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Machine Shop for Sale in Massachusetts

Nationally, similar businesses sell at 2.1x to 4.5x SDE. Compare live listings and connect with sellers.

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CNC Machine Shop -Strong Profits - Low Overhead - Repeat Customers photo
Machine Shops & Tools

CNC Machine Shop -Strong Profits - Low Overhead - Repeat Customers

Norfolk County, MA, US

This established precision CNC machine shop represents a compelling acquisition opportunity in Massachusetts' manufacturing sector. The company has operated continuously for over 20 years, developing specialized expertise in prototyping and short-run production for critical industries including medical devices, robotics, and test equipment manufacturing. The business demonstrates exceptional operational efficiency with industry-leading financial performance. Over a five-year period, the company has maintained gross profit margins averaging 85.5% with Seller's Discretionary Earnings exceeding $1 million annually. This superior profitability stems from streamlined operations, lean management infrastructure, and disciplined overhead management. Operational excellence is maintained through a focused team structure consisting of the owner-operator, two full-time skilled machinists/programmers, and dedicated bookkeeping support. This lean organizational model ensures direct quality control while maintaining cost efficiency. The company's revenue foundation rests on long-term client relationships, with primary customers maintaining business partnerships spanning over a decade. This established client base provides predictable recurring revenue streams and demonstrates the company's reputation for quality, reliability, and precision manufacturing capabilities. Key value drivers include: - Proven 20-year operational track record - Industry-leading profit margins of 85.5% - Stable recurring revenue from long-term client relationships - Specialized capabilities in high-value market segments - Lean operational structure with low overhead requirements - Established market position in precision manufacturing The business presents significant growth potential through its strong market position, operational scalability, and established customer loyalty. This represents an exceptional opportunity to acquire a mature, high-margin manufacturing operation with demonstrated financial performance and market stability. Please Note: Information furnished is provided by seller or based on representations of the seller or other sources. Squizzero, Carp & Associates has made no investigation of it and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the Information. All recipients are encouraged to perform due diligence and consult with independent tax, financial and legal professionals. Financial information shown is based on a 5-year average.

$3,500,000
$1.66mRevenue
$1mCash Flow

Market Snapshot

National transaction benchmarks for machine shop businesses.

Under $500K

Median revenue$464k
Median cash flow$102k
Median sale price$330k
Multiple range2.1x - 4.5x

$500K to $2M

Median revenue$1.43m
Median cash flow$317k
Median sale price$900k
Multiple range2.4x - 4.2x

Over $2M

Median revenue$5.89m
Median cash flow$1.15m
Median sale price$4.31m
Multiple range3.1x - 4.5x

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 buying Machine Shops Tools

GW

By George Wellmer

Cofounder & CEO

Key diligence, valuation, financing, and transition considerations for buyers evaluating machine shops tools acquisitions.

Equipment Is the Business — But Technology Obsolescence Is the Risk

Machine shops are capital-intensive manufacturing operations where the quality, condition, and technological currency of the equipment directly determines what work the shop can bid, win, and complete profitably. A shop with a modern CNC machining center fleet capable of 5-axis precision work serves a fundamentally different customer base and commands fundamentally different pricing than a job shop running older manual or early-generation CNC equipment. Before setting any valuation, commission an independent equipment appraisal by a machining industry specialist not just a generic personal property appraiser. Assess not just the physical condition but the technological generation of each machine. Equipment that was state-of-the-art in 2010 may be limited in its ability to compete for today's aerospace, medical device, or defense contracts that require current-generation tolerances and documentation.

How Machine Shops Are Valued

Machine shop valuations typically range from 2.1x to 4.5x EBITDA for well-run operations with stable customer relationships, qualified workforce, and modern equipment. The asset-heavy nature of the business means that asset-based valuation provides a meaningful floor. The replacement cost of a well-equipped machine shop can be significant, which provides support for valuations even in periods of revenue pressure. Customer concentration is the most significant earnings quality issue in machine shop acquisitions: shops where one customer represents 40–60% of revenue are common in the job shop category, and the risk that a major customer reduces purchase orders or re-sources post-transition must be priced into the acquisition. Shops with diversified customer bases across multiple end markets (aerospace, medical, automotive, defense) command premium multiples because of their lower revenue concentration risk.

The Workforce Is the Competency

Skilled machinists, particularly those trained on specific equipment platforms or holding certifications relevant to defense, aerospace, or medical device work, are among the most difficult skilled workers to recruit in any manufacturing sector. The average age of experienced machinists in the U.S. is well above 45, and the pipeline of new machinists coming through vocational programs is insufficient to replace attrition. Identify the key operators before closing, understand their compensation relative to market, and negotiate retention agreements for anyone whose departure would affect the shop's ability to service critical customer accounts. Machine shop acquisitions where experienced operators leave en masse in the first year post-closing frequently fail to maintain quality standards, triggering customer quality holds and source changes that permanently damage revenue.

Quality System Certifications and Customer Requirements

Many machine shop customers, particularly in aerospace, defense, and medical devices, require their suppliers to hold specific quality management system certifications. ISO 9001, AS9100 (aerospace), and ISO 13485 (medical devices) are common requirements. Verify the current certification status of any quality systems the shop holds, the certification body, and the next audit/renewal date. Loss of a quality certification can trigger customer source changes within 30–60 days in regulated industries. If the shop is working on ITAR-controlled (International Traffic in Arms Regulations) defense components, there are specific transfer and compliance requirements for the change-of-ownership transaction that must be addressed with a compliance attorney before closing.

Working Capital, Backlog, and Contract Review

Machine shop cash flow is governed by customer payment terms, material purchasing cycles, and production lead times. Many shops carry 30–60 day receivables, purchase materials on net 30 terms, and run production backlogs of several weeks to months. Understand the working capital cycle thoroughly before closing and negotiate an appropriate working capital peg in the purchase agreement. An underfunded working capital position at closing can create cash flow stress within the first quarter of ownership. Review the order backlog and firm purchase orders carefully: distinguish between firm orders with committed delivery dates and purchase blankets with non-binding estimated call-off quantities. Only firm orders provide genuine backlog value.

Environmental Compliance and Hazardous Waste

Machine shops generate regulated waste streams: coolants, cutting fluids, metal chips, and in some operations, chemical surface treatment byproducts. Confirm that the shop holds all required environmental permits, that hazardous waste disposal is properly documented with licensed haulers, and that there are no outstanding EPA, state environmental agency, or OSHA citations pending. Environmental violations that exist at the time of an asset purchase can in certain circumstances create liability for the buyer. A Phase I Environmental Site Assessment is strongly recommended for any machine shop acquisition, particularly those that have operated at the same facility for more than a decade. Clean environmental compliance records are a meaningful indicator of management quality in the manufacturing sector.