
What to Know Before Buying an Indiana Business for the First Time
The short answer: Buying an existing business in Indiana is one of the fastest paths to business ownership, but most first-time buyers underestimate how different the process is from anything they’ve done before. The deals that close tend to follow the same pattern: a buyer who defined their target clearly before they started looking, got their financing in order early, understood what three years of financial statements actually tell them, and assembled the right team before they needed it. The buyers who stall or walk away empty-handed usually skipped one of those steps.
Most people who reach out to me about buying a business in Indiana have spent some amount of time browsing listings online before we talk. They’ve seen businesses priced at $300,000 and businesses priced at $3 million and they don’t yet have a clear sense of what separates them, why some seem to sit on the market forever, or what it would actually take to close on one. That’s a normal place to start. The process isn’t intuitive, and there’s not a lot of practical guidance out there that tells you what the experience is really like.
What follows is what I’d want a first-time buyer to know before they make their first serious inquiry on a business in Indiana.
Start by Getting Specific About What You’re Looking For
This sounds obvious, but it’s the step most buyers skip. They start looking at listings without a clear picture of what they actually want to own, and as a result they spend months evaluating businesses that were never right for them in the first place.
Buyers who can describe their target in one specific sentence, something like “a service business between $400K and $800K in annual cash flow within 45 minutes of Indianapolis, with at least one manager already in place,” close deals three to four times faster than buyers who are broadly shopping. That’s not a coincidence. A specific target makes every decision downstream easier, from which listings to request information on, to which offers to make, to when to walk away.
Before you contact a broker or inquire on a listing, spend some time thinking about the industry you’re comfortable in, the geographic range you can realistically operate within, the size of business you can finance, and how much of a transition you’re willing to go through. Most Main Street businesses in Indiana sell for 2 to 3 times seller’s discretionary earnings, so a business generating $400,000 in annual cash flow will typically be priced somewhere between $800,000 and $1.2 million. That math matters for your financing conversations.
Get Your Financing Sorted Before You Fall in Love With a Listing
The most common mistake first-time buyers make is finding a business they want to buy and then figuring out how to pay for it. By that point, they’re emotionally invested, and if the financing doesn’t work out the way they expected, it’s a hard landing.
For most acquisitions in Indiana’s Main Street to lower middle market range, buyers are using SBA 7(a) loans. These go up to $5 million, typically amortize over 10 years, and require the buyer to put in 10 to 15 percent as equity. So on a $1 million acquisition, you’d generally need $100,000 to $150,000 in liquid capital to bring to the table, plus working capital reserves. Sellers and brokers don’t take buyers seriously until they have proof of funds or a pre-qualification letter from a lender who actually funds business acquisitions. It’s worth having a conversation with an SBA preferred lender before you start making inquiries.
What Happens After You Express Interest
When you inquire on a listed business in Indiana, you’ll be asked to sign a non-disclosure agreement and submit a buyer profile. That profile typically includes a personal financial statement, a brief background summary, your acquisition criteria, and your funding source. This isn’t bureaucratic friction; sellers are handing over sensitive financial information about a business they’ve spent years building, and they want to know who they’re sharing it with before they do.
After you sign the NDA and your profile is reviewed, you’ll receive a confidential business summary with enough information to decide whether you want to go deeper. If it still looks right, the next step is usually a call or meeting with the seller, followed by access to the full financial package.
Reading the Financial Package
The financial package will include at least three years of profit and loss statements, tax returns, and balance sheets. For a first-time buyer, this is often the most unfamiliar part of the process, and it’s where having a good accountant on your team matters most.
What you’re trying to understand is the business’s seller’s discretionary earnings, which is essentially the total financial benefit the business provides to a full-time owner-operator. It includes the owner’s salary, any personal expenses run through the business, depreciation, and one-time costs that won’t recur for a new owner. That number is what the asking price is built on, so it’s worth understanding how it’s calculated and whether the documentation actually supports it.
You’re also looking for consistency. A business whose earnings fluctuate wildly from year to year without a clear explanation is harder to value and harder to finance. You want to understand why the numbers look the way they do, not just what they are.
