What Business Sellers Must Do Now in 2026

The small‑business market is finally stabilizing — but it’s also becoming more selective. Strong, well‑prepared companies are getting multiple offers, while others are sitting on the sidelines longer than expected. According to the latest BizBuySell Insight report, buyers are more analytical than ever.

According to the latest BizBuySell Insight Report, after several years of volatility, the 2025 business‑for‑sale market finally found its footing. Transactions stabilized, valuations inched upward, and both buyers and sellers entered 2026 with clearer expectations. But beneath that stability is a market that’s becoming more selective, more data‑driven, and more competitive — especially for high‑quality listings.

As someone who works closely with California owners preparing for transition, I see the same themes reflected locally: strong businesses are still commanding attention, while under‑prepared sellers are feeling the pressure.

Here are the shifts shaping the 2026 landscape — and what they mean for owners considering an exit.

A Stabilizing Market… With a Split Personality

Overall deal volume held steady in 2025, and median sale prices rose 2% to $350,000. Cash flow and revenue also ticked up modestly. But the real story is the widening gap between businesses that can manage rising costs — and those that can’t.

Service businesses led the pack with rising valuations and stronger buyer demand. Retail and restaurants, meanwhile, continued to battle compressed margins, higher labor costs, and shifting consumer habits.

This “K‑shaped” performance means buyers are scrutinizing financials more closely than ever. Clean books, stable margins, and documented processes are no longer “nice to have” — they’re the price of admission.

A New Buyer Mix Is Reshaping Competition

Three buyer groups are now driving the market:

  • Corporate refugees — mid‑career professionals leaving traditional jobs — now make up 44% of buyers.
  • Search fund / ETA buyers are more active, well‑capitalized, and analytical.
  • Private equity continues to move downstream into sub‑$5M EBITDA deals.

This influx has created intense competition for well‑run businesses. Many top listings are going under contract in weeks, not months.

But it also means diligence is deeper, timelines are longer, and buyers expect more transparency.

AI Is Quietly Becoming a Valuation Driver

AI is no longer a buzzword — it’s influencing both buyer psychology and business value.

  • 33% of buyers view AI‑enabled businesses as more valuable.
  • 65% of owners already use AI in marketing, analytics, or customer service.
  • Some buyers are leaving corporate roles because of AI disruption fears.

For sellers, this is a strategic opportunity: even modest AI adoption can signal scalability, efficiency, and modern operations.

Policy, Tariffs, and Inflation Still Shape Owner Sentiment

Inflation remains the biggest pressure point, with 78% of owners reporting rising expenses. Tariffs and shifting federal policies are influencing supply chains, hiring, and long‑term planning. Owner sentiment toward the broader business environment is split almost evenly.

But despite the noise, one truth remains: strong businesses continue to sell in every economic cycle.

What Sellers Should Do Now

With more Baby Boomers entering the market and buyer demand expected to rise, 2026 is shaping up to be an active year. But preparation is everything.

Here’s what brokers nationwide — and my own experience — emphasize:

1. Start 12–18 months before you want to exit

Clean financials, reconciled books, and documented processes dramatically increase value.

2. Reduce owner dependence

Buyers pay premiums for businesses that don’t fall apart when the owner steps away.

3. Highlight growth opportunities

A clear roadmap can differentiate your listing from dozens of others.

4. Be realistic about valuation

Your business is worth what the market will pay — not what you need for retirement.

5. Expect creative deal structures

Seller financing, earnouts, and phased transitions are increasingly common.

The Bottom Line

The 2026 market rewards preparation, transparency, and operational strength. Buyers are active, but they’re selective. Sellers have opportunity, but only if they’re ready.

If you’re considering a transition — whether this year or next — the most strategic move you can make is to begin preparing now. The best time to sell is when you don’t have to.

📩 Contact Accel Business Advisors at info@accelvalue.com to discuss your business exit.

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