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heavy construction company for Sale in California

Similar businesses sell at 1.0x to 4.1x SDE. Compare live listings and connect with sellers.

Commercial Construction General Contractor photo
Heavy Construction
+1

Commercial Construction General Contractor

Alameda County, CA, US

Telecommunications Infrastructure Construction Contractor San Francisco Bay Area Profitable commercial construction general engineering contractor, with recurring Fortune 500 customers, over 50 employees, and extensive equipment and vehicles. Headquartered in the San Francisco Bay Area, with a multi-state service area. Experiencing enormous growth. 2025 annual sales of approximately $15,877,287, with 2025 SDE estimated at $4,425,000 (subject to buyer’s verification). Contracted WIP & Backlog as of December 31, 2025, exceeds $25,000,000. Estimated FMV of FF&E: ~$6,000,000+. Asking price is $16,000,000, subject to negotiation, terms, and timing. Some seller financing is possible. All serious, reasonable offers will be considered. Overview. This highly profitable business is engaged in general engineering construction contracting, particularly engaged in sustainable, consistent, ongoing services for the telecommunications industry, consisting of directional boring, open trenching, rock saw trenching, asphalt removal & replacement, and concrete removal & replacement. Within the past four years, the company has added an aerial cabling division in response to demand from existing customers. The company has also greatly increased its operational territory and backlog of contracted projects. While primarily operating in Northern California, customers consist of major telecommunications and other Fortune 500 companies throughout California, Oregon, Washington, Arizona, and Nevada. The company employs over 50 personnel, consisting of office staff, field management, and 5 production field crews of 6-8 men per crew. It was established in 2009 and carries a Class A & B Contractor License. The business is housed in a warehouse/office space and yard space for vehicles & equipment at a rent of approximately $9,000 per month in an industrial area. A new owner can continue the lease arrangement pending approval of the landlord and buyer to the ongoing terms. The acquisition includes all furniture, fixtures, and equipment (“FF&E”) with an estimated market value of about $6,000,000, or more. All FF&E, including vehicles, will be conveyed to the buyer free of all liens and encumbrances.* While the current owner is actively engaged in the business, he does spend time on other unrelated businesses. His position could be described as “half-time” or “semi-absentee.” He will be available for a smooth training and transition process and may be available on a long-term basis at the option of the buyer. The market reach and potential growth are unlimited based on the expansion of the geographic area served and related services that could be added. Current customers include Verizon, AT&T, and Comcast, for example. The Transaction (“Asset Purchase Agreement”): The asking price is $16,000,000, about 100% of annual gross sales (2025) and about 2.7x recent SDE. However, the seller will consider all reasonable offers and will accept an offer based on a combination of price, terms, and timing. The sale includes all assets, tangible and intangible, except for accounts receivable, cash-on-hand, rental property deposit(s), and the corporate entity itself. All accounts payable, notes payable, and encumbrances will be satisfied by the Seller at or before Closing from the Seller's funds. A prospective buyer must be able to show proof of funds and financing, Exclusive Broker: Tim Cunha, J.D. DRE #01919755 Note: All data on this business are provided by the Seller for information purposes only, and no representations are made by the Broker as to accuracy. The Broker has made no independent verification of the data contained herein. The Broker represents the Seller and does NOT represent the Buyer. The Buyer is advised to perform independent due diligence and seek the advice of appropriate qualified professionals prior to purchasing the Business.

$16,000,000
$16,000,000Revenue
$4,250,000Cash Flow
Premier Kitchen & Bath Showroom & Design-Build Firm photo
Building Material & Hardware Stores
+1

Premier Kitchen & Bath Showroom & Design-Build Firm

Ventura County, CA, US

SBA Pre- Qualified Semi-Absentee Ownership with Established Management Team *The business operates under a California General B Contractor’s License. The buyer must either hold a General B license or retain a qualifying license through an appropriate agency to maintain operations. This is a well-established kitchen and bath design-build company located in Ventura County, with over 30 years of operating history and a strong reputation for quality craftsmanship and customer service. The business operates through a proven “one-stop-shop” model, offering design, material selection, and full-service construction under one roof. Clients benefit from an integrated showroom experience featuring cabinetry, countertops, and finishes, combined with expert project execution. The company serves primarily mid-to-high-end homeowners and generates consistent revenue through a mix of kitchen remodels, bathroom renovations, and general contracting services. A skilled team of designers and craftsmen is already in place, along with established systems for project management and customer delivery. Key highlights include: 2 yr average revenue of $1.83M 2 yr average Seller’s Discretionary Earnings of ~$265K Semi Absentee run Long-standing brand with strong referral base High-quality showroom with significant investment in displays Vehicles, equipment, and inventory included Below-market lease in a desirable high traffic location The business is well-positioned for continued growth, supported by strong industry trends and increasing demand for home remodeling. Opportunities exist to expand digital marketing, increase project volume, and capitalize on design trends and outdoor living spaces. This is an excellent opportunity for an owner-operator or strategic buyer seeking a turnkey remodeling business with an established reputation, experienced team, and immediate cash flow. The business operates under a California General B Contractor’s License. The buyer must either hold a General B license or retain a qualifying license through an appropriate agency to maintain operations.

