National transaction benchmarks for insurance agency businesses.
Under $500K
Median revenue$227k
Median cash flow$121k
Median sale price$255k
Multiple range1.4x - 2.6x
$500K to $2M
Median revenue$568k
Median cash flow$219k
Median sale price$975k
Multiple range3.6x - 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.
Key diligence, valuation, financing, and transition considerations for buyers evaluating insurance agency acquisitions.
Two different transaction types: full agency vs book of business
A full agency sale transfers the operating company — staff, brand, technology, carrier contracts, lease, and the book of business. It's valued on adjusted EBITDA. A book of business sale transfers only the client list and the future commission stream; the buyer plugs the new clients into their existing operational infrastructure. Book of business sales are valued on revenue multiples — 1.5x-2.5x annual commissions for typical P&C books. These are fundamentally different transactions with different prices, different financing, and different operational implications. Buyers should know which type they're pursuing from day one.
Carrier appointments are the most undervalued asset
An agency's value depends heavily on which carriers it's appointed with. Carrier appointments aren't automatically transferable; the carrier reviews the new owner and can revoke the relationship at acquisition. Some appointments take 12-18 months to acquire from scratch (especially admitted-market specialty carriers). Buyers should confirm which appointments transfer, which require carrier re-approval, and what alternative appointments the buyer might fall back on if a key carrier walks. An agency with 15 active carriers including hard-to-get admitted markets is a different asset than one with 5 carriers, all easily replaceable.
Retention rate is the bellwether metric
P&C client retention above 85% annually is strong; above 90% is exceptional. Below 80% raises serious concerns about service quality, pricing, or client base composition. Retention compounds, a 90% retention book holds together for 10 years while an 80% retention book is half-gone in 4 years. Buyers should request the agency management system data showing retention by policy year and by line of business. Discount the valuation aggressively for retention below market norms.
P&C, life and health, commercial, and personal lines have different economics
Personal lines P&C (auto, home) generates high-volume but lower-per-policy commissions and is increasingly disrupted by direct-to-consumer carriers (Geico, Progressive direct). Commercial lines P&C generates higher per-policy commissions and is less direct-channel-vulnerable. Life insurance commissions are heavily weighted to year-one new business with thinner trail commissions. Health insurance commissions face structural pressure from Medicare Advantage consolidation. Buyers should know exactly what the book's composition is by line and assess whether the line mix is structurally growing, stable, or shrinking.
Producer concentration and relationship risk
Many independent agencies have one or two top producers driving most of the revenue. When a top producer leaves, whether to a competitor, retirement, or with the seller, the book moves with them. Buyers should ask for revenue concentration by producer, retention agreements in place, and any non-compete or non-solicit terms. Where a producer is critical, the deal should include retention bonuses or earn-out structures tied to the producer staying through transition.
Deal structures favor earn-outs over lump sums
Most insurance agency acquisitions are structured with significant earn-out components meaning payments are tied to retention of acquired clients over 2-3 years. A pure lump-sum sale is rare. Typical structures: 50-70% paid at closing, with the remainder paid over 24-36 months contingent on client retention. This protects the buyer from client departure post-closing but means the seller has continuing economic interest in maintaining relationships through the transition. Buyers should understand the earn-out structure carefully. For example a generous headline price with aggressive retention hurdles can end up costing more than a smaller lump-sum offer.
Frequently Asked Questions
Answers to common buyer questions for this market.
A full agency sale transfers the operating company which includes staff, technology, carrier contracts, brand, and clients. A book of business sale transfers only the client list and renewal commissions. The business buyer plugs the clients into their existing infrastructure. Full agency sales are typically valued on EBITDA multiples; book sales on revenue multiples.