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home health care for Sale in Oklahoma

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Multi-Location ABA Platform in Oklahoma photo
Assisted Living & Nursing Homes
+3

Multi-Location ABA Platform in Oklahoma

OK, US

An exceptional opportunity to acquire a well-established multi-location Applied Behavior Analysis (ABA) platform serving children with autism throughout an underserved region of Oklahoma. The company has built an outstanding reputation for delivering high-quality ABA therapy through both clinic-based and in-home services. Its differentiated operating model, experienced clinical team, and minimal local competition have positioned the business as the leading provider within its markets. The platform currently operates three strategically located facilities with substantial additional capacity, creating meaningful opportunities for organic growth without significant capital investment. Investment Highlights • Three established clinic locations serving multiple Oklahoma communities • Exclusive market position with little to no direct local competition • Provides both clinic-based and in-home ABA therapy • Strong referral relationships and established community presence • Two daily treatment sessions maximize facility utilization and revenue potential • Internal Registered Behavior Technician (RBT) training program creates a sustainable staffing pipeline • Innovative employment program that helps parents of clients become trained team members, improving family engagement while addressing workforce needs • Modern facilities with additional capacity for future census growth • Insurance-based reimbursement model with recurring revenue characteristics • Well-positioned to benefit from continued demand for autism and behavioral health services Services The company specializes in Applied Behavior Analysis (ABA) therapy for children diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder, providing individualized treatment programs designed to improve communication, social, behavioral, and daily living skills. Services include: Clinic-based ABA therapy In-home ABA therapy Individualized treatment planning Parent support and education Behavioral assessments Ongoing clinical supervision Facility names and addresses - 510 North High Street, Antlers, OK, 74523 17 South Central, Idabel, OK, 74745 139 West Main Street, Wilburton, OK, 74578 They all share the name of the company as Brighter Days WBA License types - Antlers location is business zoned and has an annual business permit with the city Idabel location is business zoned and has an annual business permit with the city Wilburton location is business zoned and has an annual business permit with the city Bed capacity - Antlers location has space for 23 clients per class session (this would allow for 46 clients in a day) plus office areas, a large functional kitchen, large storage area, playroom, 4 bathrooms (one has 3 toilet stalls, one is with a urinal, and one has a shower stall). Idabel location has space for 8 clients per class session (this would allow for 16 clients in a day) plus office areas, large playroom, lounge/kitchen area, lobby/seating area, 2 bathrooms and 2 storage areas (one large with shelves lining the walls one smaller with file cabinets). Wilburton location has space for 5 clients per class session (this would allow for 10 clients in a day) plus office areas, a lounge/kitchen area, 2 bathrooms, large playroom, storage room and a large lobby/seating area. Brief overview of services - We provide Applied Behavioral Analysis (ABA) therapy to children with autism as our main service provided due to insurance being our current payer What makes your program different - We are the only certified ABA clinic in the area that offers in-clinic and in-home services. We also train our RBTs to help them get certified where other clinics require you to already be RBT certified. We have a program to offer employment to our client’s parents which assists in teaching them how to better handle their child’s behaviors at home while also providing them with a job. As the only ABA clinic in the areas we are located, there is next to no competition

$1,900,000
$2,100,000Revenue
$360,000Cash Flow

Market Snapshot

National transaction benchmarks for home health care businesses.

Under $500K

Median revenue$541k
Median cash flow$108k
Median sale price$200k
Multiple range1.5x - 3.1x

$500K to $2M

Median revenue$1.95m
Median cash flow$302k
Median sale price$1.10m
Multiple range2.6x - 4.0x

Over $2M

Median revenue$7.34m
Median cash flow$1.17m
Median sale price$7.08m
Multiple range3.8x - 6.4x

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 home health care acquisitions

GW

By George Wellmer

Cofounder & CEO

Key diligence, valuation, financing, and transition considerations for buyers evaluating home health care acquisitions.

