How Much Do You Pay a Broker to Sell Your Business?

Most business brokers charge a commission between 8% and 12% of the final sale price — but that number shifts based on deal size, business type, and how hungry the broker is.

Standard Fee Structure

Business sale price Typical broker commission
Under $1M 10–12%
$1M – $5M 8–10%
$5M – $25M 5–8%
$25M+ 2–5% (M&A firms)

Smaller deals carry higher percentages. A broker earning $80,000 on a $1M sale needs that 8% because smaller transactions take nearly as much work as larger ones.

The Lehman Formula

Some M&A advisors use a tiered structure called the Lehman formula — 5% on the first million, 4% on the second, and so on down. Variations are common. Ask any advisor upfront exactly how they calculate their fee.

Retainer fees ($2,000–$15,000) are sometimes charged upfront and may or may not apply toward the final commission. Clarify this before signing anything.

What Affects the Final Number

  • Sale price (higher = lower percentage)
  • Industry and how easy the business is to sell
  • Whether you’re using a generalist broker or an industry-specific one
  • Your negotiating leverage

FAQ

Can you negotiate the commission?

Yes. Especially on deals above $2M. Most brokers won’t advertise flexibility, but it exists.

Do you pay if the business doesn’t sell?

Usually not — most brokers work on success fees only. If there’s a retainer, that part is typically non-refundable.

Conclusion

Expect to pay 8–12% for most small business sales, with room to negotiate on larger deals. Get the fee structure in writing before you sign an engagement agreement.

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