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The Realistic Timeline: 6 to 12 Months

Business owners consistently underestimate how long it takes to sell. Many assume they can list in January and be done by spring. The reality is that a well-run, properly priced business listed with an experienced broker in Los Angeles will typically take 6 to 12 months from engagement to closing. Some transactions close faster. Some take longer. What determines your timeline is largely within your control — if you understand where the delays come from.

Here's how the timeline breaks down stage by stage, and what you can do to keep things moving.

Stage 1: Preparation and Valuation (4–12 Weeks)

Before a business goes to market, there's real work to do. A broker needs to analyze your financials, prepare a professional Confidential Information Memorandum (CIM), and determine the right asking price. This stage takes 4–8 weeks for most sellers — but it can stretch considerably if your financials are disorganized, if there are issues to address with the lease, or if there are legal or compliance matters that need to be cleaned up first.

Sellers who do their homework before engaging a broker — three years of clean tax returns, updated P&Ls, an organized lease file, a clear picture of their equipment and inventory — compress this stage dramatically. Those who hand over a shoebox of receipts and hope for the best add weeks to the process before it even starts.

The single biggest time-saver: Have your last three years of tax returns and profit & loss statements reconciled and ready to go before your first broker meeting. This alone can cut 3–4 weeks off your preparation phase.

Stage 2: Marketing and Finding a Buyer (2–6 Months)

This is the stage that takes the longest and is the most variable. Once your business is on the market — confidentially, through blind listings on business-for-sale platforms, broker databases, and targeted outreach — the clock starts on finding the right buyer.

Some businesses attract serious offers within 30–60 days. Others take 4–6 months. The key variables are:

During this phase, your job as a seller is to stay focused on running the business. The worst thing you can do is let performance slip while you're trying to sell — buyers will see the trend in your financials, and it will affect both price and their confidence.

Stage 3: Offer, Negotiation, and Letter of Intent (1–3 Weeks)

When a qualified buyer wants to move forward, they submit a Letter of Intent (LOI). This is a non-binding document that outlines the proposed purchase price, terms, transition period, and any major contingencies. Negotiating the LOI typically takes one to three weeks.

This stage is faster when both parties are motivated and represented by professionals who know how to structure a deal. It slows down when buyers lowball aggressively, when sellers over-negotiate minor points, or when attorneys unfamiliar with business sales over-complicate a straightforward transaction.

Stage 4: Due Diligence (30–60 Days)

Once the LOI is signed, the buyer has the right to conduct due diligence — a thorough review of everything: financial statements, tax returns, contracts, leases, permits, equipment, employee agreements, and operations. In California, this phase almost always runs 30–60 days.

Due diligence is where unprepared sellers pay the price. Buyers who find inconsistencies, missing records, or undisclosed liabilities don't just get nervous — they renegotiate. A seller who spent 12 weeks in preparation will breeze through due diligence. A seller who skipped it will spend those same 12 weeks scrambling to find documents under pressure, often with a motivated buyer growing impatient on the other side.

Stage 5: Escrow and Closing (30–45 Days)

After due diligence, the transaction moves into escrow. In California, business sale escrows involve a licensed escrow officer who manages the flow of documents and funds. This phase typically takes 30–45 days and involves:

A broker who knows California's escrow requirements keeps this stage on track. Deals that blow up in escrow almost always do so because of surprises that proper preparation would have surfaced months earlier.

What Can Extend Your Timeline

Beyond the preparation issues already discussed, several factors routinely add time to a California business sale:

The Bottom Line on Timing

Plan for 9 months. Hope for 6. Be prepared for 12. If you go into the process with that mindset, stay focused on running your business throughout, and trust a qualified broker to manage the process, you give yourself the best possible chance of closing on time and at the right price.

Let's Map Out Your Sale Timeline

Every business is different. Martin Navarro will give you a straight, realistic picture of your timeline — and what you can do right now to shorten it.

Schedule a Confidential Consultation Call or text: 818-633-3254  ·  martin.navarro@fcbb.com