📘 Acquisition Guide

How to Buy a Landscaping Business

Everything you need to know about acquiring a landscaping company: valuation, financing, due diligence, and making a smooth transition.

The landscaping industry represents one of the most attractive sectors for acquisition entrepreneurs. With $130 billion in annual revenue across the US and a wave of Baby Boomer owners approaching retirement, opportunities abound for aspiring business owners.

In this guide, I'll break down exactly what you need to know to evaluate, finance, and close a landscaping acquisition — based on frameworks I teach at the University of Miami and use in my own deals.

2.5x-4.0x
Typical SDE Multiple
$1M-$5M
Sweet Spot Revenue
Yes ✓
SBA Loan Eligible

Why Buy a Landscaping Business?

Landscaping businesses have several characteristics that make them attractive acquisition targets:

Darien's Take: "Landscaping is exactly the kind of industry I look for. Essential service, repeat customers, and owners who built something great but have no idea how they're going to retire. We don't acquire companies and strip them for parts — we lean into the legacy."

Landscaping Business Valuation

Landscaping businesses are typically valued using a multiple of Seller's Discretionary Earnings (SDE). SDE represents the total financial benefit to a working owner — net income plus owner salary, benefits, and add-backs.

Revenue Range Typical SDE Multiple Why?
Under $1M 1.5x-2.5x Higher owner dependency, smaller customer base
$1M - $3M 2.5x-3.5x Established operations, more stable
$3M - $10M 3.0x-4.5x Professional management, stronger systems
$10M+ 4.0x-6.0x Institutional quality, EBITDA becomes relevant

Use our Business Valuation Calculator to estimate the value of any specific opportunity.

Due Diligence Checklist for Landscaping Acquisitions

Every industry has specific diligence considerations. For landscaping businesses, pay special attention to:

Financial Due Diligence

Operational Due Diligence

Legal & Regulatory

📊 Deal Scoring ToolEvaluate this opportunity → 🧮 SDE CalculatorCalculate seller earnings →

Financing a Landscaping Acquisition

Most landscaping acquisitions under $5M are financed through SBA 7(a) loans. Here's what you need to know:

Landscaping businesses are SBA favorites because they have tangible assets (equipment, trucks) and predictable cash flows. Most lenders are comfortable with the industry.

Alternative Financing

Landscaping-Specific Considerations

Seasonality

Most landscaping businesses experience significant seasonality. In northern climates, revenue can drop 60-80% in winter months unless the business has snow removal services. Southern markets are more stable but still see seasonal fluctuations.

What to look for: Businesses with diversified revenue streams — maintenance contracts, irrigation, hardscaping, snow removal — that smooth out seasonal dips.

Labor Challenges

Finding and retaining skilled landscaping crews is the #1 operational challenge. H-2B visa workers are common for seasonal peaks. Evaluate the business's crew stability and recruitment pipeline carefully.

Equipment

A typical landscaping business has $100K-$500K in equipment. Get a detailed inventory and assess condition. Deferred maintenance on trucks and mowers can become an immediate cash drain post-acquisition.

Commercial vs. Residential

Commercial contracts (HOAs, office parks, municipalities) provide stability but often have lower margins. Residential work is higher margin but more volatile. The best businesses have a healthy mix.

What Makes a Great Landscaping Acquisition?

After evaluating hundreds of deals, here's what I look for in a landscaping acquisition:

  1. Diversified customer base: No single customer over 10% of revenue
  2. Recurring revenue: Maintenance contracts, not just one-time design/build projects
  3. Strong team: Key employees who will stay through transition
  4. Systems in place: CRM, scheduling, invoicing — not just in the owner's head
  5. Motivated seller: Clear reason for selling with realistic expectations
  6. Growth opportunity: Untapped marketing, new services, or geographic expansion

Ready to Learn How to Close Your First Deal?

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Common Mistakes When Buying a Landscaping Business

Remember: Investing without proper due diligence is gambling. Take your time, ask hard questions, and walk away from deals that don't make sense. There's always another opportunity.

Next Steps

If you're seriously considering buying a landscaping business:

  1. Use our tools to evaluate any opportunities you're seeing
  2. Join the newsletter for weekly deal analysis and frameworks
  3. Get SBA pre-qualified so you know your buying power
  4. Start networking with brokers, owners, and other acquirers

The best deals aren't on BizBuySell. They're found through relationships. Doers do.