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sign shop for Sale in Illinois

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Sign Manufacturing Company w/ 8,000 sq. ft Real Estate photo
Signs

Sign Manufacturing Company w/ 8,000 sq. ft Real Estate

IL, US

Business Overview: This company is a well-established and reputable sign manufacturing company based in Chicago, Illinois. With a history spanning over 15 years under the current owner—and even longer under its original founder—this business has proven its resilience and adaptability in the industry. The company specializes in manufacturing ADA-compliant signs, logos, and vinyl applications, including certified braille signs produced in-house. One of the unique advantages of this business is its operational flexibility. The new owner can choose to run it as a low-maintenance operation or expand its capabilities for further growth. Key Features & Highlights: Established client base with high-profile contracts, including Law Firms in (Salt Lake City & San Francisco), MGM in Las Vegas, and Hub Group (servicing Memphis, St. Louis, Texas, California, and Indianapolis). One of the few sign manufacturers in Chicago, providing ADA signage. Produces certified braille signage in-house, a niche specialty in the market. Owner-operated business with a long-standing history of success. Proven track record with large-scale clients in various industries, including law firms, hospitality, and logistics. Manufactures ADA signage for other sign companies. Competitive Advantages: This company stands out from its competitors due to its dedication to exceptional customer service, efficiency, and its status as a trusted local small business. Unlike larger competitors that may struggle with personalized service, this company prides itself on working closely with clients to deliver tailored signage solutions. The company's ability to manufacture certified braille signage in-house not only ensures high quality but also speeds up production times. As a Chicago-based manufacturer, this company benefits from strong relationships with local businesses and national clients, providing a unique combination of accessibility and reliability. Additionally, its history of long-term client partnerships reflects its strong reputation and consistency in delivering high-quality products. Direct Competitors: Gemini: A leading manufacturer of signage and dimensional lettering, known for its extensive product range and national presence. Howard Industries: Specializes in architectural and ADA signage, offering turnkey solutions for various industries. Altec Sign Solutions: Provides custom signage and branding solutions, including ADA-compliant signs and environmental graphics. Growth & Expansion Opportunities: Increase marketing efforts to attract new clients and expand market share. Leverage digital signage solutions to diversify product offerings. Explore government contracts and certifications to secure additional business. Expand geographic reach to service more nationwide clients. Target new sectors, including commercial buildings, hospitals, law offices, and the medical field. This is a rare opportunity to acquire a solid, profitable business with a strong foundation, loyal clientele, and room for further growth. The current owner is willing to assist with a smooth transition to ensure continued success.

$400,000
$175,808Revenue
$62,843Cash Flow

Market Snapshot

National transaction benchmarks for sign shop businesses.

Under $500K

Median revenue$557k
Median cash flow$122k
Median sale price$239k
Multiple range1.5x - 2.5x

$500K to $2M

Median revenue$1.26m
Median cash flow$292k
Median sale price$814k
Multiple range1.8x - 3.3x

Over $2M

Median revenue$3.53m
Median cash flow$713k
Median sale price$2.73m
Multiple range3.5x - 4.1x

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 sign shop acquisitions

GW

By George Wellmer

Cofounder & CEO

Key diligence, valuation, financing, and transition considerations for buyers evaluating sign shop acquisitions.

The equipment is expensive and ages

Sign production runs on large-format printers, vinyl cutters, routers, and sometimes CNC and welding equipment, all of which are costly to buy and maintain. Aging machines mean capital expense you inherit and downtime that stalls jobs. Inspect the equipment, get its age, condition, and service history, and budget for replacements, treating the machinery as a real and depreciating component of value rather than a fixed asset.

Recurring commercial accounts are worth more than one-off jobs

Repeat business-to-business clients, who reorder signage as they open locations, rebrand, or replace worn signs, are far more valuable than one-time projects. A book of steady commercial accounts gives the business durability. Examine the customer base for repeat clients, revenue concentration, and how much of the work is recurring versus won fresh each time, since that mix shapes both stability and value.

Installation brings permitting and liability

Installing signs, especially large, illuminated, or exterior ones, involves electrical work, structural mounting, permits, and the liability that comes with it. Mistakes can mean property damage or injury, and permitting requirements vary by jurisdiction. Confirm the business carries appropriate liability insurance and any required licensing or bonding, and understand how installation is handled, since this is where the risk concentrates.

Franchise versus independent shapes the economics

Many sign shops operate under national franchise brands that provide systems, marketing, and recognition in exchange for royalties and fees, while independents keep all the margin and build their own reputation. Each has trade-offs for profit and transferability. Determine which you are buying, and for a franchise, read the agreement for royalty rates, territory, renewal, and transfer-approval terms before assuming the economics.

Design and production talent carry the work

The business depends on skilled designers and production staff who turn client requests into finished signs, and that capability may sit with a few key people. If essential staff or the owner leave, throughput and quality can suffer. Identify who does the design and production, understand their compensation and stability, and plan retention for the people the business genuinely relies on.

Frequently Asked Questions

Answers to common buyer questions for this market.

It depends on whether you value brand and systems or margin and independence. A franchise brings a recognized name, established processes, marketing, and supplier relationships, but charges ongoing royalties and fees and limits how you operate and transfer the business. An independent keeps all the margin and gives you full control, at the cost of building reputation and systems yourself. Both can be strong businesses; for a franchise, scrutinize the royalty and transfer terms, and judge an independent on its repeat client base and reputation.