Good business purchase negotiation is evidence-based. Buyers should negotiate using profit, risk, assets, working capital, due diligence findings, finance and deal structure — not emotion.
Quick Answer: How do you negotiate the price when buying a business?
To negotiate effectively, start with evidence. Understand exactly how the seller has arrived at their asking price, check whether the stated maintainable profit is realistic, review assets, stock, debt, the lease, staff risk, customer concentration, owner dependency, working capital requirements and any due diligence findings. Then make a clear, reasoned conditional offer that explains your valuation — rather than simply stating a number and hoping for the best.
Price is only one dimension of a business purchase negotiation. You can also negotiate on payment timing, seller finance, deferred consideration, earn-out, stock treatment, handover support, length of non-compete, warranties, retention amounts, completion adjustments and exclusivity. A skilled negotiation finds a deal structure that works for both sides rather than simply haggling over a headline number.
A good negotiation is evidence-based, professional and protects the buyer without making the seller feel insulted or disrespected. The goal is to reach a deal you can stand behind — at a price that reflects the real risk and value of what you are buying.
Contents
Understand the seller's asking price
The first step in any negotiation is to understand what you are negotiating about. Before you discuss numbers, you need to know exactly how the seller's asking price has been calculated — because without that, you have no basis for a rational counter-offer.
Asking prices for small businesses can be based on many different things:
A multiple of adjusted EBITDA (earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation)
A multiple of net profit or Seller's Discretionary Earnings (SDE)
The value of physical assets plus a goodwill premium
A multiple of revenue (less common for small businesses)
Comparable transactions in the same sector
A broker's formal valuation report
The seller's personal expectation — what they feel the business is worth, or what they need to retire comfortably
Some asking prices are rigorously evidence-based. Others are aspirational numbers the seller has arrived at through gut feeling or a desire to extract a certain amount of money, without a clear link to verified profit or assets.
Before making any offer, ask the seller directly:
What profit figure is the asking price based on? Is that net profit, adjusted EBITDA or another measure?
What multiple has been applied to that profit figure?
Is stock included in the asking price, and at what value?
Are there debts that will be discharged before completion, or will they transfer to the buyer?
Is working capital included in the deal?
Has a manager's salary been reflected in the profit calculation?
What add-backs have been applied, and what is the evidence for each?
What does the price include — goodwill, assets, lease, IP, customer list?
If the seller can give you clear, documented answers to these questions, you have a starting point for rational discussion. If they cannot explain the basis for their price, that is important information in itself — it suggests the price may be more aspirational than evidence-based, and that there may be more scope for negotiation.
Know your own valuation range
Before entering any price discussion, you should have calculated your own view of the business's value. This is your independent assessment — based on your review of the available information — of what the business is worth to you as a buyer. Having this number clearly in your head (and supported by analysis) is essential. Without it, you are negotiating in the dark.
Your valuation should take account of:
Maintainable profit— what the business will realistically earn after you take over, with a realistic cost for the owner's labour accounted for
Adjusted EBITDA— the seller's adjusted profit figure, reviewed and challenged for unsupported add-backs
Asset value— the realistic market value of physical assets included in the deal
Stock— at a realistic cost or net realisable value, not at the seller's inflated estimate
Working capital— how much cash you will need in the business from day one, and whether the deal includes a working capital allowance
Debt— any loans, hire purchase or HMRC liabilities that will transfer to you or affect the completion proceeds
Customer concentration risk— does one or two customers represent too high a proportion of revenue?
Lease risk— how much time is left on the lease, and what is the likelihood of renewal?
Staff risk— are key staff likely to stay? Are there TUPE liabilities?
Owner dependency— how much of the business depends on the seller personally?
Sector risk— how cyclical, competitive or regulated is the sector?
Growth potential— is there credible upside, or has the business reached its natural ceiling?
Finance affordability— at the price you are considering, can you service any debt taken on to fund the purchase from the business's cash flow?
A simple example of how this analysis might look:
Adjusted EBITDA claimed - £100,000 - £80,000 (after realistic manager salary and challenged add-backs)
Multiple applied - 3.5x - 3.0x (reflecting owner dependency and lease risk)
Implied business value - £350,000 - £240,000
If the seller is asking £350,000 and your analysis supports a value of £240,000, you have a clear basis for a negotiation — not a vague feeling that the price seems high.
Your valuation range should also include a walk-away point — the maximum you would pay even if every possible concession was secured. Write this down privately before negotiation begins. Knowing your limit in advance prevents you from being pushed past it in the heat of a negotiation.