Due Diligence and What It Actually Takes
If you decide to move forward after reviewing the financials and meeting the seller, the next step is submitting a letter of intent. Once both sides sign it, you’ll enter formal due diligence, which for most Main Street transactions takes 30 to 60 days when the seller’s records are organized. Larger or more complex businesses, or businesses with messier books, can stretch to 90 days or more.
Due diligence is your opportunity to verify everything you’ve been told and to find anything that wasn’t disclosed. That means reviewing contracts, leases, employee agreements, customer concentration, and any outstanding legal or tax issues. It’s also when your lender will order an appraisal and complete their own underwriting.
One thing first-time buyers often don’t think about is licensing. Certain industries in Indiana require permits or licenses that don’t automatically transfer to a new owner. If you’re buying a business with an alcohol permit, the Indiana Alcohol and Tobacco Commission has to approve the transfer before you can operate legally. Healthcare and transportation businesses can have similar requirements. It’s worth identifying those early, because the application timelines can be longer than the rest of the closing process.
The Team You Need
You don’t need a large team, but you do need the right ones. A business broker who knows the Indiana market will help you identify the right opportunities, interpret the financials, and manage the negotiation so you’re not doing it alone. A business attorney handles the purchase agreement and protects your interests in the legal documents. An accountant or CPA helps you understand the financial package and structure the deal in a tax-efficient way. And an SBA lender who specializes in business acquisitions will move faster and cause fewer problems than a banker who does this occasionally.
The deals I’ve watched first-time buyers close successfully are almost never the ones where the buyer tried to figure it all out themselves. The process has too many moving parts, and the cost of a mistake is too high.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much money do I need to buy a business in Indiana? It depends on the size of the business, but for most SBA-financed acquisitions in Indiana, buyers bring 10 to 15 percent of the purchase price as equity, plus working capital reserves. On a $1 million transaction, that means roughly $100,000 to $150,000 in liquid capital at minimum, and more is better. Your lender will have specific requirements based on the deal structure.
How long does it take to buy a business in Indiana? From first inquiry to closing, most Main Street transactions take four to six months. The timeline includes seller review, due diligence, lender underwriting, and closing preparation. Deals move faster when the buyer is organized, the seller’s records are clean, and the financing is in place before the process starts.
What’s the difference between an asset sale and a stock sale? In an asset sale, you’re buying the business’s assets, which typically includes equipment, inventory, customer lists, and goodwill, but not the legal entity itself. In a stock sale, you’re buying the company’s shares and taking on everything, including any liabilities. Most small business acquisitions in Indiana are structured as asset sales because buyers generally don’t want to inherit unknown liabilities from the previous ownership.
How do I know if an asking price is fair? The asking price should be tied to the business’s seller’s discretionary earnings, or SDE, and benchmarked against what similar businesses have actually sold for in Indiana. Most Main Street businesses sell for 2 to 3 times SDE. If a business is priced above that range, there should be a clear reason why, such as strong recurring revenue, a long-established customer base, or significant growth in recent years. If there isn’t, that’s worth a conversation with a broker who knows the market.
What should I do if I find a business I like but it’s priced too high? Make an offer anyway, but base it on the actual financial performance of the business rather than the asking price. A well-supported counter offer, backed by the financial data the seller has already shared, is a legitimate starting point for a negotiation. Sellers who are serious about closing will usually respond. Sellers who aren’t ready to be realistic about price will reveal that quickly, which saves you time.
The Bottom Line
Buying a business for the first time is a significant undertaking, but it’s also one of the more reliable paths to owning something that already works. The businesses that are right for you are out there. What separates buyers who close from buyers who spend two years looking and never pull the trigger is usually preparation, not luck.
If you’re thinking about buying a business in Indiana and want a clearer picture of what’s available and what the process actually looks like, I’m happy to talk. It costs nothing, and most buyers find it a lot more useful than another hour on a listing site.
Troy Frank Indiana Equity Brokers troy@indianaequitybrokers.com indianaequitybrokers.com
