How to Use Finance to Prepare a UK Business for Sale

Julian Marks
CEO · May 25, 2027 · 8 min read
The finance decisions you make in the 2-3 years before selling your business have a direct impact on the sale price you achieve. A business that has invested strategically, cleaned up its balance sheet, removed legacy debt, and demonstrated consistent EBITDA growth will achieve a higher multiple than one that has not. Understanding how finance strategy supports sale readiness is as important as any other aspect of exit planning.
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Using finance to build EBITDA
Most business sales are valued on an EBITDA multiple. Adding £100,000 of EBITDA to a business that sells at 6x EBITDA increases the sale price by £600,000. Finance that enables growth investments with strong EBITDA returns - new equipment, technology, acquisition, or market expansion - directly increases the sale price multiple times the cost of the finance.
In the 2-3 years before sale, identifying which investments will generate the highest EBITDA return and financing them efficiently is one of the highest-leverage sale preparation activities available. A business that grows EBITDA from £500,000 to £750,000 over three years through targeted investment is worth £1.5M more at a 6x multiple.
Balance sheet preparation before sale
Acquirers and their advisers scrutinise balance sheets carefully. Aged debtors, unexplained creditor balances, director loan account complications, and legacy debt from previous periods all create concerns that reduce confidence and price. Resolving these issues in the years before sale, using finance where necessary to do so, produces a cleaner transaction.
Working capital normalisation is an important part of sale preparation. Acquirers assume a normalised level of working capital is included in the purchase price. A business with lower-than-normalised working capital at completion may see a price adjustment. Understanding how lenders and acquirers calculate normalised working capital, and ensuring the business meets this expectation, avoids late-stage price negotiations.
"Finance strategy in the 2-3 years before sale is sale strategy. The decisions made now determine the price achieved then."
- Julian Marks, CEO
Removing legacy finance before sale
Legacy finance arrangements - old equipment finance, outdated revolving credit terms, or facilities with restrictive covenants - can complicate a sale. Acquirers may not want to assume existing finance; lenders may not consent to a change of control without refinancing. Reviewing all finance facilities 2-3 years before the intended sale and addressing any that will complicate the transaction saves time and money at completion.
Change of control clauses in loan agreements require lender consent for ownership changes. Most UK business sale transactions trigger these clauses, and the process of obtaining consent or refinancing the facility must be planned as part of the sale timetable. Discovering an unconditional change of control provision in the week before completion is an avoidable problem.
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Frequently Asked Questions
How far in advance should I start preparing my business finance for a sale?
2-3 years is optimal. This gives time to invest and grow EBITDA, resolve balance sheet issues, and address legacy finance without the time pressure that compressed sale preparation creates.
Will a buyer assume my existing business loans?
Depends on the sale structure. An asset sale (buying the business assets) typically leaves debt with the seller. A share sale (buying the company) passes all debt to the buyer. Share buyers usually expect the business to be free of legacy debt or adjust the price accordingly.
What is a change of control clause and how does it affect a sale?
A change of control clause requires lender consent before ownership of the borrower company can change. Most UK business loans include them. They require either lender consent or refinancing before a share sale can complete.
The bottom line
Sale preparation is a multi-year process that encompasses finance alongside operations, management, and commercial positioning. The finance component - building EBITDA through investment, cleaning the balance sheet, and addressing legacy finance - deserves as much attention as the commercial preparation. Spark Finance helps UK business owners approaching sale review their finance position and plan the most value-accretive path to exit.
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