If you’re a business owner thinking about selling in the near future, there’s an important question that you should be asking:
Who is actually buying businesses like yours in 2026?
The latest data from the report "Who’s Buying in the Lower Middle Market in 2026? Key Buyer Trends From Axial Data" reveals a buyer landscape that is bigger, more diverse, and more competitive than at any point in the past five years.
It also reveals who is closing deals, what they’re targeting, and where competition is heating up.
Let’s break down what it means for you as a small business owner.
In 2025, 2,635 new buyers joined Axial which is a 36% year-over-year increase and the highest number of new buyers in the platform’s history.
Translation for owners: Buyers and capital are readily available for transactions. So if you’re looking to sell your business, you want to ensure that your business aligns with buyers’ acquisition criteria.
Across all buyer types, including Private Equity, Independent Sponsors, Family Offices, Holding Companies, Corporations, Search Funds, and Individual Investors, the overwhelming majority are targeting businesses that have:
However, interest remains solid for businesses with $500K–$1M EBITDA and $5M–$10M EBITDA.
Demand tapers noticeably above $10M EBITDA.
What this means: If your business generates between $1M and $5M in EBITDA, you are sitting in the most competitive segment of the lower middle market.
That’s good news, but don’t forget that:
Five years ago, the market was dominated by Private Equity funds and Independent Sponsors.
In 2021, PE and Independent Sponsors were responsible for 61% of closed deals but by 2025 that dropped to 45%.
Who filled the gap?
The buyer pool is now far more diversified.
Different buyers have different priorities:
|
Buyer Type |
Priorities |
|
Private Equity |
Substantial platform companies, add-ons, scalability |
|
Search Funds |
One business to operate long term |
|
Family Offices |
Provide patient capital, legacy alignment |
|
Holding Companies |
Buy-and-hold, operational synergies |
|
Corporations |
Strategic integration |
|
Individual Investors |
Cash-flowing owner-operator or portfolio play |
You now have more potential paths, not just the PE exit lane.
Axial’s data highlights where buyer demand is at odds and even with deal supply.
Why this matters:
If you’re in Business Services, expect:
If you’re in a sector with softer enthusiasm, positioning and preparation matter even more.
Average selling prices tell an interesting story:
What’s driving this?
Bottom line: Buyers outside traditional PE now have real firepower.
Approximately 50% of add-on demand on Axial come from PE Funds.
That means many PE firms are:
For small business owners, this creates two distinct paths:
Each has different valuation dynamics and negotiation leverage.
Here are the key takeaways:
If you’re thinking about selling, this is the time to ask:
The lower middle market in 2026 is active — but buyers are disciplined.
The window is open. But it favors the prepared.
At Business Transition Academy, we help owners prepare not just their businesses—but themselves—for what’s next.
A great exit doesn’t end at the closing table. Our Business Owner resource “Live Your Ideal Life After Selling Your Business” and free book “Sell Your Business: At the Right Time, for the Right Price, and to the Right Buyer” will help you prepare for the sale and intentionally design the life that follows—so you exit on your terms, without regret.