Should You Offer Seller Financing When Selling Your Business?
By Troy Frank, Owner — Indiana Equity Brokers
Estimated read time: 8 min
The short answer: Offering seller financing when selling a business typically results in a higher sale price — research shows seller-financed deals close at 20–30% more than all-cash transactions. The seller carries a promissory note for a portion of the purchase price, typically at 6–10% interest over 3–7 years. The risk is real: if the buyer defaults, the seller may not recover the full amount owed. But for most Indiana sellers, the combination of a higher price, tax deferral benefits, and a larger buyer pool makes seller financing worth serious consideration.
A seller walks away from the closing table with a check. That’s how most business owners picture the sale of their company. All cash, clean break, done.
The reality is that all-cash deals are less common than sellers expect — and sellers who insist on them often leave significant money on the table. Seller financing isn’t a consolation prize. When structured correctly, it’s a tool that gets deals done at better prices with more qualified buyers.
This article covers how seller financing actually works, what terms are typical in Indiana Main Street transactions, what sellers need to protect themselves, and when seller financing makes sense — and when it doesn’t.
What Seller Financing Is (and Isn’t)
Seller financing means the seller agrees to accept part of the purchase price over time rather than all at closing. The buyer signs a promissory note — a legal agreement to repay the seller in installments, with interest, over a defined period.
The seller is not a bank. They’re not underwriting risk the way a commercial lender does. But they are extending credit, and that comes with real obligations on both sides.
What seller financing is not: a sign that the seller is desperate or that something is wrong with the business. Sellers who make that assumption often kill deals that would have closed well.
In fact, buyers sometimes view a seller’s refusal to offer any financing as a yellow flag — the reasoning being that a seller truly confident in the business’s cash flow should have no problem carrying a note. That logic isn’t always fair to sellers, but it’s a real dynamic we see at the table.
The Numbers: Why Seller-Financed Deals Close Higher
The data on this is consistent. Businesses sold with seller financing command 20–30% more than comparable businesses sold for all cash.
There are two reasons for this. First, seller financing expands the buyer pool. More buyers can participate when they don’t need 100% of the purchase price at closing. More buyers means more competition, and more competition drives price up.
Second, a seller who carries a note is signaling confidence. Buyers read seller financing as the seller’s vote in favor of the business’s future performance. That confidence has value — and buyers are willing to pay for it.
The old stat you may have seen — sellers receive approximately 86% of asking price with terms vs. about 70% for all-cash — reflects the same principle. When sellers offer flexibility, they get paid better.
Typical Seller Financing Terms in Indiana
There’s no universal standard, but here’s what we typically see on Main Street transactions in Indiana:
Down payment: Most sellers want a minimum of 50% down at closing, with the remainder financed by a seller note. Some sellers go lower — 30–40% down — when the business is strong and the buyer is well-qualified. Going below 30% down is uncommon and generally only works when paired with SBA financing.
Interest rate: Seller notes typically carry rates of 6–10%. The rate reflects the risk level — a well-qualified buyer with strong industry experience and a clean credit profile might negotiate toward the lower end. A buyer who’s newer to the industry or carrying more financing might see a higher rate. In the current rate environment, 7–8% is common.
Term: Most seller notes run 3–7 years. Shorter terms mean faster repayment and less ongoing exposure for the seller. Longer terms mean lower monthly payments for the buyer, which can help cash flow in the early years when the business is transitioning. Five years is a common middle ground on Main Street deals.
Balloon payment: Some seller notes amortize fully over the term. Others are structured with a balloon — a lump sum due at the end of the term. Balloons can be useful when the buyer expects to refinance through a bank after a few years of operating history.
Seller Financing Alongside an SBA Loan
Many Indiana acquisitions involve a combination of SBA financing and a seller note. This is one of the most common deal structures we work with.
When SBA financing is involved, the seller note must be placed on full standby during the SBA loan period. That means the seller cannot receive repayment on their note until the SBA conditions are met — typically until the SBA loan is paid in full or a certain period passes.
This is a deal point that surprises some sellers. You carry a note, but you may not see payments on it for years. The trade-off is that SBA financing allows the buyer to put down as little as 10% of the total purchase price — which dramatically expands your buyer pool and, as discussed, tends to drive the final price up.
For sellers considering a combined SBA-plus-seller-note structure, our detailed post on how SBA loans work for business acquisitions in Indiana walks through the mechanics of how these deals are assembled.
How Sellers Protect Themselves
The most common seller fear about financing: the buyer stops paying. It happens. Here’s how to protect yourself.
Secure a UCC Filing
A Uniform Commercial Code (UCC) filing is a legal notice that the seller has a security interest in the business assets. If the buyer defaults, the seller has a documented claim against the assets — equipment, inventory, accounts receivable — that can be enforced. A UCC filing is standard on seller-financed transactions and should be non-negotiable.
Require a Personal Guarantee
The promissory note should be personally guaranteed by the buyer, not just by the business entity. This means if the buyer defaults, you can pursue their personal assets — not just the business’s. This is a meaningful protection, especially if the buyer has personal real estate or retirement savings.
