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non-classifiable establishment for Sale in Ohio

Explore non-classifiable establishment for sale in Ohio. Compare opportunities and connect with sellers.

Established retail firearms with training center & shooting range Ohio photo
All Non-Classifiable Establishments

Established retail firearms with training center & shooting range Ohio

Columbus, Franklin County, OH, US

This is a rare opportunity to acquire a well-established firearm retailer and training facility with a strong reputation built over nearly two decades. Founded in 2006, this family-owned business has become a trusted resource for firearms, ammunition, gunsmith services, and training programs. The facility features a state-of-the-art shooting range with 12 firing lanes designed for both pistol and rifle use, plus: Two training & education rooms offering classes ranging from concealed carry courses to beginner “how-to-use” firearm programs. As well as basic OPOTA classes (Ohio Police Officers Training Academy. Large retail showroom with extensive product selection Dedicated gunsmith room Several offices and ample storage space The business is supported by a well-trained, experienced management and staff team who have been with the company for years. The owner has cultivated strong working relationships with the ATF, state, and local law enforcement agencies, ensuring compliance and fostering agency purchases through the business. Highlights: Established, respected name with loyal customer base Family-owned since inception Strong profits and proven track record Large facility with multiple revenue streams (retail, range, training, gunsmithing) Growth potential: no current e-commerce sales – major expansion opportunity Sale includes business name, goodwill, relationships, and all operating assets (inventory purchase handled separately) The current owners are ready to retire and transition this successful business to a qualified buyer who can continue its growth and legacy. Highly Confidential – Serious inquiries only. A confidentiality agreement must be completed to receive additional details.

$1,990,000
$2,900,000Revenue
$415,000Cash Flow

What to know about non-classifiable establishment acquisitions

GW

By George Wellmer

Cofounder & CEO

Key diligence, valuation, financing, and transition considerations for buyers evaluating non-classifiable establishment acquisitions.

Understand the revenue sources before you apply a multiple

Deconstruct the revenue by stream before you trust the top line. Because these businesses do not fit a standard category, the revenue often blends high-margin recurring work with low-margin project work. Get the P.L. broken out by segment and assess each piece on its own merits before blending them into a single price-to-earnings view.

The owner is often the integrating layer

Map exactly what the owner does that keeps the pieces together. Multi-service and holding structures are frequently held together by the owner as salesperson, strategist, or relationship holder. If that role didn't exist after transition, ask yourself what actually survives the sale.

Comparable valuation data is sparse by definition

Anchor the valuation on earnings and assets, not industry multiples. Without a peer group, the median asking-price-to-earnings ratio of around 3.6 for this category is a rough anchor at best. Price from the bottom up: normalized earnings, net tangible assets, revenue quality, and transition risk.

Revenue quality varies widely in this group

Separate recurring, contracted, and passed-through revenue before you apply a multiple. Structurally recurring revenue deserves a higher multiple than project-or-bid work, which in turn deserves more than pass-through revenue that carries little margin. With over 1.8M of median revenue, the quality mix matters enormously to what the number is worth.

Asset and liability structure can be complex

Diligence each operating entity or asset class on its own terms. A non-classifiable business may include real estate, equipment, contracts, and intangibles with different risk profiles and lifespans. About 19 percent of these businesses own real estate. Treat each material component as a separate diligence question.

Seller financing appears at a moderate rate

Use seller participation to bridge the valuation gap that is inherent in this category. About 21 percent of these sellers advertise financing. When independent comparables are scarce and the business is hard to categorize, a seller note or earnout aligns both parties around actual performance after the transition.

Frequently Asked Questions

Answers to common buyer questions for this market.

Start with normalized owner earnings, then add net tangible assets at fair market value. Then ask what multiple is justified by the quality and recurrence of those earnings. Recurring, contracted earnings deserve a higher multiple than project-or bid work.