BUSINESS GUIDE · PUBLISHED 2026-05-17Updated 2026-05-17
Asset Sale vs Share Sale: Which is Right for You?
Expert-supervised by Takayuki SawaiGyoseishoshi (行政書士) — Licensed Administrative Scrivener, JapanAll MmowW content is supervised by a nationally licensed regulatory compliance expert.
Compare asset sale vs share sale across 7 countries. MmowW Scrib🐮 prepares transaction documents for both sale structures simply. When selling a business, one of the most fundamental decisions is the deal structure: will the buyer purchase the company's assets, or will they purchase the shares of the company itself?
TL;DR: In an asset sale, you sell specific business assets. In a share sale, you sell your ownership of the company itself. Buyers often prefer assets; sellers often prefer shares — for very different tax and liability reasons.
What You Need to Know
When selling a business, one of the most fundamental decisions is the deal structure: will the buyer purchase the company's assets, or will they purchase the shares of the company itself?
The choice has significant consequences for both parties — affecting tax liabilities, legal risk transfer, complexity of the transaction, and the net amount the seller ultimately receives. In practice, most negotiations involve competing preferences: sellers typically prefer share sales (for tax reasons), while buyers typically prefer asset sales (for liability protection).
Understanding both structures — and the negotiating dynamics — is essential before entering any sale process. Always consult a qualified attorney and tax advisor before deciding which structure to pursue.
MmowW Scrib🐮 is a document preparation service, not a law firm. We do not provide legal advice.
How It Works: A Practical Overview
What Is an Asset Sale?
In an asset sale, the buyer purchases specific assets of the business — which might include:
Goodwill (the value of the business beyond its tangible assets)
Premises (leasehold or freehold)
The legal entity (the company) remains with the seller and is not transferred. The seller then distributes the sale proceeds to shareholders and winds up the company.
Buyer's perspective on asset sales:
Buyer acquires only what they want — they can leave behind unwanted liabilities, contracts, or employees
The company's historical liabilities (tax debts, lawsuits, pension deficits) generally stay with the old company
Buyer can "step up" the cost base of acquired assets for depreciation purposes, potentially reducing future tax
Assets may require individual transfer — contracts must be assigned, licences obtained, property transferred — which is administratively complex
Seller's perspective on asset sales:
The company continues to exist after the sale (until dissolved)
All proceeds initially land in the company — there is then a further tax event when distributing to shareholders
Double taxation risk in many jurisdictions (tax in the company on the gain, then tax again on distribution to shareholders)
Greater documentation burden — each asset transferred separately
What Is a Share Sale?
In a share sale, the buyer purchases the shares of the company from the current shareholders. The company continues to exist as the same legal entity — it just has new owners.
Buyer's perspective on share sales:
The buyer acquires the entire company — including all historical liabilities, even undisclosed ones
Less ability to pick and choose what is acquired
No step-up in asset cost base — the buyer's cost base is the shares purchased
Simpler transfer of contracts, licences, and relationships (which remain with the company)
Seller's perspective on share sales:
Proceeds flow directly to shareholders (not through the company), potentially achieving a single tax event
In many jurisdictions, there are specific reliefs on capital gains from share sales (Business Asset Disposal Relief in the UK, Small Business CGT Concessions in Australia, LCGE in Canada)
Simpler from a documentation perspective — one transfer rather than many
Key Negotiating Dynamics
Sellers generally push for share sales; buyers generally push for asset sales. The resolution of this tension often involves:
Price adjustment — buyers may pay a higher headline price to get an asset sale
Warranty and indemnity coverage — buyers accept share sales in exchange for comprehensive warranties from the seller about the company's liabilities
Making the structure decision without tax advice. The tax consequences of asset vs. share sales are complex and significant. Never agree a structure without first obtaining advice from a qualified tax advisor in your jurisdiction. The difference in net proceeds can be hundreds of thousands of dollars.
Agreeing to an asset sale without considering the distribution step. Sellers in an asset sale often forget that the sale proceeds land in the company — a further tax event occurs when those proceeds are extracted. The "double dip" of corporate tax and then personal tax can make an asset sale far less attractive than it first appears.
Failing to identify non-transferable contracts. Many contracts (particularly leases and customer agreements) require the other party's consent to be assigned in an asset sale. Failing to identify these early can derail or delay a transaction.
Not addressing warranty scope in share sales. In a share sale, buyers require extensive warranties from sellers about the company's historical affairs. Sellers who resist comprehensive warranties often scare off buyers. Work with a qualified attorney to agree an appropriate scope.
Ignoring employees in asset sales. In many jurisdictions, employees automatically transfer in a business sale (under TUPE in the UK and EU, or similar rules in Australia under the Fair Work Act). Failing to understand employee transfer obligations can create significant post-completion liability.
Next Steps: Get Started Today
MmowW Scrib🐮 can help prepare key corporate documents needed in either an asset sale or share sale — shareholder records, director minutes, and supporting documentation for the transaction.
Helpful tools:
Director Checker — verify shareholding and director records before sale
MmowW Scrib🐮 is a document preparation service, not a law firm. We do not provide legal advice. The choice between asset sale and share sale has major tax and legal implications — always consult a qualified attorney and tax advisor.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: What is Warranty and Indemnity (W&I) insurance?
A: W&I insurance is a specialist insurance product that covers losses arising from breaches of the seller's warranties in a share purchase agreement. It allows buyers to get protection for warranty claims while sellers receive a clean exit. W&I insurance has become very common in mid-market transactions and has helped make share sales more buyer-friendly.
Q: Can a partial business (a division or subsidiary) be sold as an asset sale?
A: Yes. Selling a division or business unit as an asset sale is very common. The seller carves out and transfers the specific assets and contracts relating to that division. This can be complex if systems, staff, or contracts are shared between the division being sold and the retained business.
Q: Are employee transfers automatic in a business asset sale?
A: In many countries, yes. In the UK and EU, TUPE (Transfer of Undertakings Protection of Employment) regulations automatically transfer employees assigned to the transferred business on their existing terms and conditions. In Australia, a change of employer in a business transfer does not automatically transfer employees, but the FairWork Act governs rights on transfer. The position varies significantly by country — always obtain specialist employment law advice.
Loved for Safety. MmowW Scrib🐮 — Document preparation made simple across 7 countries.
Free tools to help you get started:
💰 Cost Calculator — Estimate registration and compliance costs by country
🔍 Name Checker — Check if your preferred company name is available
Important disclaimer: MmowW Scrib🐮 is a document preparation service, not a law firm. We do not provide legal advice. For legal questions, consult a qualified attorney in your jurisdiction.
Loved for Safety.
Don't let regulations stop you!
Ai-chan🐣 answers your compliance questions 24/7 with AI