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heavy construction company for Sale in Missouri

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

ADD ON / Branson MO / Residential Roofing Business / ~$4.5MM 2025 FY photo
Heavy Construction
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ADD ON / Branson MO / Residential Roofing Business / ~$4.5MM 2025 FY

Branson, MO, US

ADD ON / Branson MO / Residential Roofing Business / ~$4.5MM 2025 FY Company Overview The business is a full-service residential and commercial exterior contractor operating across Southwest Missouri and the greater Ozarks region. With over two decades of operating history, it has established a strong regional presence supported by operational scale, brand recognition, and a technology-enabled service model. The company generates approximately $4.5 million in annual revenue with ~$467K in adjusted EBITDA, reflecting a growing and increasingly efficient operating platform.  Core Services • Residential and commercial roofing (primary revenue driver) • Gutters, siding, soffit, and fascia • Emergency repair and exterior restoration services This multi-service offering enables a single-vendor solution for exterior needs, increasing project size and customer lifetime value. Business Model & Market Position The company operates in a region characterized by consistent demand for roof replacement and exterior maintenance driven by aging housing stock and environmental factors. The market remains highly fragmented, with most competitors operating at a smaller scale and lacking formal systems or infrastructure. The business has positioned itself above regional peers through process standardization, technology adoption, and a reputation for quality service delivery. Key KPIs • Revenue (FY2025): ~$4.5M • Adjusted EBITDA: ~$467K • EBITDA Margin: ~10.5% • Revenue Growth (2023–2025): ~18.4% • Gross Margin Expansion: ~28.6% → 44.3% • Service Mix: • Roofing: ~81% • Gutters: ~11% • Siding & Exterior: ~8% • Customer Mix: • Residential: ~85% • Commercial: ~15%  Technology & Operational Infrastructure The company differentiates itself through a modern, integrated technology stack that enhances efficiency, accuracy, and scalability: • CRM & Workflow Management: AccuLynx (lead tracking, project lifecycle management) • Measurement & Estimation Tools: EagleView and Hover (remote property measurement) • Estimating Platform: Xactware (standardized project scoping) • Field Service Management: Housecall Pro (dispatch, scheduling, customer communication) This infrastructure enables streamlined operations, faster project turnaround, and the ability to scale without proportional increases in overhead.  Competitive Advantages • Established regional brand with long operating history • Scalable, system-driven operations • Multi-service exterior platform increasing revenue per customer • Technology-enabled workflows uncommon among smaller competitors Growth Opportunities • Expansion into adjacent geographic markets • Continued monetization of prior marketing investments • Introduction of recurring service/maintenance programs • Margin expansion through operational efficiencies and pricing optimization

$2,250,000
$4,500,000Revenue
$467,000Cash Flow
Midwest / Commercial Grinding Business / ADD ON / $2.56MM ADJ EBITDA photo
Heavy Construction

Midwest / Commercial Grinding Business / ADD ON / $2.56MM ADJ EBITDA

Kansas City, MO, US

Midwest / Commercial Grinding Business / ADD ON / $2.56MM ADJ EBITDA Company Overview The business is a specialized infrastructure services provider focused on asphalt and concrete milling across key Midwestern markets. Operating as a critical subcontractor to paving contractors, the company removes and prepares surfaces for roadway and parking lot resurfacing projects, serving both public sector agencies and blue-chip commercial clients. The platform has developed a strong competitive position within a niche segment characterized by high barriers to entry, including specialized equipment requirements, union-trained labor, and long-standing relationships with departments of transportation and national accounts. The business benefits from a preferred vendor model, where paving contractors repeatedly outsource milling work to trusted partners, creating durable, repeat project flow and limited competitive bidding pressure. Revenue is diversified across public infrastructure and private commercial work. Public sector contracts provide volume stability through multi-year budgets, while commercial projects deliver premium pricing and faster payment cycles. As shown in the revenue mix charts on page 4, approximately 60% of revenue is derived from public sector work and ~40% from private customers, with a balanced mix of full-day and partial-day engagements driving consistent utilization.  Operationally, the company runs a scalable, asset-backed model supported by a fleet of specialized milling equipment, experienced crews, and centralized administrative functions. With dual operating locations and the ability to share equipment and labor across markets, the platform maintains high utilization and operational flexibility. The business has demonstrated consistent growth and profitability, positioning it as an attractive platform within a fragmented and consolidating infrastructure services market. Key KPIs • Revenue: ~$12.41M (TTM 2025)  • Revenue Growth: +55% (2022–TTM 2025)  • 2026E Revenue: ~$13.65M  • Adjusted EBITDA: ~$2.56M  • Adjusted EBITDA (2026E): ~$2.87M  • Adjusted EBITDA Margin: ~20–21%  • EBITDA: ~$2.39M  • EBITDA Margin: ~19%  • Gross Margin: ~55%  Contracted Visibility & Scale: • 2026 Contracted Backlog: ~$9.64M  • Average Ticket Size: $20K–$26K (full day) / ~$12K (partial day)  • Bid Win Rate: ~45% on 550+ annual bids  Operations: • Equipment Fleet: 17 milling machines + supporting fleet  • Employees: ~34 personnel 

$12,800,000
$12,410,000Revenue
$2,560,000Cash 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.