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Tax implications of buying or selling a small business: what I’m seeing right now

Tax implications of buying or selling a small business can make or break your entire deal. And right now? I’m seeing a level of urgency in the small business market that catches a lot of owners off guard.

I’m seeing some unusually intense buying and selling activity among my business owners.

Some small businesses are even going under LOI in 48 hours or less.

I’m talking electrical companies, cleaning services, restoration businesses… the kind of “boring” businesses with real, repeatable cash flow every month.

The buyers are not who you would think. I’m seeing professionals—attorneys, executives, experienced operators—who want cash flow without the startup hustle.

The sellers? Many are older owners whose kids don’t want the business, or don’t want to run it. They’re ready to cash out.

Here’s why this matters to you:
Whether you’re thinking about buying OR selling, there’s a massive opportunity here… and most people are getting it wrong.

  • If you’re selling: Positioning can be the difference between a clean sale at a strong price versus leaving serious money on the table.
  • If you’re buying: You need your due diligence team locked in. I’ve watched “good deals” turn into money pits because the buyer didn’t have the right CPA and risk assessor evaluating the numbers and the tax landmines.

Either way, the tax implications can make or break your entire deal.


Why “boring” businesses are moving fast

Let’s be factual about what’s fueling this:

  • Deal volume is real. Small business transaction data has shown year-over-year increases, and the time it takes to sell has tightened in many markets.
  • Service businesses are getting attention. Essential services (home services and facility services) are attractive because demand is resilient, and many industries are fragmented—meaning buyers can still find opportunities.
  • Buyer demand is competitive. For clean, cash-flowing businesses, sellers often have options—multiple conversations, multiple offers, and pressure to move quickly.

Translation: if your numbers are clean, your story is clear, and your tax picture is handled, you can move fast. If any one of those is messy, you can lose leverage fast.


Tax implications of selling a small business: positioning is not “marketing”—it’s proof

When sellers hear “positioning,” they think it means a pretty pitch deck.

No. Positioning is the paper trail that proves your cash flow is real, transferable, and low-risk.

Seller checklist: what buyers (and lenders) will ask for

  • 3–5 years of tax returns and financial statements that match reality (and match each other)
  • Clean bookkeeping (no mystery categories, no personal spend running through the business)
  • Owner add-backs documented (not “trust me” add-backs)
  • Customer concentration analysis (how much revenue is tied to 1–3 customers)
  • Payroll and contractor records (W-2s vs 1099s done correctly)
  • Sales tax and state compliance snapshot (where you have exposure)
  • Simple operations documentation (what happens when you’re not there)

If you want a mindset shift: buyers pay for transferable cash flow. Not “hero-owner” cash flow.

Seller tax strategy: what to plan BEFORE you sign anything

  • Entity and exit structure: The way your business is structured can change the way your exit is taxed.
  • Asset sale vs stock sale: This is one of the biggest “silent” drivers of your after-tax outcome.
  • Allocation and documentation: If this is an asset deal, the allocation matters—and the IRS paperwork matters.
  • Timing: Your tax year, your personal income, and your state exposure all change the math.

This is where many owners get blindsided: they negotiate price and forget structure… and structure quietly decides what you keep.

Internal link: If you want a quick reminder of why “trusting the process” is not a strategy, read: Due Diligence in Investing: Why Blind Trust Costs More Than Money


Tax implications of buying a small business: due diligence isn’t optional

If you’re buying, you are not “buying a job.” You’re buying a set of risks and a set of cash flows. Due diligence is where you find out which one is real.

Buyer checklist: what your CPA should be testing

  • Tax return reality check: Do the returns support the earnings story?
  • Cash flow quality: Are expenses properly categorized? Any “one-time” items that are actually recurring?
  • Payroll and contractor exposure: Misclassification can get expensive fast.
  • Sales tax and nexus exposure: Especially for service + multi-location or multi-state operations.
  • Debt, liens, and compliance: What follows the business after close?
  • Working capital needs: Can the business operate day 1 without you injecting cash?

I’ve seen buyers fall in love with a P&L and ignore the tax returns. That’s backwards. The IRS doesn’t care what your seller’s spreadsheet says.


The tax decisions that swing your after-tax outcome

You do not need to be a tax expert to understand this: deal structure changes taxes.

Asset sale vs. stock sale (simplified)

  • Buyers often prefer asset deals because they may get a basis step-up and future deductions.
  • Sellers often prefer stock deals because more of the gain may be taxed at capital gain rates.

There are exceptions and planning options—but if you don’t address this early, you can end up negotiating yourself into a tax problem.

Purchase price allocation and Form 8594

In many asset acquisitions of a trade or business, both sides may have to report the allocation using IRS Form 8594 (Asset Acquisition Statement under Section 1060).

Outbound (IRS): About Form 8594, Asset Acquisition Statement Under Section 1060

Why you should care: the allocation can change how much is treated as ordinary income vs capital gain, and it can change what the buyer can deduct over time.


Want to talk through your specific situation?

If you’re thinking about buying, selling, or you’re just curious what your business might be worth in today’s market, let’s talk through it with the numbers in front of us.

Schedule a Free Tax Strategy Session

P.S. That vending machine business I looked at? It went under contract in 2 days. If you’re sitting on a cash-flowing business thinking “maybe someday”… someday might be costing you.


Read related content!

Educational content only. Tax outcomes depend on your entity, state(s), deal terms, and timing.

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