If you’re preparing to sell your business, one of the first questions you might have is:
Do I need a business broker or a real estate agent?
It’s a common point of confusion. After all, both help people buy and sell things, and both have a real estate license. But when it comes to selling a business, there is a clear difference between what a business broker does and what a real estate agent does.
What Does a Business Broker Do?
A business broker is a licensed professional that specializes in selling businesses: both with and without real estate. Their focus is on the value of the business as a whole—not just its physical location.
Business brokers help with:
Business brokers understand that you’re not just selling a building, you’re selling cash flow, relationships, operational value, and your legacy.
What Does a Real Estate Agent Do?
A real estate agent is a licensed real estate professional who helps people buy and sell property. This includes homes, land, commercial buildings, and industrial space.
Real estate agents help with:
If your sale involves only real estate—like a vacant commercial building—then a real estate agent is likely the right fit. We have a lot of real estate agent friends that we happily refer to when a seller’s business isn’t a going concern, and they need to liquidate and sell their property.
Selling a Business Is NOT Like Selling a House
Here’s a major misconception:
“I’ll just use a real estate agent—selling my business is the same as selling a building, right?”
Not quite.
Key differences:
Selling a business is layered, nuanced, and involves a broker working closely with the buyer and seller’s professional advisors (CPA’s, Lawyers, Financial Planners, Insurance agents, etc.). The entire process requires experience beyond real estate.
When Should You Use a Business Broker?
You should work with a business broker if you’re selling a business that has:
The key difference is that a business broker knows how to value and sell the entire business—not just the physical property it occupies. Choosing the right professional matters. If I needed heart surgery, I wouldn’t turn to my family doctor—I’d go to a heart specialist. The same logic applies here: if you’re selling real estate, call a reputable real estate agent. But if you’re selling a business, you need a professional business broker who understands the full picture—operations, cash flow, goodwill, employees, physical location, and more.