Vet the Buyer Before You Agree
Seller financing isn’t for every buyer. Before agreeing to carry a note, look at the buyer’s relevant experience, credit history, and available capital. A buyer who has operated a similar business, brings strong industry knowledge, and has financial reserves beyond the down payment is a materially lower risk than one who doesn’t.
This is where working with an experienced broker matters. At Indiana Equity Brokers, we qualify buyers before they see confidential financial information. By the time a seller is reviewing an offer, the buyer has already been vetted. That reduces the pool of buyers who reach the offer stage — but it dramatically increases the quality of the ones who do.
Structure a Right of Recourse
Your promissory note should include clear default provisions: what constitutes a default, how much notice the buyer gets, and what the seller’s remedies are. Ideally, a default allows you to accelerate the note (call the full balance due) and, if unpaid, reacquire the business assets. Have your transaction attorney draft the note — not a form you found online.
The Tax Angle: Installment Sale Treatment
One underappreciated benefit of seller financing is the installment sale tax treatment available under IRS rules. When you sell a business and receive payments over multiple years, you can report the capital gain proportionally — as you receive each payment — rather than recognizing the entire gain in the year of sale.
This can meaningfully reduce the tax hit in the closing year, especially for sellers in higher income brackets or those who have other significant income in the year of sale. Spreading the gain over 3–5 years can keep you out of the highest marginal brackets for each of those years.
This isn’t a reason to carry a note you’d otherwise refuse. But it’s a real benefit worth discussing with your CPA before you decide whether to push for all cash or accept terms. In some cases, an installment sale actually puts more money in your pocket after taxes than an all-cash deal at the same gross price would have.
For further reading on the IRS installment sale rules, the IRS publication on installment sales (Publication 537) provides the authoritative guidance.
When Seller Financing Doesn’t Make Sense
Seller financing isn’t always the right call. A few situations where it may not make sense:
You need the cash at closing. If you’re funding a retirement purchase, paying off debt, or have another specific need for the full proceeds, structuring a note creates complications. Know what you actually need from the sale before the negotiation starts.
The buyer is underqualified. If a buyer has minimal industry experience, limited personal capital, and needs seller financing to get to the minimum down payment — that’s a risk profile that may not be worth carrying. A buyer who struggles to operate the business is more likely to default.
The business has declining cash flow. Seller financing is partly a bet on the business’s future performance. If you’re carrying a note on a business with shrinking revenue or increasing costs, that note is only as good as the business’s ability to service it. If the trajectory isn’t strong, price and terms need to reflect that risk.
Deal structure is one of the most important — and most underappreciated — variables in getting a business sold at the best possible price. Our post on how deal structure affects what sellers actually keep gets into the specifics beyond just seller financing.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is seller financing in a business sale? Seller financing means the seller accepts a promissory note for part of the purchase price instead of receiving all cash at closing. The buyer repays the seller directly over a set term — typically 3 to 7 years — at an agreed interest rate. Seller financing is common in small business transactions and is not a sign of a distressed deal. It’s a standard tool that expands the buyer pool and often results in a higher final sale price.
What interest rate should I charge on a seller note? Seller notes on business sales typically carry interest rates of 6–10%. The rate reflects the buyer’s risk profile — experience, creditworthiness, and available capital — rather than market benchmark rates alone. In the current environment, most Indiana Main Street seller notes are priced at 7–8%. Your attorney or broker can help you determine a rate appropriate to the specific buyer and deal.
What happens if a buyer defaults on seller financing? If a buyer defaults on a seller note, the seller can accelerate the note (demand full repayment immediately), pursue the buyer’s personal assets if a personal guarantee is in place, and potentially reacquire the business assets through a UCC filing. The exact remedies depend on how the note and security agreement are drafted. This is why working with a transaction attorney — not a template — is essential when structuring a seller note.
Do I have to put my seller note on standby if the buyer uses SBA financing? Yes. When an SBA 7(a) loan is part of the deal, the SBA requires any seller note used as part of the buyer’s equity injection to be placed on full standby — meaning the seller cannot receive payments on the note until the SBA loan conditions are satisfied. This is non-negotiable under current SBA guidelines. The standby period can last until the SBA loan is paid in full or a defined period passes, depending on how the loan is structured.
Are there tax benefits to offering seller financing? Yes. Under IRS installment sale rules, sellers who receive payments over multiple years can report their capital gain proportionally as they receive each payment, rather than recognizing the full gain in the year of sale. This can reduce the tax liability in the closing year and may keep sellers in lower marginal brackets over several years. The benefit varies based on the seller’s overall income situation — consult a CPA before deciding on deal structure.
Is Seller Financing Right for Your Deal?
For most Indiana sellers, the answer is yes — at least partially. A seller note of 10–30% of the purchase price is standard on Main Street transactions, and refusing to offer any terms often costs more in final price than the note would have paid in interest.
The key is structuring it correctly: the right term, the right rate, a personal guarantee, a UCC filing, and a clearly written promissory note drafted by an attorney who works on M&A transactions.
If you’re considering selling your Indiana business and want to understand how deal structure — including seller financing — affects your actual net proceeds, a confidential conversation with Troy Frank costs nothing and usually takes about 20 minutes. Indiana Equity Brokers has closed more than 879 Indiana transactions and can walk you through how comparable deals in your industry have been structured.
