Is My Electrical Business Even Sellable?

Most sound electrical businesses are sellable — but selling is genuinely hard, and the businesses that don't sell usually fail on a short list of fixable factors, not on size or even profit. Here's what buyers actually need to see, and why electrical sits in a favorable position.

"Is anyone even going to want this?" is one of the most common quiet fears among electrical contractors — and it's worth taking seriously, because selling a business genuinely is hard. But the reason businesses don't sell is rarely the one owners fear. It's almost never "nobody wanted it." It's a short list of fixable problems. Here's the honest picture, and where your business likely stands.

First, the hard truth — and the reassuring one

Selling is harder than most owners expect. Drawing on Exit Planning Institute and Forbes figures, only about one in five small businesses that go to market actually sell. That number is sobering, but read it carefully: the four that don't sell mostly stall on specific, identifiable issues — not because no buyer existed. Sellability is less a verdict on your business and more a checklist you can work against.

What buyers actually need to see

A business is sellable when a buyer can look at it and believe the earnings will survive the handoff. In practice that comes down to a handful of factors:

  • Transferable earnings. Can the business run without you? This is the big one, and in electrical it includes a wrinkle: if the master electrician's license sits with you personally, the buyer inherits a transfer problem on top of the usual key-person risk. (More on this in why owner-dependence lowers your multiple.)
  • Clean, verifiable financials. Buyers discount — or walk away from — what they can't confirm. Books that can be clearly recast, with job-level costing that proves margins, are table stakes.
  • Revenue quality. A diversified base with recurring commercial service revenue is far easier to sell than revenue concentrated in a few accounts or tied to one-off projects and new construction. (See do service contracts raise what your business is worth.)
  • A functioning team. Trained, licensed, stable electricians who'll stay through a transition are part of what a buyer is paying for — and worth more in a trade with a real shortage of skilled labor.
  • A financeable price. This one is underrated: a price a buyer can actually finance — for example, through SBA lending at smaller deal sizes — is a market price. A number that can't be financed at that deal size isn't a market price; it's an asking price. Realistic, supportable expectations are part of being sellable.

The reframe: most "unsellable" is really "not ready yet"

Notice what's on that list: owner-dependence, messy books, concentration, unrealistic pricing. Every one is a structural problem you can improve with runway — not a permanent condition. The businesses that don't sell are very often the ones that didn't prepare, not the ones that couldn't have. That's the most useful thing to know if a sale is still years away: the gap between "unsellable" and "sells well" is mostly work you can start now.

Why electrical is a favorable place to be

The demand side is genuinely on your side. Electrical is an essential service with steady demand, and it sits in front of an unusually active pool of buyers — individual searchers, regional strategics, and private-equity-backed platforms that now drive the large majority of electrical contractor M&A, with deal activity accelerating sharply in recent years. There's also a tailwind specific to electrical: demand tied to electrification, data centers, and EV and solar infrastructure is lifting interest in contractors positioned for that work. For a sound electrical business, "is there a buyer?" is rarely the real question. "Is it ready?" is.

The cases that are genuinely harder: very small or below-scale shops, pure new-construction project businesses with no recurring base, severe owner-dependence — especially where the license is locked to the owner — or books that can't be verified. Even most of these are improvable, but they're worth being honest with yourself about.

The fastest way to stop guessing is to see where your business actually stands and what's holding it back. A confidential valuation gives you that read — privately, with no obligation.

Illustrative example. Figures and signals shown are for format only and are not a valuation of any business.

Common questions

Is my electrical business too small to sell?
Usually not. Electrical is an essential service with steady demand and an unusually active pool of buyers — from individual searchers to private-equity-backed platforms now driving most of the M&A in the trade. Being below scale can narrow your buyer set, but it rarely makes a healthy business unsellable on its own.
Why do so many businesses fail to sell?
Drawing on Exit Planning Institute and Forbes figures, only about one in five small businesses that go to market actually sell. The common reasons aren't size or profit — they're owner-dependence, financials that can't be verified, customer or revenue concentration, and asking prices a buyer can't finance. Most of those are fixable with time.
What makes an electrical business actually sellable?
Earnings a buyer can keep after you leave (low owner-dependence, including who holds the license), clean and verifiable books with real job costing, good revenue quality (ideally recurring commercial service work), a functioning licensed team, and a price a buyer can realistically finance. Strengthen those, and 'sellable' stops being a question.

Sources

  1. Calder GroupThe Effects of Owner Dependence on Business Valuation (citing Exit Planning Institute / Forbes) (2025)
  2. Main Street WealthElectrical Contractor M&A Stats (reporting PitchBook and GF Data) (2026)
  3. YourExitValueElectrical Business Valuation Calculator & Exit Planning (2026)