Tupelo Data Room

nondurable goods distribution for Sale in Idaho

Similar businesses sell at 1.8x to 6.7x SDE. Compare live listings and connect with sellers.

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Market Snapshot

National transaction benchmarks for nondurable goods distribution businesses.

Under $500K

Median revenue$691k
Median cash flow$99k
Median sale price$298k
Multiple range1.8x - 3.3x

$500K to $2M

Median revenue$2.54m
Median cash flow$294k
Median sale price$900k
Multiple range2.4x - 4.2x

Over $2M

Median revenue$11.06m
Median cash flow$1.07m
Median sale price$5.33m
Multiple range3.6x - 6.7x

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 nondurable goods distribution acquisitions

GW

By George Wellmer

Cofounder & CEO

Key diligence, valuation, financing, and transition considerations for buyers evaluating nondurable goods distribution acquisitions.

Routes and delivery infrastructure define the business

Density matters more than total customer count. A distribution business with 200 customers spread across three states is more expensive to run than one with 200 customers in two zip codes. Pull a customer map and route schedule. Vehicles, drivers, dispatch, and fuel costs all scale with miles driven, not with revenue. Tight geographic concentration is a moat (it's expensive for competitors to build a parallel route); diffuse coverage is a problem.

Cold chain and special-handling requirements add real costs

Some products demand refrigeration, hazmat, or licensing. Food-service distribution requires refrigerated trucks and FDA compliance. Industrial chemicals require hazmat-trained drivers and special permits. Pharmaceuticals require DEA-registered distribution. Each layer of regulatory complexity adds capital cost and operating overhead, and also adds barriers to entry that protect incumbent distributors. Verify what regulatory regimes apply and whether the seller's compliance is current.

Volume commitments determine supplier pricing

Pricing is tiered by volume. A distributor buying $5M of product per year from a manufacturer pays substantially less per unit than one buying $1M. When you buy the business, you inherit the volume tier — but if you lose customers and volume drops, you might bump up to higher unit costs, compressing margins. Verify the supplier volume commitments and break points before underwriting the gross margin.

Customer contracts protect both sides

Read the customer agreements. Some distribution customers operate on handshake purchase orders; others have formal multi-year contracts with volume commitments and exclusivity. Contracted revenue is more durable and more valuable. Ask for the customer contract inventory: how many contracts, average remaining term, exclusivity clauses, and renewal mechanics. Contracted relationships with 12+ months remaining are worth meaningfully more than month-to-month customers.

Fleet age and replacement cycle is hidden capex

Walk the fleet and ask about MPG. Delivery trucks (Class 4-7 box trucks, sometimes Class 8) typically last 7–12 years in distribution duty. If the seller has been deferring replacement, your first three years include a substantial capex bill the P&L doesn't show. New trucks are $80K–$150K each. Get the replacement schedule and budget accordingly.

E-commerce and direct-to-customer is reshaping demand

Look at the customer trajectory by segment. Traditional distribution serves brick-and-mortar businesses, restaurants, and institutional buyers. As these customers face their own pressure (restaurant closures, retail consolidation, hospital procurement changes), distribution demand shifts. Distributors that have added e-commerce fulfillment, drop-shipping, or marketplace logistics services are positioning for growth. Distributors entirely dependent on shrinking customer segments are facing structural headwinds.

Frequently Asked Questions

Answers to common buyer questions for this market.

Owner-operator route distributors typically sell in the Tier 1 range (under $500K). Mid-size distributors with $3M–$15M in revenue, established routes, and good customer relationships usually trade in the Tier 2 range ($500K–$2M of SDE valuation). Larger regional distributors with multiple warehouses, strong fleet, and contracted customer base can reach Tier 3 ($2M+).