Earnouts: When to Accept One, When to Walk Away, and How to Protect Yourself

By Ryan Williams March 31, 2026 9 min read

An earnout is one of the most misunderstood terms in a business sale. Buyers present it as upside — a chance to earn more than the base price if the business performs. Sellers often accept it as a bridge over a valuation gap. In reality, earnouts are frequently the most contested part of any deal — and sellers collect less than they expected more often than not. Here's what you need to know before you agree to one.


What an earnout actually is

An earnout is a provision in a purchase agreement where a portion of the purchase price is deferred and paid after closing — contingent on the business meeting specific performance targets during a defined period, typically 1–3 years post-close.

Example: You're selling for $4M. The buyer offers $3M at close plus up to $1M in earnout if the business hits $2.5M in revenue in Year 1 post-close. You've agreed to a $4M deal — but $1M of it is contingent on a performance target you may not fully control.

Earnouts are structurally a risk transfer from buyer to seller. The buyer pays less certain money upfront. The seller accepts the risk that future performance may not reach the threshold — or that disputes arise over how performance is measured.


Why buyers propose earnouts

Buyers use earnouts for specific reasons — understanding them helps you evaluate whether an earnout is reasonable in your situation or simply a price reduction in disguise.


When earnouts make sense — and when they don't

Situations where an earnout can be reasonable

Situations where you should push back

The honest math on earnouts Studies of completed M&A transactions consistently show that sellers collect less than the full earnout value in the majority of cases. This isn't always bad faith — business conditions change, integration is hard, and targets set at LOI often look different 18 months later. Factor in the statistical reality when deciding how much of your exit price to leave contingent.

If you accept an earnout: terms that protect you

If an earnout is part of your deal, the specific language in the purchase agreement matters enormously. These are the provisions that separate an earnout that pays from one that becomes a dispute.

1. Use revenue, not EBITDA or net income

Revenue is the most seller-friendly earnout metric because it's harder to manipulate post-close. EBITDA and net income can be affected by decisions the buyer makes — allocating corporate overhead, changing how costs are classified, or adjusting management compensation — that you have no control over. Push for gross revenue from existing customers, or gross profit as a second choice.

2. Define the calculation methodology explicitly

The earnout calculation should leave nothing to interpretation. Who compiles the numbers? What accounting standard applies? What's included and excluded? Is the earnout based on the acquired business in isolation or as part of a larger combined entity? Every ambiguity in the methodology is a potential dispute.

3. Non-interference clause

This is the most important earnout protection. A non-interference clause prohibits the buyer from taking actions that would materially reduce the likelihood of hitting earnout targets — changing the pricing strategy, eliminating key salespeople, redirecting customers to other business units, or not allocating sufficient resources to the acquired business.

Buyers will push back on this provision because it constrains their post-close operating freedom. That tension is exactly why it matters.

4. Acceleration on breach or change of control

If the buyer breaches the purchase agreement, or if they sell the business to a third party before the earnout period ends, the remaining earnout should accelerate and become immediately payable. Without this provision, you could find yourself in an earnout dispute with a buyer's buyer who has no relationship with you and no incentive to help you hit targets.

5. Audit rights

You should have the right to audit the financial records used to calculate earnout payments. Without this, you're trusting the buyer to report accurately — which is a significant concession when significant money is at stake.

6. Dispute resolution mechanism

Earnout disputes are common enough that the purchase agreement should specify how they get resolved — typically an independent accountant or arbitration — with a defined timeline and cost-sharing structure. Without a clear mechanism, disputes end up in litigation, which benefits nobody.


The alternative to earnouts: structure the deal differently

Before accepting an earnout, explore whether the valuation gap can be bridged through other deal structures:


The honest summary

Earnouts are not inherently bad — they exist because valuation gaps are real and sometimes a legitimate way to bridge them. But they shift risk onto sellers in ways that aren't always apparent at signing, and the majority of earnouts pay out less than expected.

If you're in a position where a buyer needs an earnout to reach your price, the best outcome is either getting them to close the gap with cash or structuring the earnout with the protections above. The worst outcome is accepting a large earnout against vague metrics with no non-interference protections — which is a version of accepting a lower price while doing someone else's job for two more years.

Know your baseline before negotiations start

Understanding your business's market value before an LOI gives you the leverage to push back on earnout structures that don't serve you.

Take the valuation quiz →
Ryan Williams

Ryan Williams

Founder, bzwrth

Ryan helps owners of $1M–$50M service businesses understand what their company is worth and prepare for a successful exit. Learn more

Last updated April 2026