What You’re Actually Buying

A home health care business acquisition is a purchase of a state license, a caregiver workforce, client relationships, and a payer mix that will define your economics more than almost any other variable in the deal. The distinction between a licensed home health agency (skilled nursing, physical therapy, occupational therapy under Medicare/Medicaid certification) and a non-medical home care agency (personal care, companionship, homemaker services) is one of the most important lines in the entire SMB acquisition market. They look similar from the outside. They have completely different regulatory frameworks, reimbursement structures, clinical requirements, and acquisition price points. Confusing them in diligence is not a minor error.

What the Financials Need to Show

Revenue analysis in home care requires payer-level decomposition: private pay, long-term care insurance, Medicaid waiver, Medicare (if applicable), Veterans Administration. Each payer has different rates, payment timelines, and renewal risk. The accounts receivable aging report is a critical document; home care payers vary enormously in payment speed, and an AR aging with significant Medicaid balances over 90 days is a working capital issue. Caregiver utilization rate, billable hours as a percentage of scheduled hours, is the key operating metric. Industry benchmark is 75–85% utilization for well-managed agencies. Below 70% suggests scheduling inefficiency, high cancellation rates, or caregiver no-shows that indicate workforce management problems. Above 90% suggests a workforce that’s stretched, which carries attrition risk.

Licensing, Medicare Certification, and Survey History

All home care agencies require a state license to operate. Licensed home health agencies providing skilled services under Medicare Part A require Medicare certification through CMS; which is obtained through a survey process that typically takes 3–6 months for a de novo application and involves rigorous clinical quality and documentation standards. In an acquisition, the Medicare certification transfers with the agency if specific conditions are met. This is called a change of ownership (CHOW) process, and it involves CMS approval, 30-day advance notification, and the new owner accepting existing liabilities including any outstanding overpayments, citations, or enforcement actions. Review the most recent Medicare survey report and any Plans of Correction issued in the past three years before pricing a skilled agency. A history of condition-level deficiencies is a material valuation issue

Caregiver Workforce — The Constraint That Determines Everything

Home care is a workforce-constrained business. Caregiver shortages have been chronic and structural since before COVID accelerated the problem. The most important operational question in any home care acquisition is: what is the current caregiver turnover rate, and what is the pipeline for replacing caregivers who leave? Industry turnover in non-medical home care runs 60–80% annually at the aide level — normalized for the category but still the primary driver of client attrition and revenue instability. Agencies that have built competitive compensation structures, caregiver recognition programs, and consistent scheduling systems retain staff better and trade at premium multiples as a result. Ask for turnover data by quarter for the past two years. Ask how the agency sources caregivers — Indeed, agency relationships, community college partnerships, referral bonuses.

Financing and the Demographic Tailwind

SBA 7(a) financing is available for home care acquisitions, with lenders attentive to payer mix, survey history (for skilled agencies), and caregiver workforce stability. The structural demand story for home health care is among the strongest in the SMB market. The 65+ population in the US is projected to grow by 20 million people by 2040, and strong majority preference for aging in place over institutional care creates durable, long-term demand for home-based services. It doesn’t eliminate operational risk or workforce constraints but it does mean that a well-run agency in a growing market is unlikely to face demand problems. The constraint is and will remain supply: licensed, reliable caregivers who show up consistently. Solve that problem and the business takes care of itself.

Frequently Asked Questions

Answers to common buyer questions for this market.

A licensed home health agency (LHHA) provides skilled care — registered nursing, physical therapy, occupational therapy, speech therapy — and is typically Medicare-certified, which means it accepts Medicare Part A reimbursement for eligible homebound patients. Skilled agencies are subject to CMS oversight, regular Medicare surveys, and clinical documentation requirements. A non-medical home care agency provides personal care and companionship services — bathing, dressing, meal preparation, transportation, errands — and is regulated at the state level only, without Medicare certification. Skilled agencies trade at significantly higher multiples because the Medicare certification is a regulatory asset that takes 3–6 months to obtain for a new entrant and cannot be replicated quickly. Non-medical agencies are simpler to operate but have lower barrier to entry and more competition. In an acquisition, the Medicare certification transfers through a CMS CHOW process with specific conditions — including the new owner assuming any existing CMS liabilities, overpayments, or outstanding enforcement actions. This makes survey history review non-negotiable for skilled agency acquisitions.