Sector guide

How to Sell a Retail Shop in the UK

Amrita04 May 202615 min read
UK business marketplace scene for guide: How to Sell a Retail Shop in the UK

Executive summary

Learn how to sell a retail shop in the UK, including valuation, stock, lease, EPOS, footfall, suppliers, VAT, staff, business rates, online reviews and handover.

Selling a retail shop involves more moving parts than most sellers expect. The financials must stack up, the stock must be clearly valued, the lease must be assignable, and every supplier, system and staff member needs a handover plan. This guide covers what buyers will look for and how to prepare your shop for a successful sale.

Contents

  1. What makes selling a retail shop different?

  2. When is the best time to sell?

  3. How much is a retail shop worth?

  4. What financial information should you prepare?

  5. Why stock matters so much

  6. Lease and premises checks

  7. Staff, suppliers and systems

  8. VAT, business rates and compliance

  9. How to write a strong retail shop listing

  10. Mistakes sellers should avoid

  11. Seller checklist

  12. FAQs

  13. Key takeaways

What makes selling a retail shop different?

A retail shop is judged on more dimensions than most businesses.

Profit matters — but so does location, lease security, stock quality, gross margin, supplier relationships, footfall, online presence, customer loyalty and whether the business can genuinely continue after the owner leaves. A buyer is not just buying the last year's trading; they are buying the ability to replicate it.

Buyers will ask:

  • Is the shop profitable after a realistic owner salary is costed in?

  • Is the lease secure, and can it be assigned without landlord complications?

  • Is the stock current, well-managed and fairly valued?

  • Does the customer base return regularly, or is it primarily passing trade?

  • Are supplier terms competitive, and will they transfer?

  • Are staff reliable and likely to stay?

  • What EPOS data supports the revenue figures?

  • Are rent and business rates sustainable relative to profit?

  • Is there an online presence or revenue stream that adds value?

  • What growth opportunity is genuinely available to a new owner?

Your job as the seller is to make the shop easy to understand, easy to verify and easy to take over. Buyers do not expect perfection. They expect clear evidence.

When is the best time to sell?

The strongest time to sell is when:

  • Accounts are current and consistent— three years of clean trading history with no large unexplained movements

  • EPOS reports are available— transaction-level evidence that supports the declared revenue

  • Stock is well-managed— current, clearly valued and not carrying significant obsolete or slow-moving lines

  • Supplier relationships are healthy— accounts in the company name, no arrears, transferable terms

  • The lease is secure— sufficient term remaining (typically five or more years) and clear assignment provisions

  • Staff are stable— key staff are under proper contracts and likely to stay

  • Rent and business rates are manageable— these are buyer's fixed costs from day one

  • Reviews are strong and recent— Google Business Profile, social media and any third-party platforms

  • The reason for sale is credible— retirement, health, relocation, new opportunity

Consider preparing before marketing if:

  • Revenue has declined in the past twelve months without a clear explanation

  • Stock records are poor or significant slow-moving stock exists

  • The lease is short, in dispute or subject to an imminent rent review

  • Rent represents an uncomfortably high proportion of revenue

  • Business rates are under appeal or have arrears

  • Supplier arrears exist

  • Staff are uncertain or may leave

  • The owner personally drives all customer relationships and sales

  • EPOS records are incomplete or unavailable

  • Online reviews have worsened

Even six months of record-keeping improvement, stock rationalisation and lease clarification can make a material difference to the sale price.

How much is a retail shop worth?

Retail shop valuation starts with maintainable profit and adjusts for the specific characteristics of the business, its location and the market.

Adjusted EBITDA

The starting point is adjusted EBITDA — profit before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation, with one-off costs removed and the owner's salary normalised to a market-rate manager equivalent. Your accountant should prepare an add-back schedule as part of the sale preparation.

A multiple is then applied to reflect:

  • Profit trend— stable or growing profit attracts a higher multiple than a declining trend

  • Lease quality— a long, assignable lease with reasonable rent is a significant value driver

  • Location and footfall— a shop in a prime position with consistent footfall is worth more than an equivalent business in a declining high street

  • Gross margin— a good gross margin (after cost of goods sold) provides resilience; a thin one does not

  • Customer base— repeat, loyal customers are more valuable than passing trade that is difficult to predict

  • Owner dependency— the less the business relies on the owner's personal presence and relationships, the better

  • Stock quality— well-managed, current stock adds value; old or slow-moving stock reduces it

  • Online channel— an additional online revenue stream diversifies income and can increase the multiple

  • Supplier terms— competitive, transferable supplier accounts with good margins add value

Stock in the valuation

Stock is a separate consideration. It can be:

  • Includedin the asking price — the buyer pays one price for goodwill, fixtures, fittings and stock combined

  • Valued separatelyat completion — the agreed goodwill price is paid, then an independent stocktake determines the stock value, which is paid on top

  • Discounted for slow-moving or obsolete items— realistic treatment of aged stock

The arrangement should be agreed before heads of terms. Disputes about stock value at completion are one of the most common friction points in retail business sales.

