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Sell Your Business in Houston, Texas

Quick Answer

Houston business valuations typically range from 4.0x to 8.0x EBITDA depending on sector, recurring revenue, and owner dependency, with buyers including 100+ capital partners across PE, family offices, search funders, and strategic acquirers. Most Houston deals close in 60 to 120 days from first introduction, and sellers pay nothing, the buyer pays the advisory fee at closing with no retainer or exclusivity required. The market is particularly active in energy services, healthcare, logistics, light industrial, and home services sectors serving the 7.3 million person metro area.

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Houston, Texas landscape

If you’re considering selling a Houston, Texas business, you have three things to figure out before anything else: what your business is actually worth in today’s market, who the qualified buyers are for a business like yours, and which path to a closing wastes the least of your time and money. This page covers all three for Houston, Texas sellers, plus the alternative to the traditional broker model.

The short version: well-funded buyers, search funders, family offices, lower-middle-market PE, and strategic acquirers, are looking for Houston, Texas businesses and they pay the advisor fee themselves. CT Acquisitions is the firm that connects them. Sellers pay nothing. No exclusivity contract. No retainer. Most Houston, Texas deals in our network close in 60-120 days. The first step is finding out what your business is worth, our free valuation tool takes about 90 seconds.

Houston, Texas sellers, what to know

  • Typical Houston, Texas multiples: 4.0x to 8.0x EBITDA depending on sector, recurring revenue, and owner dependency
  • Free Houston, Texas valuation: our 90-second valuation tool gives you a sector-adjusted range using current lower middle market benchmarks
  • Active buyers in Houston, Texas: 100+ capital partners across PE, family offices, search funders, and strategic acquirers
  • Typical close: 60 to 120 days from first introduction, not 9 to 12 months
  • Cost to seller: $0, the buyer pays our fee at closing. No retainer, no exclusivity contract
  • Want the broker fee breakdown? See our national business broker alternative guide and the Texas broker landscape

The Houston, Texas business sale landscape

Houston has one of the largest deal markets in the South, with the energy sector (Permian Basin extension, refining, petrochemicals, oilfield services) creating distinct M&A dynamics. Beyond energy, Houston has a deep base of healthcare services (Texas Medical Center), logistics serving the Port of Houston, light industrial, and a meaningful home services sector serving the dense metropolitan area. Year-round HVAC demand makes Houston home services particularly active for consolidators.

What’s distinctive about the Houston deal market

Metro population: 7.3 million · 5-year growth: +7.9% (2019-2024)

Industry composition: Oil and gas (upstream, midstream, downstream, services), petrochemicals, healthcare (Texas Medical Center is the world’s largest medical complex), aerospace (NASA Johnson), maritime and logistics (Port of Houston).

Major employers anchoring the deal market: ExxonMobil, Sysco, Phillips 66, Kinder Morgan, ConocoPhillips, Memorial Hermann Health System, Houston Methodist, MD Anderson, Halliburton, Schlumberger. These anchor businesses create dense B2B services ecosystems and concentrated home services demand around their corporate campuses and employee residential corridors.

Submarket dynamics

Inner Loop (Heights, Montrose, River Oaks, West University) skews to wealthy-demographic specialty trades and B2B services. The Energy Corridor (West Houston, Katy, Cinco Ranch) hosts dense corporate B2B services serving the energy industry. Sugar Land, Pearland, and The Woodlands anchor different suburban submarkets with heavy home services activity. Port-adjacent areas (East Houston, Pasadena, Baytown) host the densest industrial services and petrochemical-adjacent operators.

Where Houston multiples run above national averages

Energy-services and industrial-services operators command strategic premiums when buyers value Houston’s unique positioning. HVAC and plumbing in suburban Houston pay above-national multiples due to extreme weather. Oilfield-services-adjacent specialty trades see significant strategic acquirer interest.

PE and strategic-acquirer activity in Houston

Houston has the largest energy-services M&A market in the world. Home services consolidation has been active since 2021, particularly in Sugar Land, The Woodlands, and Katy.

What’s my Houston, Texas business worth?

