Can You Sell Your Business Without a Broker? The Honest Answer

By Ryan Williams March 31, 2026 9 min read

Business brokers typically charge 8–12% of the transaction value. On a $2M deal, that's $160K–$240K. The appeal of selling yourself is obvious. But that commission savings comes with real costs — in time, in complexity, in buyer access, and in the mistakes that owner-managed sales are statistically more likely to make. This is an honest assessment of whether going without a broker makes sense for your situation.


When selling without a broker actually makes sense

There are specific situations where an owner-managed sale is genuinely appropriate, and the DIY route has worked for plenty of sellers. Those situations tend to share certain characteristics:


What a broker actually does that you'd be doing yourself

If you decide to go without a broker, here's a realistic inventory of what you're taking on:

Buyer development and marketing

This is the hardest part to replicate. Business brokers have buyer databases — lists of qualified buyers actively looking for businesses in specific industries, geographies, and revenue ranges, who have been pre-screened for financial capacity and seriousness. Building this yourself means:

CIM preparation

The Confidential Information Memorandum is the primary document buyers use to evaluate your business. You'll need to write it yourself or hire a consultant to do so — typically a 20–40 page document covering your business history, operations, financials, and growth opportunities.

NDA management

Every buyer who wants financial information signs an NDA. You manage the distribution, tracking, and enforcement of these agreements. Not complex, but time-consuming.

Due diligence management

Organizing and providing documents, responding to information requests, coordinating between your accountant, attorney, and the buyer's advisors — this consumes significant time during an active due diligence process.

LOI negotiation

Negotiating the Letter of Intent without a broker means you're either negotiating directly with the buyer (who likely has professional representation) or relying heavily on your attorney. Either is workable but requires preparation.


The statistical reality

Data from business sale platforms consistently shows that:

This doesn't mean broker representation is always worth it. It means that the commission savings have to be weighed against the full picture — not just the fee as a percentage of the headline price, but as a percentage of the difference in outcomes between the two paths.


The hybrid approach: what most FSBO sellers should actually consider

Rather than a binary "use a broker or don't," many sellers in the right circumstances benefit from a hybrid approach:


The one thing no FSBO seller should skip

Regardless of whether you use a broker, you need an M&A attorney to review and negotiate your purchase agreement. This is non-negotiable.

The reps and warranties, indemnification provisions, and post-close obligations in a purchase agreement have significant financial consequences. Business attorneys who don't specialize in M&A transactions frequently miss things that M&A-specific counsel would catch. The incremental cost of specialized M&A counsel over general business law is small relative to the exposure.

Start with what your business is worth

Whether you go with a broker or handle it yourself, knowing your estimated value range is the starting point for every decision that follows.

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