
Deal Structure When Selling a Business
By Troy Frank, Owner, Indiana Equity Brokers Estimated read time: 6 min
The short answer: Two offers at the same price can leave you with hundreds of thousands of dollars’ difference in real, after-tax cash. Deal structure decides what you keep, and it comes down to how much is cash at closing, how much is a seller note, and how much is rollover equity. Roughly 70 to 80 percent of small business sales involve some seller financing, and a typical seller note runs 10 to 20 percent of the price. The time to plan structure is before you go to market, not after the offers arrive.
A seller called me last year, thrilled, because he had two offers on his business and one of them was $400,000 higher than the other. He wanted to take the bigger number and move on. So we sat down and ran the actual math together. The smaller offer put more cash in his pocket at closing, and it freed him from five years of risk, so that’s the one he took.
This is the part of selling a business that almost nobody talks about. The headline price is not what you keep. What you keep depends on how the deal is structured, and the best time to think it through is before the offers ever land on your desk.
Same price, very different deals
Picture two offers on a business listed at $5 million.
Offer A comes in at the full $5 million. The buyer puts $3.25 million in cash at closing, signs a $1 million seller note paid over five years, and asks the seller to take the remaining $750,000 as rollover equity, meaning an ownership stake in the business under its new owner instead of cash.
Offer B comes in at $4.6 million, all cash at closing, with a buyer who’s already pre-approved for financing and can close in 60 days.
Offer A looks bigger, so it’s tempting to stop there. But look at what the seller is actually holding. That seller note makes them the buyer’s junior lender for five years, sitting behind the bank. If the business hits a rough patch, the bank will almost certainly force the note onto full standby, which means the seller’s payments stop until the bank is made whole. The rollover equity is a minority stake in a company the seller no longer controls, and there’s no guaranteed date or price for cashing it out.
None of that makes Offer A a bad deal. Seller notes get paid in full far more often than owners fear, and rollover equity is how some sellers earn a real second bite of the apple. If the new owners grow the business and sell it again in five or seven years, that retained stake can be worth more than the cash they gave up at closing. Spreading the payments across several years can also soften the tax hit.
The point is simply that you can’t compare two offers on price alone, and the smart time to work through all of this is before you go to market.
The five questions to answer before you list
Long before a buyer sees your financials, you and your advisor should be able to answer these.
How much cash do you need at closing, really?
Not what you’d like to walk away with, but what you genuinely need to retire debt, cover taxes, and fund whatever comes next. That number sets your floor, and it tells you how much flexibility you can afford to offer on terms. This is exactly the kind of planning that separates owners who plan their exit early and sell for more from those who scramble once offers start arriving.
Can the business carry acquisition debt?
Lenders and serious buyers all run the same math. They take your adjusted earnings, subtract a market salary for the new owner, then subtract the annual loan payments your asking price implies, and they see what’s left over. If that cushion is thin, your price isn’t financeable at conventional terms, no matter what the valuation report says. Either the structure has to bridge that gap, or the price has to come down.
Will you carry paper, and on what terms?
A seller note of 10 to 20 percent of the price is common, and it does real work. It bridges valuation gaps, it satisfies lenders who want the seller to keep skin in the game, and it signals confidence in the business. But the terms matter enormously, because the interest rate, the payment schedule, the security, and the standby provisions all change what that note is actually worth to you. That last piece got sharper in 2025, which I’ll come back to in a moment.
Would you keep equity after the sale?
Rollover equity isn’t right for everyone. It works best when you believe in the buyer’s growth plan and can afford to leave part of your money illiquid for several years. If what you want is a clean exit and a clean break, say so early, because it shapes which buyers your advisor should even bring to the table.
What does each structure do to your tax bill?
What’s being sold, how the price is allocated, and when you actually receive the payments can all swing your after-tax proceeds dramatically. This is worth a real conversation with your accountant before you set an asking price, because some of the most valuable tax planning has to be in place a year or more ahead of a sale.
What changed in 2025: the SBA rules tightened
Here’s an expert-level detail most sellers never hear about. In June 2025 the SBA rolled out new lending rules, known as SOP 50 10 8, and they reshaped how acquisition deals get financed.