$440,000
$1,835,000Revenue
$265,000Cash Flow

Market Snapshot

National transaction benchmarks for heavy construction company businesses.

Under $500K

Median revenue$897k
Median cash flow$165k
Median sale price$285k
Multiple range1.0x - 1.6x

$500K to $2M

Median revenue$1.61m
Median cash flow$299k
Median sale price$850k
Multiple range2.4x - 4.1x

Over $2M

Median revenue$8.29m
Median cash flow$1.49m
Median sale price$4.48m
Multiple range2.5x - 4.1x

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 heavy construction company acquisitions

GW

By George Wellmer

Cofounder & CEO

Key diligence, valuation, financing, and transition considerations for buyers evaluating heavy construction company acquisitions.

What You’re Actually Buying

A heavy construction business acquisition is a purchase of equipment, contracts, bonding capacity, licensing, and a project management team that knows how to estimate, sequence, and deliver complex projects on schedule. The equipment is a significant balance sheet item, often $1M to $10M+ in fleet value, but it’s not the business. The business is the team’s ability to win bids, deliver projects profitably, and maintain the customer and surety relationships that enable continued operation. Equipment can be acquired in months. Building the trust of a state DOT or a commercial general contractor takes years.

What the Financials Need to Show

Heavy construction financials require careful WIP analysis. Construction accounting standards (percentage-of-completion versus completed-contract) significantly affect reported revenue and profit in any period. Request the WIP schedule for all open projects: contract value, estimated cost, costs to date, recognized revenue, and remaining duration. A contractor whose stated income includes front-loaded recognition on projects that are over budget is showing an inflated picture. One who has under-recognized revenue on projects nearing completion may be showing income that understates the actual business performance. Reconcile WIP carefully before settling on normalized SDE. Equipment depreciation is a meaningful add-back in this category; understand whether the depreciation reflects actual useful life or aggressive tax positioning.

Bonding Capacity, Licensing, and the Surety Relationship

Heavy construction operations that bid public work or large commercial work require performance and payment bonding capacity from a surety company. Bonding capacity is underwritten based on the contractor’s financial strength, project history, and management team and a change of ownership requires the surety to reassess capacity, which can result in reduced or revoked bonding. Before LOI, have a conversation with the contractor’s surety about the transfer. A surety that’s comfortable with the buyer and committed to maintaining bonding capacity is critical to deal value. One that’s reluctant or unable to issue equivalent capacity to the new owner is a deal-breaker for any operation dependent on bonded work. Licensing varies by state and project category; verify general contractor’s license, specialty trade licenses, and DBE/MBE/WBE certifications where applicable.

The Project Management Team and Estimating Capability

The two functions that most directly determine heavy construction profitability are estimating accuracy and project execution. Both live in specific people, the estimator who knows how to price a job correctly and the project manager who knows how to deliver it. Ask about both before close. Who is the lead estimator? How long have they been with the company? What’s their bid-to-win ratio? Who runs day-to-day project execution, and what’s their tenure? The departure of either function mid-acquisition is a meaningful operational event. Build retention agreements for both positions; the investment is small relative to the cost of losing them.

Cyclicality, Public Works, and the Macro Picture

Heavy construction is among the most macro-sensitive categories in the SMB market. Private development drives commercial and residential site work; public infrastructure spending drives state DOT and municipal work. The 2021–2024 Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act allocated $1.2T to infrastructure projects with disbursement extending through 2030, which creates a multi-year demand tailwind for contractors positioned to compete for federally funded work. Buyers acquiring operations with public works experience and bonding capacity above the threshold for federal contracting are buying into a favorable macro environment. Buyers acquiring residential and light commercial focused operations should model a cyclical revenue picture with more conservative assumptions about housing market and commercial development activity.

Frequently Asked Questions

Answers to common buyer questions for this market.

Bonding capacity is the most critical and most commonly overlooked element of heavy construction acquisitions. Sureties underwrite bonding capacity based on the contractor's financial strength, project execution history, and management team and a change of ownership triggers a reassessment that can result in reduced or revoked capacity. Before LOI, have a conversation with the current surety about the transfer. Ask specifically: will bonding capacity remain at current levels under new ownership? What is your underwriting process for the change? What financial requirements or management continuity do you need to see? A surety comfortable with the buyer and committed to maintaining capacity is critical to deal value. One reluctant or unable to issue equivalent capacity is a deal-breaker for any operation dependent on bonded work. If the surety relationship doesn't transfer cleanly, you may need to bring in a new surety; this takes 60–120 days and requires demonstration of project history that you may not yet have under your name.