Built for the Business of Building.
Construction and trades businesses are among the most acquisition-friendly industries in the lower middle market — strong cash flow, recurring contracts, and real barriers to entry make them attractive targets for buyers. But they come with complexity: licensing requirements, bonding, equipment valuations, and workforce dynamics that generic advisors often miss. For buyers who approach them correctly, construction and trades businesses represent a compelling opportunity to acquire a defensible, cash-flowing asset with real upside. For sellers who have spent years building a reputation and a team, they represent significant value — if that value is packaged and presented to the right buyer in the right way.
The construction and trades industry is also one where the current market dynamics strongly favor well-prepared buyers and sellers. A generation of trade business owners is approaching retirement, creating a meaningful pipeline of acquisition opportunities across general contracting, specialty trades, and service-based construction businesses. At the same time, the persistent shortage of skilled tradespeople creates real barriers to entry that protect established businesses from new competition — making existing operations with trained teams and proven track records particularly valuable.
At Greenland Advisors, we work with construction and trades business owners at every stage — helping buyers identify and close on the right opportunities, helping operators scale profitably, and helping sellers exit for the value their years of work deserve.
What Buyers and Sellers Need to Know About Construction and Trades Businesses
Construction and trades businesses have specific financial and operational characteristics that make them distinct from other service businesses — and that require specialized knowledge to evaluate and transact correctly.
Licensing and bonding are foundational considerations in any construction or trades transaction. Contractor licenses are issued at the state level and in many cases at the municipal level as well, and the requirements vary considerably depending on the trade, the scope of work, and the jurisdiction. Buyers need to understand exactly what licenses the business holds, whether those licenses are transferable or require reapplication under new ownership, and what the implications are for operations during any transition period. Sellers need to have clean licensing documentation ready and should address any gaps or lapses before going to market.
Equipment and fleet valuation is another area that requires careful attention. Construction businesses often carry significant capital in the form of heavy equipment, vehicles, tools, and specialized machinery — and the age, condition, and remaining useful life of that equipment directly affects both the ongoing cost structure of the business and the valuation of any deal. Buyers need to conduct thorough equipment due diligence, ideally with the input of someone who understands the specific type of construction or trade involved. Sellers who have maintained their equipment well and can document that maintenance history are in a meaningfully stronger position at exit.
Customer concentration and contract backlog are critical financial metrics. A construction business that generates the majority of its revenue from one or two customers — or that depends on winning new bids to sustain its top line — carries a different risk profile than one with a diversified customer base and a strong pipeline of recurring or contracted work. Buyers need to understand the composition of the revenue and the visibility into future work. Sellers need to be able to demonstrate a healthy backlog and a track record of winning repeat business.
Workforce stability and key-person dependency are perhaps the most important operational factors in any construction or trades transaction. Skilled tradespeople are in genuine short supply in most markets, and the institutional knowledge, customer relationships, and project execution capability held by a stable, experienced team is one of the most valuable assets a construction business owns. Buyers need to assess the depth and stability of the workforce and the degree to which key relationships — with customers, subcontractors, or suppliers — are tied to the current owner. Sellers who have built businesses that run well without their personal involvement in every project are in a significantly stronger position when it comes time to exit.
Why Greenland Advisors for Construction and Trades Business Owners
Greenland Advisors is not a generalist firm that treats construction businesses like any other service company. We work specifically with lower middle-market business owners in industries where operational complexity and financial discipline intersect — and construction and trades is exactly that kind of industry.
For buyers, we help you evaluate licensing status, equipment condition, customer concentration, contract backlog, and workforce stability before you commit to any deal. We run the financial analysis, identify the risks, and help you structure an acquisition that accounts for the real complexities of the construction industry. Our Business Acquisition Mastery program is a valuable resource for first-time buyers who want to enter the trades space with knowledge and confidence — so you’re not learning the hard lessons after you’ve already signed the papers.
For operators, our Scale division provides CFO advisory, accounting services, and strategic consulting tailored to the realities of running a construction or trades business. We help you build the financial systems that give you real visibility into job costing, margin performance, and cash flow — because in construction, the difference between a profitable job and a money-losing one often comes down to how well you track the numbers. We’ve helped hundreds of service-based business owners improve their margins, tighten their operations, and build the kind of financial clarity that drives real growth.
For sellers, we help you prepare and position your construction business for a successful exit. That means getting your licensing documentation in order, presenting your equipment and fleet clearly, building a compelling story around your backlog and customer relationships, and going to market with financials that hold up under buyer scrutiny. And because we work with buyers on a daily basis, we know exactly what they are looking for in a construction or trades acquisition — and how to make sure your business checks every box.
Whether you’re looking to buy your first trades business, scale the one you’ve built, or finally plan the exit you’ve earned, Greenland Advisors is the team that understands this industry and is built to help you succeed in it.


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