Use evidence, not emotion
The most common mistake buyers make in business purchase negotiations is negotiating on the basis of instinct rather than evidence. Saying "that feels expensive" or "can you do any better?" is weak. It gives the seller no reason to move, and it positions you as someone who is guessing rather than someone who has done their homework.
Evidence-based negotiation is both more effective and more professional. It respects the seller's position while making a clear, rational case for a different price.
Weak negotiation sounds like:
"That seems too expensive. Would you take £250,000?"
Strong negotiation sounds like:
"Based on the accounts, I believe maintainable profit is closer to £80,000 than £100,000 once a realistic management salary is included and the one-off consultancy add-back is removed. At a 3x multiple, which I consider appropriate given the lease has only four years left and two customers represent 55% of revenue, my valuation is in the range of £230,000 to £250,000, subject to due diligence confirming the figures."
The second approach gives the seller something to respond to. They can agree with your analysis, challenge it, or propose a compromise — but the conversation is grounded in reality rather than positioning.
The evidence you can use to support your offer includes accounts and management figures, your own add-back analysis, the lease terms, stock valuation, customer concentration data, staff risk factors, asset condition and finance availability. The more of this you can reference specifically, the stronger your position.
What can justify a lower offer?
A lower offer is only credible if you can explain why. Here are the most common legitimate grounds for offering below the asking price:
Profit is overstated.The seller's adjusted EBITDA includes add-backs that are not genuinely one-off or non-recurring, or the owner salary is excluded without being replaced by a realistic management cost.
Revenue is declining.If turnover has fallen over the last two or three years, or recent management accounts show a downward trend, paying a multiple of historic peak profit is not appropriate.
High customer concentration.If two or three customers represent more than 40 to 50% of revenue, the business is exposed to significant risk if any of them leave or reduce their spend.
Short lease.A lease with less than three or four years remaining, particularly if contracted out of the Landlord and Tenant Act 1954, significantly reduces the certainty of the business's future trading position.
Heavy owner dependency.If the business depends almost entirely on the seller's personal relationships, skills or knowledge, much of the goodwill may not survive the transition.
Equipment or assets are old.If significant capital expenditure will be needed shortly after completion, this cost should be reflected in the purchase price.
Undisclosed debt or liabilities.Hire purchase, HMRC payment plans, supplier arrears or outstanding legal claims that emerge during due diligence.
Weak contracts.Key customer relationships are informal and could leave without notice; or existing contracts contain change-of-control clauses that allow customers to exit when the business changes hands.
Stock is overvalued.The stock balance includes obsolete, damaged or slow-moving items that are not worth what the seller claims.
Working capital is high.The business requires a larger cash cushion than anticipated to operate normally after completion.
Example wording:
My offer of £230,000 reflects the fact that maintainable profit after a realistic management salary is approximately £78,000 rather than the £100,000 in the listing, the upcoming lease renewal risk, and the fact that the business's two largest customers together represent 55% of revenue. I am happy to discuss these points in detail.
This is professional, clear and gives the seller a meaningful basis for a counter-conversation.
What can justify paying more?
Equally important: do not reflexively try to negotiate every price down. A strong business at a fair price deserves a fair offer. Undercutting unnecessarily risks losing the deal to another buyer or damaging the goodwill you need from the seller to make the handover work.
A higher price may be justified by:
Strong recurring revenue with long-term contracts and low churn
Low owner dependency — a capable management team runs the business day-to-day
Clean, well-documented accounts with modest and well-evidenced add-backs
A long lease with good renewal prospects
Valuable contracts that transfer cleanly to the buyer
Low customer concentration — no single customer represents more than 10 to 15% of revenue
A stable and experienced team who are committed to staying
A strong order book or forward pipeline
Good operating systems and documented processes
High margins relative to sector norms
Valuable intellectual property — trademarks, domain authority, proprietary software
Strong strategic fit — the business fills a gap or accelerates a plan you already have
Genuine competitive interest from other buyers
An exceptional handover commitment from the seller
The danger in business acquisitions is not usually overpaying for a strong, well-evidenced business. It is paying a strong-business price for a weakly-evidenced one on the assumption that things will be better than they appear.
Negotiate structure, not just price
Experienced buyers and sellers know that the headline price is often not the most important element of the deal. How and when money is paid can be just as significant as the total amount.
When there is a gap between what the buyer is comfortable paying upfront and what the seller wants to receive, creative deal structuring can bridge it. Elements you can negotiate beyond the headline price include:
Upfront cash payment.The element paid on completion. This carries the highest risk for the buyer — once paid, it is gone regardless of what happens next.
