Selling in California: What's Different
The fundamentals of selling a business — getting a valuation, preparing your financials, marketing confidentially, negotiating, and closing — apply everywhere. But California layers on state-specific requirements that catch unprepared sellers: bulk-sale escrow rules, seller disclosure obligations, some of the nation's strictest employment laws, sales-tax and successor-liability issues, and high capital-gains taxes. Understanding these early is the difference between a smooth sale and a stalled one.
California is also one of the most active business-sale markets in the country, with deep buyer demand — especially in Southern California. That demand works in a prepared seller's favor.
Get a confidential, no-obligation valuation from a broker who knows the California market and how deals actually get closed here.
The California Selling Process
At a high level, selling a California business follows the same arc as anywhere:
- Get a professional valuation and price the business correctly
- Prepare clean financials and documentation
- Market confidentially to qualified buyers
- Negotiate price and terms, and sign a purchase agreement
- Open escrow, complete due diligence, and close
What differs is the California-specific compliance woven through the back half — escrow, disclosure, tax clearance, and employment matters that must be handled correctly.
The Key California-Specific Rules
- Bulk-sale escrow — many asset sales require a formal escrow with published notice to creditors
- Seller disclosure — obligations to disclose material facts about the business
- Employment law — final pay, PTO payout, and successor considerations
- Sales tax and successor liability — CDTFA clearance to avoid inheriting tax debt
- Lease assignment — landlord consent to transfer the lease
- License and permit transfers
California Taxes on a Business Sale
Taxes materially affect what you keep. California taxes capital gains as ordinary income — there's no reduced state rate for long-term gains — on top of federal capital-gains tax. How the purchase price is allocated across asset classes affects the tax treatment for both sides, and structures like installment sales can spread the tax over years. These decisions have real dollar consequences, so plan them with a CPA before you sign. See California capital gains considerations.
Common Mistakes California Sellers Make
- Ignoring bulk-sale escrow and tax-clearance steps until they stall the closing
- Underestimating California employment obligations around final pay and PTO
- Not securing lease assignment early for location-dependent businesses
- Failing to plan for California's high capital-gains tax
- Pricing on guesswork instead of a professional valuation
Getting It Right
A successful California sale is a team effort: an experienced business broker to manage the process and market confidentially, a CPA for tax planning, and an attorney for the agreement and compliance. The state's rules are navigable — thousands of California businesses sell every year — but they reward preparation and punish improvisation. Start early, price right, and assemble the right team.
Note: This article is general educational information, not legal or tax advice. California rules are complex and change — consult a qualified California attorney and CPA about your specific situation.
Frequently Asked Questions
How do you sell a business in California?
You follow the standard process, get a valuation, prepare financials, market confidentially, negotiate, and close, while handling California-specific requirements: bulk-sale escrow with notice to creditors, seller disclosure, employment-law obligations like final pay and PTO payout, sales-tax clearance to avoid successor liability, lease assignment, and license transfers.
What taxes do you pay when selling a business in California?
You pay federal capital-gains tax and California state tax, and California taxes capital gains as ordinary income with no reduced long-term rate. How the purchase price is allocated across asset classes affects treatment, and structures like installment sales can spread the tax. Plan with a CPA before signing.
Do you need escrow to sell a business in California?
Often yes. Many California asset sales are subject to bulk-sale rules requiring a formal escrow with published notice to creditors, which protects the buyer from the seller's undisclosed debts. A licensed business escrow holder handles this. Confirm the requirements for your specific sale with your broker and attorney.
What makes selling a business in California different?
California adds state-specific layers: bulk-sale escrow, seller disclosure obligations, strict employment laws around final pay and PTO, sales-tax and successor-liability rules, lease-assignment requirements, and high capital-gains taxes. The core selling process is the same, but this compliance must be handled correctly to close.
Selling a Business in California?
Martin Navarro helps California owners sell confidentially and navigate the state's rules to a clean close. Let's talk, confidentially and with no obligation.
Request a Free Valuation Call or text: 818-633-3254 · 365navarro.martin@gmail.com