Under the new rules, a seller note can cover only half of the buyer’s required equity injection. In practice that often caps the seller note at roughly 5 percent of the deal when it’s counted toward the buyer’s equity, and that portion typically sits on full standby for the first two years. For years sellers routinely carried anywhere from 10 percent to a third of the price, so this genuinely changed the math.
The result is real friction in the market. About 41 percent of business brokers say the 2025 SBA changes are causing delays in closing deals. If you’re planning to sell, this matters to you directly, because it affects how buyers finance the deal and how much paper you may be asked to carry. A broker who’s closing deals in this market knows where the new limits bite and how to structure around them.
Flexibility widens your buyer pool, and that’s where price comes from
Here’s the part most sellers underestimate. Structure doesn’t only affect what you keep from a single offer. It also affects how many offers you get in the first place.
A business offered strictly as all cash, full price, as-is is only available to the small slice of buyers who can write that check or finance the whole amount conventionally. Add reasonable seller financing or an openness to a rollover piece, and the qualified buyer pool grows. More qualified buyers competing for your business is the single most reliable way to push the price up.
The market data backs this up. Roughly 70 to 80 percent of small business sales involve some seller financing, yet a recent survey found that only 22.8 percent of sellers plan to offer it while 62.3 percent of buyers want it. That gap is your opening. Sellers who insist on total rigidity often end up taking a lower price from the one buyer who could meet their terms. Flexibility isn’t a concession you make, it’s a negotiating asset you use.
Where an M&A advisor fits in
Your accountant knows your tax position, and your attorney will protect you in the purchase agreement. But neither one spends their days watching what buyers in Central Indiana are actually offering, what lenders are actually approving, and which structures are actually closing this year.
That marketplace view is what a good broker brings, and it’s most valuable early, while you’re still deciding whether and how to go to market rather than after you’ve anchored yourself to a number that can’t be financed. It also helps to see what’s actually selling in your market right now.
At Indiana Equity Brokers we’ve closed more than 878 transactions over 23 years, and the pattern is consistent. The businesses that sell well are rarely the ones with the highest asking price. They’re the ones packaged so the price, the structure, and the financing all work together, for the seller’s bottom line and for the buyer’s ability to say yes.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is seller financing when selling a business? Seller financing is when the seller accepts part of the purchase price over time instead of all cash at closing, usually in the form of a promissory note. A typical seller note runs 10 to 20 percent of the price and is paid over three to five years with interest. It bridges valuation gaps and helps buyers qualify for bank financing, which is why roughly 70 to 80 percent of small business sales include some form of it.
Is a higher offer always the better deal when selling my business? No. Two offers with the same headline price can differ by hundreds of thousands of dollars in real, after-tax proceeds. A higher price loaded with a long seller note and illiquid rollover equity can put less cash in your pocket than a lower all-cash offer. The smart move is to compare offers on net proceeds and risk rather than on the headline number.
What is rollover equity in a business sale? Rollover equity is when a seller keeps an ownership stake in the business under its new owner instead of taking that portion in cash. It can deliver a second bite of the apple if the new owners grow the company and sell it again later. Because it’s a minority stake with no guaranteed cash-out date, it suits sellers who believe in the buyer’s plan and can afford to hold illiquid value for several years.
How did the 2025 SBA rules change seller financing? The SBA’s SOP 50 10 8, effective June 2025, limits a seller note to half of the buyer’s required equity injection, which often works out to about 5 percent of the deal when it counts toward equity, and that portion usually sits on full standby for two years. Previously sellers commonly carried anywhere from 10 percent to a third of the price. About 41 percent of brokers report that the changes are delaying closings.
How early should I plan deal structure before selling? Before you set an asking price. Your cash-at-closing needs, the financeability of the price, and your tax planning all shape that number, and some tax strategies have to be in place a year or more ahead of a sale. Planning structure early also widens your buyer pool, which is what ultimately drives price up.
The bottom line
The price on the offer sheet is not what you keep. The cash at closing, the seller note, the rollover equity, the financing, and the taxes all decide your real proceeds, and the smart time to plan them is before you go to market.
If you’re thinking about what your business might be worth and how to structure a sale that protects your bottom line, a confidential conversation costs nothing. Troy Frank and the team at Indiana Equity Brokers have closed more than 878 deals for Indiana business owners, with no upfront fees and a free business valuation to get started. You can reach Troy at troy@indianaequitybrokers.com