Deferred consideration.A portion of the price paid at a future date — for example, six or twelve months after completion. This gives the buyer time to verify that the business performs as expected before the full price is paid.
Seller finance.The seller lends part of the purchase price to the buyer, to be repaid from the business's cash flow over an agreed period. This demonstrates the seller's confidence in the business's continued performance and reduces the buyer's upfront cash requirement.
Earn-out.A portion of the price is linked to the business's future performance after completion — typically revenue or EBITDA targets over one to three years. If the business hits the targets, the seller receives the full earn-out. If it does not, the payment is reduced.
Stock adjustment.The stock element of the price is determined by a completion stocktake rather than a fixed estimate, so the buyer pays only for what is actually there.
Retention.A small portion of the price is held back for a defined period after completion as security against warranty claims or undisclosed liabilities emerging.
Working capital adjustment.The deal includes a provision for the business to be handed over with an agreed level of working capital, with the price adjusted if the actual level at completion differs.
Handover support.The seller agrees to remain available for a defined period after completion to train the buyer, introduce them to key customers and staff, and assist with the transition.
Non-compete.The seller agrees not to compete in the same market for a defined period and geography.
Example of a structured deal:
Seller wants £300,000. Buyer is confident at £230,000 upfront based on their analysis.
Upfront cash payment - £215,000 - Paid on completion
Deferred payment - £35,000 - Paid 12 months after completion
Earn-out - £50,000 - Based on Year 1 EBITDA exceeding £85,000
Total potential price-£300,000
This structure gives the seller a path to their £300,000 if the business performs — while protecting the buyer against paying a full price for performance that is not yet proven.
The key is that every element of the structure is clearly documented in the sale agreement. Earn-outs and deferred consideration can become sources of significant dispute if the conditions are vague. Always have a solicitor draft the terms precisely.
How to use due diligence findings
Due diligence is not just about deciding whether to complete a purchase. It is also a legitimate source of information that may justify a price adjustment or change in deal terms.
If due diligence reveals material differences from what was represented before the offer was made, you have the right to go back to the seller and renegotiate — or to withdraw under the conditions of your offer letter or heads of terms.
Common due diligence findings that can justify price adjustment include:
Profit is materially lower than stated after accounts are reviewed in detail
Stock is worth significantly less than the seller claimed
Equipment is in worse condition than described, requiring near-term capital expenditure
An undisclosed hire purchase or finance agreement is attached to key assets
Lease assignment involves an unexpected condition or cost
Customer contracts contain change-of-control clauses that could cause customer loss
A key customer has indicated they may reduce orders or leave
VAT arrears or an HMRC payment plan that was not disclosed
A pending employment tribunal or other legal claim
The owner salary was not included in the profit calculation at all
How to raise a price adjustment based on due diligence findings:
Do not simply demand a lower price. Be specific and professional:
State clearly what was found and when
Explain why it affects the value or risk of the business
Propose a specific adjustment with supporting logic
Offer evidence if you have it
Example:
During due diligence, our accountant identified that the adjusted EBITDA figure of £100,000 included £22,000 of add-backs relating to the owner's personal expenses and a one-off marketing spend that is actually a regular annual cost. After adjusting for these, maintainable EBITDA is closer to £78,000. We would like to propose a revised price of £234,000, based on 3x adjusted EBITDA, subject to confirming the remaining due diligence.
This approach is professional, specific and gives the seller a clear basis to respond.
How to avoid overpaying
The most effective protection against overpaying is preparation. Set your limits clearly before negotiation begins and stick to them.
Before any offer is made or price discussion entered:
Calculate your maximum price based on your valuation analysis, not the seller's asking price
Estimate the business's profitability in your hands — after your own costs and realistic management salary
Stress-test the figures: what happens to your return if profit is 20% lower than expected? Can you still service any acquisition debt?
Set a walk-away price — the maximum you would pay under any circumstances — and write it down
Walk away or pause and seek fresh advice if:
The seller will not provide financial evidence to support the asking price
Profit depends on add-backs that cannot be substantiated
Due diligence reveals significant undisclosed liabilities
The lease or a key licence cannot be transferred
Customer concentration is so high that the loss of one customer would fundamentally change the business
The working capital requirement is larger than you had budgeted for and there is no flexibility in the deal structure
HMRC or other hidden debts emerge that were not disclosed
The seller pressures you to skip due diligence or complete more quickly than is reasonable
The deal would require you to borrow to a level where the debt cannot be serviced from realistic business cash flow
You find yourself rationalising problems rather than solving them — "it will probably be fine" is not a due diligence conclusion
The willingness to walk away from a deal that does not work is your most powerful negotiating tool. A buyer who will walk away has leverage. A buyer who must complete does not.
