selling a business is a full-time job for 9 to 12 months, and good brokers have buyer networks, deal experience, and negotiating discipline that owners don’t. Whether you need a broker or something more sophisticated depends on how big your business is and who the likely buyer is.
Business brokers work on deals roughly $500K to $5M. They’re paid a commission only when a deal closes, typically 8 to 12% for deals under $1M, with minimums often around $15,000 to $25,000. Their buyer pool is mostly individuals: first-time buyers, SBA-financed buyers, and small operators looking to acquire. Good brokers find buyers through their own networks, targeted outreach, and listing sites like BizBuySell. They handle confidentiality, screen buyers, and manage the process so you can keep running your business.
The IBBA (International Business Brokers Association) issues the CBI designation (Certified Business Intermediary) to experienced brokers who meet ongoing education requirements. It’s worth asking whether a broker you’re interviewing holds it.
M&A advisors work on deals roughly $3M to $50M+. They charge a monthly retainer ($5,000 to $10,000 per month is typical) plus a success fee, often structured on the “Double Lehman” formula: about 9 to 10% on the first million, declining on larger amounts. They run a structured competitive process. First an anonymous one-pager (called a “teaser”) goes out to qualified buyers. Then a full information package (the CIM, 30 to 80 pages) is shared only after an NDA is signed. Then management presentations and simultaneous competing bids. Their buyer pool is private equity firms, strategic acquirers, and corporate buyers. A completely different type of buyer than a broker typically reaches.
Going solo means you handle the entire sale without an intermediary. An attorney is still required, always. So is a CPA. Going solo makes sense only in specific situations: a known buyer already exists (an employee, a family member, a competitor who has expressed genuine interest), the deal is simple and small, or you have prior transaction experience. Most owners who try it underestimate how long it takes and how much leverage they give up by approaching a single buyer with no competitive alternatives.
| Situation | Best path |
|---|---|
| Business value under $500K, known buyer | Solo with attorney and CPA |
| Business value $500K to $2M, individual buyer likely | Business broker |
| Business value $2M to $5M, no clear buyer type | Business broker with PE/lower-middle-market experience |
| Business value $3M+, PE firms are likely buyers | Consider M&A advisor |
| Business value $5M+, strong recurring revenue, PE calling | M&A advisor: structured competitive process |
| Any size, unsolicited offer already on the table | Get representation before responding |
The table looks straightforward, but the harder question is always buyer type. A business worth $3M sold to an SBA-financed individual and the same business sold to a PE platform are two different transactions. Different processes, different timelines, and often a significant difference in final price. Knowing who is likely to buy your business shapes every other decision.
Nearly 800 HVAC, plumbing, and electrical companies were acquired by PE firms since 2022, according to Marketplace.org (2024). Roofing PE platforms grew from 17 to 56 between early 2023 and late 2024 (The Deal Sheet, 2025). PE interest in plumbing and HVAC on the Axial deal platform increased 550% from 2020 to 2023 (Axial, 2024). If you own a trades business with $2M+ in profit and $5M+ in revenue, there’s a good chance you’ve already received calls or LinkedIn messages from PE platform scouts. If you haven’t yet, you likely will.
PE buyers look at profit, not revenue. Most platforms want $5M+ in revenue and at least $2M in profit, though they’ll look at deals slightly under those thresholds if the risk profile is attractive. The calculation isn’t “how much is this business worth.” It’s “how much risk am I taking, and what’s the probability this cash flow continues after the owner leaves?” Low risk, even at slightly lower profit, still attracts serious PE interest.
Not every PE call is a serious offer. Some platforms throw out large numbers to start a conversation, see where your head is, and use what they learn for competitive intelligence: your market, your customer mix, and who else to approach. The number they mention in the first call is rarely the number they mean.
The cost of skipping representation is documented and specific. One owner received a $10 million verbal offer, agreed in principle, and had no representation in place. By the time due diligence completed, the price had been re-traded to $8 million, per Boyd Wealth Management (2024). The initial offer created goodwill. The subsequent process created leverage for the buyer.
The question most owners ask is “should I use a broker?” The better question is “how do I find the right one?” Hiring someone to help you sell your business is like hiring someone for a complex plumbing job. You could try to do it yourself, and people do, but it takes longer, costs more in mistakes, and the end result may not hold. A good plumber has done this specific job a hundred times. That expertise has real value. The question isn’t whether to hire one. It’s hiring the right one.
The difference between a good broker and a mediocre one is significant. A mediocre broker lists your business on BizBuySell and waits. A good broker activates their network. They have relationships with buyers who aren’t browsing listing sites, with other brokers who represent qualified buyers, and with lenders who can finance the deal. That network is what creates multiple offers. Multiple offers are what create a good price.
Three questions that separate strong brokers from weak ones:
The listing price that sounds too good. The most common way bad brokers win business is by quoting an inflated valuation. It’s called “buying the listing.” You hear a big number, sign an agreement, and six months later they’re talking you down while your listing has gone cold. Ask any broker you interview: “How did your last five closed deals compare to the original listing price?” A good broker will show you. A bad one will change the subject.
Pressure tactics. A broker who calls repeatedly, creates urgency, or implies other buyers are circling is a red flag. Good brokers explain their process and let their track record speak.
Long exclusive agreements with no performance clauses. Some brokers want 12-month exclusives with no milestones. Six months is reasonable. A right to exit the agreement if the broker isn’t producing qualified buyers is even better.
The broker doing everything alone. Not automatically disqualifying. But ask specifically who handles financial recast, buyer outreach, and deal documentation. If the answer is “me” for all three, that’s a capacity and expertise constraint worth knowing about.
Going solo is defensible in one specific situation: you have a known, serious buyer who has already expressed clear interest. An employee, a family member, a neighboring competitor you’ve worked alongside for years. In that case, paying a broker 10% to find a buyer you already have doesn’t make sense.
But “solo” doesn’t mean without professionals. It means:
The most common solo failure: the owner mentions to a competitor that they’re thinking about stepping back, with no NDA in place. The competitor isn’t serious. But now they know the owner is looking to get out, and they use that to approach the owner’s best customers or recruit the top technician. The deal never happens. The damage does.
A concrete example. HVAC business selling for $2,000,000.
Path A: Business Broker (10% commission)
Path B: M&A Advisor (Double Lehman + retainer)
Path C: Solo/FSBO
The fee difference between a business broker and an M&A advisor at $2M is often less than $30,000 once all costs are totaled. The real question is which path produces a higher gross sale price, not which one has the lowest headline fee.
A business broker finds buyers, manages the process, and guides you to a closed sale. Here's what they handle, what it costs, and what to watch for.
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