Preparing Your Business for Sale – Four Key Steps Most Entrepreneurs Overlook
- Sophia Yu

- Mar 4
- 2 min read
Updated: Mar 5

Most entrepreneurs don’t start their business thinking about selling it.
They’re focused on growth. Revenue. Hiring. Expansion.
But here’s the reality:
If you don’t prepare early, you’ll either leave money on the table—or lose leverage when it matters most.
After working with business owners through acquisitions, internal buyouts, and third-party sales, I’ve seen the same four oversights cost sellers thousands (sometimes millions).
Let’s walk through them.
Not Knowing Your Tax Basis Before Negotiating the Price
Before you agree to any sale price, you need to understand your tax basis.
If you operate as an S-Corporation under Internal Revenue Code Subchapter S or as a partnership, your stock or ownership basis determines how much of the sale is taxable gain.
Example:
Sale price: $1,000,000
Tax basis: $300,000
Taxable gain: $700,000
Without knowing this upfront, you can’t:
Estimate your capital gains tax
Plan estimated payments
Negotiate from a true net perspective
Too many sellers negotiate based on gross sale price instead of after-tax proceeds.
That’s a costly mistake.
Ignoring Deal Structure (Asset Sale vs. Stock Sale)
Not all sales are taxed the same.
In an asset sale, the buyer purchases business assets.
In a stock sale, they purchase ownership interest.
The difference?
Asset sales often trigger depreciation recapture and ordinary income.
Stock sales may qualify for more favorable capital gain treatment.
In some cases, sellers of qualified small businesses may qualify for benefits under Internal
Revenue Code Section 1202, allowing partial or full exclusion of capital gains.
But eligibility depends on:
Entity type
Holding period
Industry
Original issuance requirements
Structure matters more than most entrepreneurs realize.
Messy Financials Kill Valuation
Buyers don’t just buy revenue. They buy clarity.
If your books are:
Commingled with personal expenses
Missing reconciliations
Inconsistent with tax returns
Unsupported by documentation
You lose negotiating power immediately.
Clean financials:
Increase buyer confidence
Speed up due diligence
Justify higher multiples
Before going to market, you should have:
2–3 years of clean financial statements
Reconciled balance sheets
Clear add-backs documentation
Organized contracts and leases
Preparation equals leverage.
No Pre-Sale Tax Planning
Many owners come to their CPA after signing the Letter of Intent.
That’s often too late.
Pre-sale planning may allow you to:
Shift income timing
Accelerate deductions
Optimize owner compensation
Consider installment sale treatment under Internal Revenue Code Section 453
Evaluate charitable planning strategies
Assess state tax exposure
Even a few months of proactive planning can significantly change your tax outcome.
Waiting until closing eliminates most options.
Bonus: Think Beyond the Exit
Selling your business is not just a transaction.
It’s:
A liquidity event
A retirement pivot
A legacy decision
If your entity structure, trust planning, and asset protection strategy aren’t aligned before the sale, you may create avoidable complications after the fact.
The sale is only step one.
What you keep—and how you protect it—is what truly matters.
The Bottom Line
Most business owners focus on increasing revenue before a sale.
The sophisticated ones focus on:
Structure
Tax efficiency
Documentation
Negotiation leverage
The difference in outcomes can be dramatic.
Even if you’re not planning to sell this year, preparing early increases value and keeps your options open. If you’re considering an exit—or just want to understand what your after-tax number would look like—let’s talk strategy. A short planning conversation today can prevent expensive surprises tomorrow.



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