What financial information should you prepare?

Buyers will scrutinise the financials carefully. Prepare the following:

  • Three years of filed accounts— profit and loss, balance sheet, directors' report or self-assessment returns

  • Current year management accounts— year to date versus the prior year

  • EPOS sales reports— weekly and monthly summaries, ideally by category or product line

  • VAT returns— to cross-check against declared turnover

  • Payroll records— staff numbers, roles, hours, pay rates, pension, employer NI

  • Supplier invoices and statements— key accounts, credit terms, outstanding balances

  • Stock valuation— current estimate and methodology

  • Gross margin reports— overall and by product category if available

  • Rent and service charge history— current rent, last review date, next review

  • Business rates— current bill, rateable value, any reliefs, any arrears

  • Utility bills— electricity and gas (relevant for shops with significant refrigeration or lighting costs)

  • Insurance documents— contents, public liability, employers' liability, any claims history

  • Asset finance agreements— any equipment under hire purchase or lease

  • Loan agreements— any outstanding business loans

  • Add-back schedule— owner salary, owner benefits, one-off costs, non-recurring items

Key numbers to know

  • Weekly and monthly turnover— and how seasonality affects it

  • Gross margin— revenue minus cost of goods as a percentage

  • Net profit— after all costs, including a realistic owner salary

  • Average transaction value— and how it has trended

  • Best-selling categories— where does the profit actually come from?

  • Stock shrinkage— if it is measured, what is the annual loss?

  • Wage cost as a percentage of revenue

  • Rent as a percentage of revenue— above 15–20% for most retail formats is a concern

  • Online sales revenue— if applicable

A buyer will not rely on "the shop is always busy." They will want evidence. EPOS reports and VAT returns that are consistent with each other are the strongest form of early-stage confidence.

Why stock matters so much

Stock is frequently the most contentious element of a retail shop sale. Both parties need to agree the treatment clearly before heads of terms, not during due diligence.

What to prepare

  • A current stock estimate— total cost value of all lines

  • Stock by category— fast-moving, seasonal, slow-moving, display, damaged, clearance

  • Slow-moving stock identification— any lines that have not sold in the past three to six months

  • Obsolete or damaged stock— separately identified and, ideally, removed or written down before marketing

  • Supplier retention-of-title clauses— does any stock remain the supplier's property until fully paid?

  • Supplier finance arrangements— is any stock held on sale-or-return or consignment?

Completing the stocktake

Agree in advance:

  • Who carries out the stocktake (typically an independent party agreed by both buyer and seller)

  • When it takes place (immediately before or at completion)

  • How stock is valued (cost price is standard; retail price with a discount is occasionally used)

  • Whether VAT applies to the stock transaction

  • What happens to any stock that is disputed — obsolete, damaged or significantly marked down

A clear, pre-agreed stock protocol reduces one of the most common causes of late-stage deal friction.

Lease and premises checks

The lease is often the most important single document in a retail shop sale. Get this right before you start marketing.

Key lease checks

  • Remaining term— how many years are left? Most buyers want a minimum of three to five years after completion; lenders often require more

  • Assignment provisions— does the lease allow assignment, and what process does the landlord's consent require?

  • Landlord's likely position— some landlords use assignment as an opportunity to renegotiate rent, demand a personal guarantee from the buyer, or impose new conditions

  • Rent level— is it at market rate or above it?

  • Service charge— what is included and what has the trend been?

  • Rent review mechanism— upward-only? RPI-linked? Open market?

  • Break clauses— who can trigger them and on what notice?

  • Repair and dilapidation obligations— what is the tenant responsible for, and is the property in reasonable condition?

  • User clause— is the permitted use wide enough to cover what the new owner wants to do?

  • Signage rights— can the buyer change the external branding?

  • Opening-hour restrictions— are there any limits on trading hours?

  • Storage and loading— is there adequate back-of-house space?

  • Rent arrears— are there any outstanding?

Involve your solicitor at the earliest stage. Lease assignment — including the landlord's consent process — is consistently one of the longest parts of a retail business sale.

Premises questions

Beyond the lease, buyers will also ask:

  • Is the shop in a strong trading position with stable or growing footfall?

  • Are there nearby competitors, and how does the shop differentiate?

  • Is the frontage and signage attractive?

  • Are any repairs or refurbishments needed?

  • Are there any planning restrictions that affect use or signage?

  • What is the energy performance, and what are the utility costs?

