TL;DR: A management buyout (MBO) occurs when the existing management team purchases the business from its current owner. It's a popular exit route for founders because the buyer already knows the business — but financing is the key challenge.
A management buyout (MBO) is a transaction in which a company's management team acquires ownership of the business they manage. From a founder's perspective, it is an exit route that offers continuity — the business continues under leaders who know it well, employees are less disrupted, and key customer relationships are preserved.
From the management team's perspective, an MBO represents an opportunity to own the business they have been building — but typically requires them to contribute personal capital and take on significant debt to finance the purchase price.
MBOs are most common in:
This guide explains the key elements of an MBO and how they work across seven countries.
MmowW Scrib🐮 is a document preparation service, not a law firm. We do not provide legal advice.
Before approaching the owner, the management team needs to address several fundamental questions:
Who is in the team? Typically the CEO, CFO, and other key directors. A strong, aligned team that covers the key functions (finance, operations, sales) is more attractive to lenders and investors.
Can we raise the money? MBOs are typically financed through a combination of management's own capital contribution (often 5–20% of the purchase price), bank debt, and potentially private equity investment. The size of the deal and the business's cash generation (EBITDA) determine the feasible level of debt.
Do we want to own this business? Management teams should conduct their own due diligence and think carefully about the risks of ownership — including personal liability as directors, the need to service acquisition debt, and the commitment required.
For a founding owner, an MBO can be an attractive exit for several reasons:
However, the management team may not offer the highest price. A trade sale or private equity transaction may yield a higher value. Compare options carefully before committing.
Most MBOs are too large for management to finance entirely from personal savings. Common financing structures include:
Senior bank debt: Banks lend against the business's cash flow, typically a multiple of EBITDA. The business's cash flow services this debt after the acquisition.
Private equity: A private equity fund co-invests alongside management, taking a minority or majority ownership stake. PE firms bring expertise and capital but will have significant governance rights and expect an exit (sale or IPO) within 3–7 years.
Vendor loan notes: The seller lends part of the purchase price to the management team, to be repaid from future profits. This bridges the gap between bank lending and the required equity.
Mezzanine debt: A hybrid of debt and equity, sitting between senior debt and equity in the capital structure. Higher risk than senior debt, so carries higher interest rates.
A typical MBO process involves:
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Try it free →| Country | PE Activity for SME MBOs | Key Financing Source | Management Investment Norm |
|---|---|---|---|
| 🇬🇧 UK | High — BVCA-member funds active | Senior debt + PE equity | 2–10% of deal value |
| 🇫🇷 France | Active — France Invest ecosystem | Banques + LBO specialists | 5–15% of deal value |
| 🇸🇪 Sweden | Moderate — Nordic PE active | Bank + Nordic PE | Varies |
| 🇦🇺 Australia | Growing — AVCAL-member funds | Bank + private credit | 5–20% of deal value |
| 🇳🇿 New Zealand | Limited PE market — more bank-led | Bank debt | Significant personal equity |
| 🇨🇦 Canada | Active — CVCA-member funds | BDC + chartered banks | 5–20% of deal value |
| 🇺🇸 USA | Very active — SBA loans available | SBA 7(a) + PE + mezz | 10–30% of deal value |
Key government resources:
MmowW Scrib🐮 can help prepare key corporate documents needed in an MBO — director and shareholder records, company information packs, and supporting documentation.
Helpful tools:
MmowW Scrib🐮 is a document preparation service, not a law firm. We do not provide legal advice. MBO transactions are complex — engage qualified M&A lawyers, accountants, and financial advisors from the outset.
Q: How long does an MBO take?
A: A typical MBO takes 4–12 months from initial discussions to completion. The process is longer when private equity is involved (PE due diligence is extensive), when regulatory approvals are needed, or when the business is complex. Build adequate time into your plans.
Q: What is a management buy-in (MBI)?
A: An MBI is similar to an MBO but the incoming management team is from outside the company — they are buying into a business they do not currently manage. MBIs are generally considered higher risk than MBOs because the incoming team needs to learn the business while also managing it. A combination — a BIMBO (Buy-In Management Buyout) — involves both internal managers and external executives.
Q: Can a small business do an MBO without private equity?
A: Yes. Many smaller MBOs are financed entirely through a combination of management's personal capital, bank debt, and vendor loan notes, without external private equity. The SBA in the USA has specific programmes supporting management acquisitions. The feasibility depends heavily on the business's cash flow and the gap between management's available capital and the required purchase price.
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