Tupelo Data Room

durable goods distribution for Sale in Florida

Similar businesses sell at 1.4x to 5.8x SDE. Compare live listings and connect with sellers.

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Market Snapshot

National transaction benchmarks for durable goods distribution businesses.

Under $500K

Median revenue$810k
Median cash flow$144k
Median sale price$300k
Multiple range1.4x - 2.4x

$500K to $2M

Median revenue$1.99m
Median cash flow$294k
Median sale price$885k
Multiple range2.3x - 3.6x

Over $2M

Median revenue$8.29m
Median cash flow$1.09m
Median sale price$3.98m
Multiple range3.4x - 5.8x

A variety of factors can cause businesses to trade outside this range, including earnings quality, operational transferability, key-person risk, growth trajectory, and geography, so a listing priced above or below the typical multiple usually reflects real differences in the underlying business.

What to know about durable goods distribution acquisitions

GW

By George Wellmer

Cofounder & CEO

Key diligence, valuation, financing, and transition considerations for buyers evaluating durable goods distribution acquisitions.

Customer concentration is the most dangerous unknown

Pull the customer list ranked by revenue. Many wholesale businesses get 40–60% of revenue from their top 10 customers, and 15–25% from the single largest. If your top customer represents 20% of revenue and they're up for renewal in 90 days, that's a structural problem. Ask for written customer concentration analysis with renewal status and historical retention rates. Heavy concentration is a discount factor; broad customer base is a premium factor.

Working capital is the real capital requirement

The business runs on receivables and inventory. Wholesalers typically extend 30–60 day payment terms to customers while paying suppliers in 15–30 days, financing the gap with inventory and bank lines. A wholesaler with $5M in revenue often has $1M+ tied up in inventory and $700K in receivables. When you buy the business, you're buying that working capital too — often as a separate component on top of the goodwill price. Verify what's actually included and what triggers price adjustments at close.

Supplier relationships are not guaranteed to transfer

Call the top suppliers. Distribution agreements with manufacturers often include change-of-control provisions — the supplier can approve or deny the new owner. Lose a key brand and you may lose the customers who buy that brand. Get supplier consent (or at least informal indications) before LOI. Some manufacturers also have geographic exclusivity that the new owner needs to be approved to maintain.

Inventory turn ratio reveals operational quality

Calculate inventory turns yourself. Healthy distributors turn inventory 6–10 times per year (sometimes higher for fast-moving consumables, lower for slow-moving specialty items). A wholesaler turning inventory 3 times per year has dead stock, obsolete SKUs, or buying problems. Pull a SKU-level aging report. Anything sitting more than 12 months is functionally written off and should reduce the price you pay for inventory.

Sales reps are part of the customer relationship

Identify the rainmakers. In B2B distribution, customers often have a primary relationship with their assigned outside sales rep, not with the company brand. If a senior rep with $2M in attached revenue leaves at close (or follows the seller into retirement, or is recruited by a competitor), you lose their book. Identify the key reps before close, meet with them, and structure retention bonuses. Non-compete agreements should be in place and enforceable.

Pricing power is mostly a myth in commoditized lines

Look at where the gross margin actually sits. Distributors selling commoditized products (basic electrical components, common plumbing fittings, standard hardware) compete almost entirely on price and service speed. Distributors selling specialty products with technical complexity, regulatory requirements, or scarce supplier relationships can hold meaningfully better margins. Mix matters. A wholesaler with 35% gross margin on specialty products and 18% on commodity items is a different business than one running 25% blended.

Frequently Asked Questions

Answers to common buyer questions for this market.

Small specialty distributors with $1M–$3M in revenue typically sell in the Tier 1 to low Tier 2 range. Mid-size distributors with $3M–$15M in revenue and good gross margins usually trade in the Tier 2 range ($500K–$2M of SDE valuation) or extending into Tier 3 ($2M+). Larger regional distributors with $20M+ in revenue, multiple locations, or strong supplier relationships can sell well into Tier 3.