The honest answer: it depends on six factors, sector multiples, your size, your recurring-revenue percentage, owner dependency, growth trajectory, and the strength of your management team underneath you. Here are the typical multiple ranges for businesses we see in the Houston, Texas market across the sectors our buyer network is most active in:

Sector Typical EBITDA Multiple Range What drives the upper end
HVAC, plumbing, electrical (service) 4.0x , 7.5x Recurring service-agreement revenue 50%+, crew retention, defensible territory
Roofing 3.5x , 6.5x Insurance-claim mix, multi-state operations, commercial work
Pest control 5.5x , 9.0x Recurring contract %, commercial vs residential mix, route density
Landscaping (commercial maint.) 4.5x , 7.5x Multi-year contract base, commercial concentration, fleet quality
B2B services & professional services 4.5x , 8.5x Recurring revenue, customer concentration <15%, defensible niche
Healthcare services 5.5x , 10.0x Provider retention, payer mix, growth trajectory
Light manufacturing & specialty 4.0x , 7.5x Customer diversification, IP and tooling, capacity utilization
Logistics, distribution & supply chain 4.5x , 8.0x Customer retention, fleet ownership, lane defensibility

These are the ranges we use as starting points when valuing Houston, Texas businesses. Your actual multiple depends on the size of the business (larger businesses get a size premium), your specific sector dynamics, owner dependency, growth trajectory, and the depth of your management team. Our free valuation tool applies all of these adjustments and gives you a personalized range in about 90 seconds.

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Answer six quick questions about your business and we’ll give you an instant estimated valuation range based on current lower middle-market benchmarks, plus the specific factors driving your number up or down.

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Active buyers in the Houston, Texas market

The buyer pool for Houston, Texas businesses splits into four groups, and the right group for your specific business depends on size, sector, and what you want post-close:

Search funders & independent sponsors

Operators with committed equity capital looking to acquire and personally run a single business. Best fit for $1-5M EBITDA businesses where the owner is willing to do a 6-12 month transition. Typical multiples: lower end of the range, but they often offer rollover equity for sellers who want to participate in upside.

Family offices

Long-hold capital from wealthy families. They want stable cash-flowing businesses with a multi-decade hold horizon. Best fit for $2-15M EBITDA businesses with strong management teams underneath the owner. Family offices typically pay competitive multiples and offer the highest seller flexibility on deal structure.

Lower middle-market PE

The largest single buyer group for $3-25M EBITDA businesses. They build platforms (consolidating multiple operators in a sector) or do strategic add-ons to existing platforms. Best fit when you want a clean exit or have a strong second-in-command. Typical multiples: highest in the range when there’s clear synergy with their thesis.

Strategic acquirers

Other operators in your sector or adjacent sectors looking to grow through acquisition. They consistently pay the highest multiples because they’re underwriting synergies. The catch: they typically refuse to participate in broker auctions because they don’t want their interest signaled to competitors. The way to reach strategic buyers is through targeted, confidential, sequential introductions, our model.

Want to know which of these groups is the right fit for your specific Houston, Texas business? Start a 15-minute confidential conversation or use our valuation tool first.

Sectors with the most buyer demand for Houston, Texas businesses right now

Across our 100+ buyer network, the sectors most actively prospecting Houston, Texas businesses are:

All sectors we have buyer demand for

If your Houston, Texas business doesn’t fit cleanly into one of the sectors above, our buyer network is broader than home services. Browse all the verticals where we maintain active capital partner relationships:

Don’t see your sector? That doesn’t mean we have no buyers, our capital partner mandates change quarterly. Start a confidential conversation and we’ll tell you within 24 hours whether we have qualified buyers for your specific vertical.

The Houston, Texas broker landscape (and a free alternative)

Most owners considering a sale start by talking to a Houston, Texas business broker. A broker quotes 9-12 months, may ask for a $25,000 to $100,000 retainer (typical for M&A advisors on deals over $2M, many smaller-deal Main Street brokers work commission-only), hands over an exclusivity agreement, and explains that their 6-12% success fee comes out of sale proceeds at closing. On a $5M deal that’s $300,000 to $600,000 the seller never sees.

For some owners, that math works. For most owners we work with in Houston, Texas, it doesn’t, and the buyer-paid alternative is better.

Our national business broker alternative guide covers the full breakdown: what brokers actually charge, the five hidden costs of the broker model (exclusivity lockouts, auction filtering, confidentiality leaks, re-trades during diligence, inflated valuations), and the eight questions to ask before signing any engagement letter.

For Texas-specific broker market data and fees, see our Texas business brokers and free alternative guide.

Curious what your Houston, Texas business would sell for?

A 15-minute confidential call gives you a real valuation range and tells you which buyers would compete for your business. No cost, no obligation, no pressure to sell.

