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industrial machinery for Sale in Utah

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Market Snapshot

National transaction benchmarks for industrial machinery businesses.

Over $2M

Median revenue$4.19m
Median cash flow$2.06m
Median sale price$9.01m
Multiple range3.0x - 5.2x

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 industrial machinery acquisitions

GW

By George Wellmer

Cofounder & CEO

Key diligence, valuation, financing, and transition considerations for buyers evaluating industrial machinery acquisitions.

What You’re Actually Buying

An industrial and commercial machinery business acquisition can mean several different things depending on the operation - a distributor, a service and repair operation, a custom machinery builder, or a rebuilding and remanufacturing shop. Each of these has different valuation drivers, different customer relationships, and different competitive dynamics. Distributors sell other manufacturers’ equipment and live on margin and customer service. Service operations generate recurring revenue from maintenance contracts and parts sales. Custom builders compete on engineering capability and project execution. Identifying which sub-category you’re evaluating, and understanding the business model accordingly, is foundational diligence.

What the Financials Need to Show

Decompose revenue by category: new equipment sales, used equipment sales, parts revenue, service labor revenue, and rental revenue if applicable. Each of these has different gross margin characteristics and different defensibility, and they should be analyzed separately. Parts revenue typically runs 35–55% gross margin and is the most defensible income source. A customer who bought a piece of equipment will continue buying parts and service for that equipment for years. Service labor revenue at 40–60% gross margin is equally defensible. New equipment sales at 8–18% margin are essentially the cost of customer acquisition for the parts and service business that follows. Be sure you understand the revenue mix.

Manufacturer Relationships and Exclusive Territories

The most valuable single asset in many industrial machinery distribution businesses is the relationship with the equipment manufacturer. The OEM dealer agreement that grants exclusive or preferred status in a defined geographic territory. Verify the dealer agreement terms, the transferability provisions, and the manufacturer’s position on the proposed change of ownership before LOI. Some manufacturers require formal approval of new owners and may use the transfer as an opportunity to renegotiate territory boundaries, performance requirements, or financial commitments. A dealer agreement that doesn’t transfer cleanly or that the manufacturer uses to extract concessions can materially affect deal economics. Talk to the manufacturer before signing an LOI in this category.

Service Technician Workforce and Knowledge Transfer

Industrial machinery service requires deep technical expertise that takes years to develop. A field service technician with 15 years of experience on a specific equipment brand carries institutional knowledge that’s nearly impossible to replicate quickly. The departure of two or three senior technicians in the first six months of new ownership can compress service revenue meaningfully and damage customer relationships built over decades. Identify your top technical talent, understand their employment status, and structure retention agreements that align their incentives with continued operation. The technicians are the asset. The trucks and toolboxes are accessories.

Inventory, Working Capital, and the Parts Business

Parts inventory represents significant working capital in industrial machinery distribution. A $500,000 parts inventory turning four times annually generates $2M in annual revenue but ties up real capital. Verify the inventory valuation methodology, age the inventory by SKU velocity, and assess whether slow-moving or obsolete parts have been properly written down. Excess inventory in obsolete or end-of-life equipment categories can represent significant balance sheet overstatement. Aged parts inventory for current equipment is an asset; the part you have in stock when a customer needs it for a downed machine is worth its replacement cost plus a service premium. Distinguishing between productive and unproductive inventory is critical to accurate valuation.

Frequently Asked Questions

Answers to common buyer questions for this market.

Parts and service revenue is the most defensible income stream in industrial machinery distribution and should be valued accordingly. Decompose revenue by category: new equipment sales, used equipment sales, parts revenue, service labor revenue, and rental revenue if applicable. Parts revenue at 35–55% gross margin and service labor at 40–60% gross margin are the high-margin, defensible income. Customers who bought equipment continue buying parts and service for that equipment for years. New equipment sales at 8–18% margin are essentially the cost of customer acquisition for the parts and service business that follows. A distribution business generating $5M revenue with 70% from new equipment and 30% from parts/service is fundamentally different from one with 40% new equipment and 60% parts/service. The second has better margins, more defensible revenue, and higher valuation. Analyze the installed base: how many active machines are under service by this distributor, and what is the annual parts and service revenue per machine; that ratio is predictive of long-term profitability.