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Walking Away Is a Skill

The willingness to walk away is a buyer's greatest source of leverage and protection. Most deals that go bad sent clear signals before closing; the buyers who got hurt were the ones too committed to leave. Not every problem is a dealbreaker — many justify a price adjustment instead — but some issues are fundamental, and recognizing them is what separates disciplined buyers from those who buy trouble.

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Financial Dealbreakers

Walk away when the numbers don't hold up:

You cannot fix a deal that only works if the earnings are what the seller claims but can't prove. See how to read the financials.

The Owner-Dependency Dealbreaker

If due diligence reveals that the business is entirely the owner — the relationships, the expertise, the sales all tied to them personally, with nothing documented and no team — and there's no realistic transition that transfers it, walk away or fundamentally restructure. Buying a business that can't run without the seller means buying a job with debt attached, and often the value evaporates the day the owner leaves.

When the Seller Is the Problem

Walk away from a seller who won't provide documents, keeps changing their story, aggressively re-trades agreed terms, or pressures you to skip diligence. A transaction requires good faith on both sides; a seller who obstructs verification or negotiates in bad faith is telling you something. No price is worth buying a business you were never allowed to properly examine.

Dealbreaker or Just Cold Feet?

Not every doubt is a reason to walk. Distinguish a real, material problem (unverifiable earnings, a business that can't service its debt, a seller hiding information) from normal nerves about a big decision. The test: is the concern factual and quantifiable, or emotional? Facts that can't be resolved or fairly priced justify walking. Nerves alone usually just require more diligence and a clear head.

How to Walk Away Professionally

When you do walk, do it cleanly and respectfully. Communicate clearly and promptly, explain the specific reason if appropriate, and preserve the relationship — deals sometimes come back together on different terms, and your reputation follows you into the next one. A professional exit protects your standing with brokers, sellers, and the market. Walking away well is part of being a buyer people want to do deals with. Review red flags and common buyer mistakes to sharpen your judgment.

Frequently Asked Questions

When should you walk away from buying a business?

Walk away when you can't verify the earnings, when the business can't comfortably service the acquisition debt, when it's entirely dependent on the owner with no transferable value, when you can't secure the lease or there are serious undisclosed liabilities, or when the seller won't provide documents or negotiates in bad faith.

Is owner dependency a reason to walk away from a deal?

It can be. If the business is entirely the owner, their relationships, expertise, and sales, with nothing documented and no team, and there's no transition that transfers it, you may be buying a job with debt attached. If it can't be restructured to address that, walking away is often the right call.

How do I know if it's a real dealbreaker or just cold feet?

Ask whether the concern is factual and quantifiable or emotional. A material, unresolvable problem, such as unverifiable earnings or a business that can't cover its debt, justifies walking away. Normal nerves about a big decision usually just call for more due diligence and a clear head, not abandoning a sound deal.

How do you walk away from a business deal professionally?

Communicate clearly and promptly, explain the specific reason if appropriate, and preserve the relationship. Deals sometimes come back together on different terms, and your reputation follows you to the next one. A clean, respectful exit protects your standing with brokers, sellers, and the market.

Martin Navarro, Business Broker and M&A Advisor in Los Angeles
Martin Navarro · Business Broker & M&A Advisor

Martin Navarro advises business owners across Los Angeles, Ventura, and Southern California on selling, buying, and valuing privately held companies. A U.S. Marine Corps veteran with dual CSUN degrees in Business Management and Accounting, he brings hands-on transaction experience and a straight-talking, numbers-first approach to every engagement. Bilingual in English and Spanish.

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