Negotiation checklist
Use this checklist to prepare for and manage the negotiation:
Asking price basis understood — profit figure and multiple confirmed
Maintainable profit calculated independently based on accounts review
Add-backs reviewed and challenged where unsupported
Owner salary and labour cost reflected in adjusted profit
Physical assets reviewed and valued independently
Stock included or excluded confirmed, and value agreed in principle
Debt and finance agreements checked — any to be discharged before completion?
Working capital requirement estimated and deal structure accommodates it
Lease reviewed — term, assignment, rent and renewal risk assessed
Staff and TUPE position understood
Customer concentration assessed
Handover support discussed and included in deal terms
Non-compete scope and duration agreed in principle
Finance availability confirmed — can you fund the deal at your target price?
Deal structure options explored — deferred, seller finance, earn-out if useful
Offer made conditional on due diligence, finance and legal review
Walk-away price set privately before entering price discussion
Solicitor briefed to review heads of terms before signing
FAQs
Should I always offer below the asking price?
Not necessarily. If the asking price is justified by verified profit, clean accounts, strong contracts, a long lease and low risk, paying close to the asking price may be entirely reasonable. The question is always whether the price reflects the evidence — not whether you have managed to negotiate a number down for its own sake.
What if the seller refuses to negotiate at all?
You have three options. First, review whether your own valuation is correct — perhaps the seller's price is fair and you were applying the wrong multiple. Second, negotiate the structure rather than the headline price — deferred consideration, seller finance or earn-out can change the economics without changing the number. Third, walk away if the price is genuinely not supportable by the evidence.
Can due diligence findings change the agreed price?
Yes. This is one of the key functions of due diligence. If material issues emerge after an offer has been made and accepted in principle, the buyer has every right to revisit the price and deal terms. The conditions in the heads of terms specifically protect this right. However, trying to use minor or insignificant due diligence findings as a pretext for a large price chip is generally counterproductive — it damages trust and can cause the seller to pull out.
Is seller finance a good way to bridge a valuation gap?
It can be. Seller finance means the seller loans part of the purchase price to the buyer, to be repaid from the business's income over an agreed term. It aligns the seller's interest in the business's ongoing success and reduces the buyer's upfront cash requirement. However, it also creates an ongoing creditor relationship that needs to be managed carefully, and the terms must be properly documented in the sale agreement to avoid disputes later.
Should I reveal my maximum price to the seller?
No. Your walk-away price should remain private. If you reveal your maximum, the seller has no incentive to accept anything less. Negotiate based on your evidenced valuation and deal structure — not on your personal financial limits.
When should I involve a solicitor in the negotiation?
From the heads of terms stage at the latest. Heads of terms are typically non-binding commercially, but certain provisions — exclusivity clauses, confidentiality obligations, deposit terms — can be legally binding. A solicitor should review any document before you sign it.
Key takeaways
Negotiate from evidence, not emotion.A clear, reasoned case for your valuation is more effective than simply stating a lower number.
Understand how the asking price was calculatedbefore you discuss it. Without this, you have no basis for a rational counter-offer.
Set your valuation range before negotiating.Calculate what the business is worth to you independently, and set a private walk-away point.
Price is only one element of the deal.Payment timing, seller finance, earn-outs, deferred consideration and deal structure can all be negotiated alongside or instead of the headline price.
Due diligence findings can justify price adjustments.If material issues emerge, raise them specifically and professionally — not as vague dissatisfaction.
Working capital matters.Make sure the deal structure accounts for the cash you need in the business from day one.
Know your walk-away point and respect it.The willingness to walk away is your strongest negotiating position.
Related resources
Important disclaimer
Buy a Business Ltd is a marketplace, not a broker, corporate finance adviser, M&A adviser, law firm, accountant, tax adviser, lender, valuation firm, surveyor, insolvency practitioner or investment adviser. Information, guides, checklists and examples on this site are for general guidance only and do not constitute legal, tax, financial, investment, lending, valuation, property, employment, data protection, brokerage, corporate finance, M&A or regulated advice.
Buying or selling a business involves risk. You should seek independent professional advice before buying, selling, valuing, financing, negotiating or completing a business purchase.
Sources and useful references
Companies House / GOV.UK: Get information about a company
GOV.UK: Business transfers, takeovers and TUPE
GOV.UK: Business Asset Disposal Relief
GOV.UK: Transfer a business as a going concern — VAT Notice 700/9