Staff, suppliers and systems

Staff

When a business changes hands, employees may be protected under TUPE (Transfer of Undertakings (Protection of Employment) Regulations 2006). In most asset sales of a going-concern retail shop, staff employed by the business will transfer to the buyer on their existing terms and conditions.

Prepare:

  • Full staff list — names, roles, contracted hours, pay rates, start dates

  • Written employment contracts for all staff

  • Holiday accrual and outstanding entitlements

  • Pension auto-enrolment records

  • Training records

  • Any disciplinary or grievance history

  • An honest assessment of which staff are likely to stay

Be transparent with the buyer about key-person risk. If the most experienced member of staff has indicated they may leave, that is material information.

Suppliers

Supplier relationships can materially affect the shop's profitability from day one of the new owner's tenure. Prepare:

  • A list of all suppliers, by product category

  • Credit terms and credit limits

  • Outstanding balances

  • Whether accounts are in the company name or the owner's personal name

  • Any rebates, volume discounts or promotional funding that may or may not continue

  • Whether terms are transferable — or whether the buyer needs to establish their own account

  • Any exclusivity arrangements

Introduce the buyer to key suppliers during the handover period — a warm introduction is worth far more than a list of contacts.

Systems

Prepare transfer or access arrangements for:

  • EPOS system— what platform? Can the data and account transfer?

  • Card machines— lease or owned? Contract transferable?

  • Website and online store— registered in whose name? CMS access?

  • Google Business Profile— can ownership be transferred?

  • Social media accounts— login access and administrative rights

  • Loyalty scheme— platform, customer data, terms

  • Stock management software— if used separately from EPOS

  • Accounting software— QuickBooks, Xero, Sage, etc.

  • Email accounts— especially if on a company domain

  • CCTV and alarm— owned or monitored service? Contract details?

Plan secure handover of all system access at completion. Do not share login credentials early in the process.

VAT, business rates and compliance

VAT

The VAT registration threshold is £90,000 (from 1 April 2024). If turnover is at or above this level, the business should be VAT registered. If it is not, a buyer approaching the threshold will need to register.

Prepare:

  • VAT registration number and registration date

  • Last four VAT returns — to cross-check turnover

  • Any outstanding VAT liability or payment plan

  • VAT treatment of products (most general retail is standard-rated, but exceptions apply — e.g. children's clothing, food)

  • Whether the sale may qualify as a Transfer of a Going Concern (TOGC) for VAT — this requires specific conditions and means no VAT is charged on the sale price. Take specialist VAT advice.

Business rates

Business rates are often a significant fixed cost for a retail shop. Prepare:

  • Current business rates bill

  • Rateable value — and whether it has been challenged or is subject to appeal

  • Any small business rates relief or retail relief currently applied

  • Outstanding arrears, if any

  • Any correspondence with the local authority about rates

A buyer will model business rates as a fixed day-one cost. If relief is currently applied, they need to understand whether they will qualify for it themselves.

Other compliance checks

Depending on what the shop sells, buyers may also ask about:

  • Alcohol licence (if spirits, wine or beer are sold)

  • Tobacco track-and-trace registration (if tobacco is sold)

  • Food registration (if food is prepared or sold)

  • Product safety and CE/UKCA marking compliance

  • Age-restricted sales processes and staff training

  • Waste management contracts

  • Fire safety — risk assessment, extinguisher service records

  • Health and safety policy and risk assessments

  • Insurance — contents, public liability, employers' liability

How to write a strong retail shop listing

A good retail listing leads with what makes the shop genuinely attractive — location, profit, lease, customer loyalty — not vague claims about "huge potential."

Include:

  • Shop type and product category

  • Broad location (area, not specific address at this stage)

  • Years of trading history

  • Revenue and profit summary (ranges are fine at this stage)

  • Gross margin overview

  • Stock treatment (included or separately valued)

  • Lease summary (remaining term, rough rent level)

  • Staff overview (headcount, stability — no names)

  • Supplier overview (categories, not specific suppliers)

  • Online presence (website, social media, Google profile)

  • Reason for sale

  • Growth opportunities (specific and credible, not generic)

  • Handover support offered

  • Confidentiality and screening process

Example listing paragraph

Established independent retail shop in a strong local trading location, with a loyal repeat customer base, organised EPOS records, reliable supplier accounts and clear opportunities for growth through local marketing and an expanded online presence. The sale includes goodwill, fixtures and fittings, supplier introductions and structured handover support. Stock can be valued separately at completion. Further financial, lease and stock information is available to serious buyers after screening and confidentiality checks.

Mistakes sellers should avoid

Overvaluing slow-moving stock.Old or obsolete stock is not worth its cost price. Identify it early, discount it or remove it before marketing. Buyers will discount aggressively if they discover aged stock during the stocktake.

