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Deal Structure 101: Asset vs. Stock Sale and Why It Matters

M&A advisors reviewing asset sale and stock sale deal structures during a business transaction.

The structure of your deal affects taxes, liability, and what transfers to the buyer. Understand the key differences before you negotiate.

Why Deal Structure Matters

If you’re buying or selling a business, deal structure is not a technical detail — it shapes taxes, risk, and what actually transfers at closing. One of the first questions owners face is whether the transaction will be structured as an asset sale or a stock sale.

Understanding this difference early helps avoid surprises later in the process.

Full process overview: Selling Process Overview Discuss your situation: Contact Us Get a value range first: IVE Page

Asset Sale: The Basics

In an asset sale, the buyer purchases selected assets and, in some cases, assumes selected liabilities. The seller’s legal entity usually remains with the seller.

Think of it as buying the business piece by piece:

  • Equipment and machinery
  • Inventory
  • Customer contracts
  • Intellectual property, brand, and goodwill
  • Cashflow

Only what is specifically listed transfers.

Stock Sale: The Basics

In a stock sale, the buyer purchases the ownership interests of the company itself. The legal entity transfers as a whole, including most known and unknown liabilities, unless the agreement specifically excludes them.

Because of this, buyers often view stock sales as higher risk, while sellers may prefer them for tax, liability, or simplicity reasons.

Why the Difference Is So Important

The choice between asset and stock affects:

  • Taxes for both buyer and seller
  • Liability exposure
  • Risk allocation
  • Working capital treatment
  • Complexity of closing documents

In Midwest transactions, structure often becomes a key negotiation point as buyers seek clarity around risk and cash flow.

Where structure fits in the timeline → Negotiation & Closing – Step 4

Purchase Price Allocation (Especially in Asset Sales)

In asset deals, the purchase price must be allocated across asset categories. This matters because different assets are taxed differently and depreciated differently.

Common allocation categories include:

  • Equipment and machinery
  • Inventory
  • Real estate (if applicable)
  • Customer relationships and other intangibles
  • Goodwill

Allocation is negotiated and documented in the purchase agreement and it directly affects after‑tax outcomes.

Earnouts and Seller Financing

Some transactions include additional structure tools:

Earnouts

  • Part of the price is paid later
  • Tied to revenue, profit, or other performance targets
  • Require clear reporting and control rules

Seller Financing

  • Seller carries a note for part of the price
  • Terms include interest rate, security, and default remedies
  • Can help deals close, but increases seller risk

Structure should support a deal that is fair, financeable, and closable.

Key Takeaways

  • Asset vs. stock sales affect taxes, risk, and what transfers
  • Asset sales offer flexibility; stock sales offer simplicity
  • Purchase price allocation matters most in asset deals
  • Earnouts and seller financing add opportunity and complexity
  • Most small business purchases are asset sales

If you want guidance on what structure is realistic for your business → Contact Us

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