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How to Find a Buyer for Your Home Care Agency (The Right Way)

Neli Gertner
#buyers#sell#process#home-care#M&A

“How do I find a buyer for my home care agency?”

It’s one of the most common questions owners ask when they start thinking seriously about an exit. The assumption behind the question is often wrong — most sellers assume finding a buyer is the hard part. It isn’t.

The real challenge is not finding a buyer. It’s finding the right buyers — the 5–15 highly qualified, financially credible acquirers who will compete for your business and drive the price to its genuine market value.

This guide explains how buyers find home care agencies, how agencies find buyers, and — most importantly — how a professional process produces dramatically better outcomes than both.


How Buyers Are Currently Finding Home Care Agencies

Understanding how the buyer side works helps you recognize why reactive selling puts sellers at a disadvantage.

Direct outreach from PE-backed platforms. Private equity-backed home care companies have dedicated M&A teams — sometimes called Corporate Development — whose full-time job is identifying and approaching potential acquisition targets. They monitor state licensee lists, attend industry conferences, and review LinkedIn actively.

When they call you, they have already researched your agency. They know your approximate revenue, your payer mix (from public data), and your geography. They have a price they are willing to pay — and it is calibrated to assume you are not working with an advisor and have no competing offers.

Investment bankers and brokers calling on behalf of buyers. Some firms represent buyers (rather than sellers). They are paid to source deals for their clients. When they contact you, they are working for the buyer — not for you.

Business listing sites (BizBuySell, BusinessForSale.com). Posting your agency on a business listing site is equivalent to putting a “for sale” sign in your window with the price attached. The buyers who browse these sites are typically:

  • Small regional operators who can’t access institutional capital
  • Individual buyers with financing contingencies
  • Intermediaries scouting for clients

These are rarely the buyers who pay premium multiples. And listing publicly announces to employees, competitors, referral sources, and payers that your business is for sale — which can destabilize operations before any deal closes.

Your accountant, attorney, or banker. Well-meaning but typically poorly positioned. General professional advisors do not have relationships with the 80+ PE-backed home care platforms, national strategic acquirers, and regional operators who are most likely to pay premium prices for your specific business.


Why Waiting for the Right Buyer to Find You Is a Mistake

The buyers who approach you proactively have already decided what they are willing to pay. More precisely: they have modeled your business at the lowest price they believe you will accept — without competition.

This is not cynical — it is rational. Every buyer is negotiating. A sophisticated acquirer knows that:

  1. If they are the only buyer at the table, there is no market clearing mechanism
  2. Without market clearing, the seller has no way to know whether the offer is fair
  3. The absence of competition is worth millions of dollars to the buyer

This dynamic consistently produces below-market outcomes for sellers who “find a buyer” on their own.

The research is clear: sellers who run competitive processes with multiple qualified buyers receive 24–40% more in transaction value than sellers who negotiate with a single buyer. On a $10M transaction, that is $2.4M–$4M in additional proceeds.


What a Real Buyer Identification Process Looks Like

A professional M&A process for a home care agency involves systematically identifying and contacting every credible potential buyer — not waiting for them to find you.

Step 1: Build a Comprehensive Buy-Side Universe

A specialized home care M&A advisor maintains active relationships with:

  • 80–120 PE-backed home care platforms nationally and regionally
  • National strategic acquirers (Addus, Amedisys/UnitedHealth, Enhabit, etc.)
  • Regional operators in adjacent geographies
  • Health systems with home care ambitions
  • Private equity firms making first-time home care investments

For any given agency, the appropriate buyer list is typically 50–150 organizations — filtered by geography, service line, size requirements, and current acquisition activity.

Step 2: Blind Teasers to the Full List

A one-to-two page summary called a “blind teaser” is distributed to the full buyer list. It describes the business without identifying it — markets served (e.g., “northwest metropolitan market”), service line, scale (revenue range), and key financial characteristics.

Interested buyers execute an NDA before receiving the Confidential Information Memorandum (CIM) with full details.

Step 3: The CIM Creates the Market

The CIM is a professional, detailed presentation of your business — financials, operations, growth strategy, market position, and management team. It is the document that buyers use to build their initial financial model and decide whether to bid.

A well-crafted CIM does not just inform — it positions. It frames the business in its most compelling accurate light, emphasizes the opportunities that matter most to each buyer type, and anticipates and addresses concerns before they become objections.

Step 4: Management Presentations Create Relationships

Qualified buyers are invited to meet you and your management team. This is a 60–90 minute presentation and Q&A. It is your opportunity to convey what the numbers can’t — the culture, the growth vision, the team quality, and the reasons buyers should want to own this business.

Step 5: Competitive Bid Process

Buyers submit competing offers (Letters of Intent or Indications of Interest). With multiple credible offers on the table, your advisor negotiates from position of strength — using each offer as leverage against the others and systematically improving terms across all bidders.

Step 6: Select the Best Overall Offer

“Best offer” is not just the highest price. It includes deal certainty (has the buyer closed similar transactions?), speed (do they have capital committed?), structure (cash at close vs. earnout), post-close terms (non-compete scope, employment agreement), and fit (PE firm quality, operator reputation).

A well-run process produces 5–15 competitive offers and a clear answer on which buyer combination of price, terms, and fit is optimal for your situation.


The Types of Buyers and What They Pay

Buyer TypeTypical MultipleSpeedEarnout Likelihood
PE-backed platform (add-on)4.5 – 7× EBITDAFastLow
PE firm (platform investment)5.5 – 9× EBITDAModerateModerate
National strategic acquirer3.5 – 6× EBITDASlowLow
Regional strategic acquirer3.0 – 5.5× EBITDAModerateModerate
Individual/lifestyle buyer2.5 – 4× EBITDAVariableHigh

Ranges reflect market conditions as of early 2026. Actual multiples depend on agency-specific characteristics.

The highest multiples consistently come from PE-backed platforms and PE firms making platform investments — the buyers who are least likely to approach you directly on your own.


Do I Really Need a Broker or M&A Advisor?

Every seller asks this question. The calculation is straightforward:

A specialized M&A advisor typically charges a transaction fee of 3–6% for home care agency sales (lower on larger transactions). On a $10M sale, that is $300K–$600K.

Research consistently shows that represented sellers receive 24–40% more than unrepresented sellers. On a $10M sale, that is $2.4M–$4M in additional value.

The question is not whether an advisor costs money. The question is whether the net benefit — additional proceeds minus advisory fee — is positive. For virtually every home care seller in the $2M–$50M+ enterprise value range, the answer is overwhelmingly yes.

What varies is advisor quality. A generalist business broker who lists your agency on BizBuySell and sends blind emails will not produce the competitive tension that drives premium pricing. A specialized home care M&A advisor with active relationships across the entire buyer universe will.


Questions to Ask Before Engaging an Advisor

Not all advisors are equal. When evaluating M&A representation:

  1. How many home care agencies have you closed in the past 3 years? (Minimum: 10+)
  2. Can you provide a list of all buyers you have contacted on the last 3–5 comparable transactions? (The answer tells you how broad their buyer coverage is.)
  3. What are your last 10 closed transactions’ enterprise values and EBITDA multiples? (Verified against public records or reference calls)
  4. Do you represent buyers as well as sellers? (Conflict of interest if yes)
  5. What is your average days-to-close from engagement to funded close?

Contact Hendon Partners to discuss finding the right buyers for your home care agency →


Hendon Partners is a sell-side-only M&A advisory firm. We represent sellers. We do not represent buyers, which means there is no conflict of interest in our advocacy.

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