Ignoring lease risk.The lease is the foundation of the business. A short lease, a landlord who is likely to be difficult, or assignment clauses that are unclear can delay or kill a deal. Check the lease before marketing, not after an offer is received.

Valuing only on turnover.Buyers care about profit after all costs, including a realistic owner salary. High turnover with thin margins and high rent is not an attractive business at a high price.

Not having EPOS records.A busy shop with no electronic sales data forces buyers to rely entirely on the seller's word. EPOS reports that cross-reference with VAT returns are the most powerful early evidence of trading performance.

Sharing supplier pricing too early.Supplier terms are commercially sensitive. Share high-level supplier information (categories, relationship quality) before an NDA. Detailed pricing and terms only in formal due diligence.

Hiding business rates or rent issues.These are day-one fixed costs for the buyer. An outstanding rates appeal, higher-than-average rent or a recent rent review outcome all need to be disclosed — and explained.

Not preparing staff information.Staff continuity is important to most retail buyers. Know which staff are on proper contracts, what their entitlements are, and which ones are likely to stay.

No handover plan.A buyer who cannot picture running the shop without you will price that uncertainty into their offer. A practical handover plan — supplier introductions, system access, operational knowledge, customer relationship notes — is worth preparing before you start marketing.

Seller checklist

  • Three years of filed accounts available

  • Current year management accounts prepared

  • EPOS reports extracted and reviewed

  • VAT returns available (and consistent with EPOS/accounts)

  • Payroll records organised

  • Gross margin by category understood

  • Add-back schedule prepared

  • Stock estimate prepared — by category, with slow-moving lines identified

  • Stocktake method agreed (independent, at completion, cost price)

  • Supplier list prepared — accounts in company name, terms clear, no arrears

  • Lease document ready — term, assignment provisions, rent, service charge, rent review

  • Landlord consent process understood

  • Business rates checked — rateable value, reliefs, any arrears

  • VAT position understood — registration status, returns available, TOGC advice taken if applicable

  • Staff list, contracts and employment records prepared

  • TUPE position understood — employment advice taken if needed

  • Asset finance agreements identified and listed

  • Fixtures and fittings list prepared — included vs excluded

  • Website, domain, social media accounts listed and access confirmed

  • Google Business Profile access confirmed

  • Any product-specific compliance identified (alcohol licence, tobacco, food registration etc.)

  • Insurance documents prepared

  • Handover plan drafted

  • NDA and buyer screening process ready

FAQs

How much is my retail shop worth?

A retail shop is usually valued using maintainable profit, stock (separately or included), lease quality, location, customer base, supplier terms and buyer demand. There is no single formula — the multiple depends on the specific shop's risk and growth profile.

Is stock included when selling a shop?

It depends on the deal. Stock is often valued separately by an independent stocktaker at or immediately before completion, with the agreed value paid in addition to the goodwill price. Confirm the arrangement clearly before heads of terms.

Does TUPE apply when selling a retail shop?

In most asset sales of a going-concern retail business, yes. Employees connected to the business transfer to the buyer on their existing terms and conditions. The exact position depends on the structure of the transaction — take employment advice.

Should I share supplier details with buyers early?

Share high-level supplier information (product categories, relationship overview) before an NDA. Specific pricing, discount structures and credit terms should only be shared during formal due diligence with an NDA in place.

What documents do shop buyers typically ask for?

Accounts, EPOS reports, VAT returns, payroll records, lease, supplier invoices, stock valuation, asset finance agreements, insurance, staff details and the handover plan.

Key takeaways

  • Retail buyers care about profit, stock, lease quality, location and the ability to replicate the business without the seller.

  • Stock value and treatment must be agreed upfront — it is the most common source of late-stage deal friction.

  • EPOS data and VAT returns are the strongest early evidence of trading performance.

  • The lease is foundational — know the assignment process and involve your solicitor before marketing.

  • Rent and business rates are immediate fixed costs for the buyer — make them easy to verify.

  • Supplier terms and system access need a clear handover plan.

  • Stage your disclosure carefully and use NDAs before sharing detailed financial, supplier or staff information.

Important disclaimer

Buy a Business Ltd is a marketplace, not a broker. Information, guides, checklists and examples on this site are for general guidance only and do not constitute legal, tax, financial, investment, valuation, employment, licensing, health and safety, data protection, brokerage or regulated advice.

Buying or selling a business involves risk. You should seek independent professional advice before buying, selling, valuing, financing or completing a business purchase.

Sources and useful references

  • GOV.UK: VAT registration threshold increase

  • GOV.UK: Business transfers, takeovers and TUPE

  • ICO: Due diligence when sharing data following mergers and acquisitions

  • Companies House: Get information about a company

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