Get My Confidential Valuation

What our process looks like for Houston, Texas sellers

Here’s the operational difference compared to a traditional broker engagement, step by step:

Step Traditional broker CT Acquisitions
Initial conversation Free; ends with engagement letter Free; ends with valuation and buyer-fit conversation, no signing
Engagement Sign exclusivity, M&A advisor retainers $25K-$250K typical No engagement letter; no payment from seller, ever
Marketing Auction: 30-100 buyers contacted with anonymized teaser Sequential: one buyer at a time from our 100+ capital partners under NDA
Confidentiality Network-wide; leaks common One-buyer-at-a-time, NDA-first
Timeline 9-12 months typical, 18+ months common 60-120 days typical
Cost to seller 5-12% of sale price $0
If it doesn’t close You may still owe retainer + monthly + tail fee You owe nothing

The five pillars of how CT Acquisitions works

$0 to Sellers

Buyer pays our fee. Founders never write a check.

No Retainer

No engagement letter. No upfront cost. No exclusivity contract.

100+ Capital Partners

Search funders, family offices, lower-middle-market PE, strategics.

Sequential, Not Auction

Confidential introductions to the right buyers. No bidding war.

60-120 Day Close

Not 9-12 months. Not 18 months. Months, not years.

Other metros we cover near Houston, Texas

No Pitch · No Pressure

Ready to explore selling your Houston, Texas business?

Tell us about your business. We’ll tell you what it’s likely worth, whether we have qualified buyers in our network, and what the next 60 to 120 days could look like. No engagement letter. No retainer. Walk at any time.

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Christoph Totter, Founder of CT Acquisitions

About the Author

Christoph Totter is the founder of CT Acquisitions, a buy-side partner headquartered in Sheridan, Wyoming. We work directly with 100+ buyers, search funders, family offices, lower middle-market PE, and strategic consolidators, including direct mandates with the largest consolidators that other intermediaries cannot access. The buyers pay us when a deal closes, not the seller. No retainer, no exclusivity, no contract until close. Connect on LinkedIn · Get in touch

Frequently asked questions about selling a Houston, Texas business

How much is my Houston, Texas business worth?

Most Houston, Texas businesses sell for 4.0x to 8.0x adjusted EBITDA depending on sector, size, recurring revenue percentage, and owner dependency. Home services and B2B businesses typically land between 4.5x and 7.5x; healthcare services and high-recurring SaaS-adjacent businesses can clear 8x to 10x. Our free valuation tool takes about 90 seconds and applies all the standard adjustments to give you a personalized range.

What’s the typical timeline to sell a Houston, Texas business?

With a traditional broker, expect 9 to 12 months quoted, 12 to 24 months in practice. With our buyer-paid alternative, typical close is 60 to 120 days because we introduce founders to capital partners who have already pre-qualified the type of business they want to acquire.

Do I need a business broker to sell my Houston, Texas business?

No. Many founders sell businesses without a broker by working directly with a transactional M&A attorney for documentation, a CPA for tax structuring, and a small set of qualified strategic acquirers they identify themselves or are introduced to. The work brokers actually do, connecting buyers, organizing diligence, negotiating, is learnable for an experienced operator. The key is access to qualified buyers, which is what CT Acquisitions provides at no cost to Houston, Texas sellers.

Will my Houston, Texas employees and customers find out if I work with CT Acquisitions?

No. Confidentiality is built into our model. We make sequential introductions to one buyer at a time, under NDA, until a fit emerges. There’s no buyer-pool email blast, no listing on broker networks, no auction process. Particularly important for tighter Houston, Texas markets where word travels fast.

What does it cost a Houston, Texas seller to work with CT Acquisitions?

$0. The buyer pays our advisor fee at closing as part of their cost of acquisition. We don’t charge Houston, Texas sellers a retainer, success fee, or any other fee at any stage. If a deal doesn’t close, you owe us nothing.

What if my Houston, Texas business is below your typical size range?

Our network is most active for businesses with $1M to $25M of EBITDA, which translates roughly to $3M to $100M+ in revenue depending on margins. If your business is smaller, we may still have qualified search-fund or family-office buyers for it, but the alternative is also good: many smaller Houston, Texas businesses do well selling directly to a key employee or competitor with a transactional attorney handling the paperwork. Start a 15-minute conversation and we’ll tell you honestly which path fits your situation best.

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