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Acquisition14 min read2026-04-26

How to Buy an Existing Ecommerce Business: The Step-by-Step Acquisition Guide

A complete 7-step roadmap to finding, evaluating, and closing the purchase of an online store β€” from defining your criteria to post-acquisition scaling.

Buy vs. Build: Why Buying an Established Store is a Shortcut to Success

Every year, thousands of aspiring entrepreneurs spend 6 to 12 months building an online store from scratch β€” selecting products, building a website, running ads, tweaking funnels β€” only to realize they have zero traction and a dwindling bank account. There is another path: buying an existing ecommerce business that already has momentum.

Why acquisition beats building from zero:
  • Immediate cash flow. An established store generates revenue from day one. You are not waiting months for SEO to compound or for ad algorithms to learn your audience.
  • Proven products and suppliers. The guesswork is gone. You inherit a catalog that real customers have already validated with their wallets.
  • Existing traffic and audience. Email lists, organic rankings, social media followers, and repeat buyers are assets that take years to build organically.
  • Operational infrastructure. Fulfillment workflows, supplier relationships, and Standard Operating Procedures (SOPs) are already in place.

The trade-off is straightforward: you need capital upfront and you need a rigorous process to avoid overpaying or buying a business with hidden problems. That is exactly what this 7-step guide will walk you through.

Step 1: Define Your Investment Criteria

Before you browse a single listing, get crystal-clear on what you are looking for. Skipping this step leads to "shiny object syndrome" β€” chasing deals that look exciting but do not match your situation.

Use this criteria framework:
CriterionQuestions to AnswerExample
BudgetHow much can you invest (including working capital)?$50K–$150K total
Niche preferenceDo you have domain expertise or passion?Health & wellness, pet products
Time commitmentAre you looking for a full-time operation or a passive asset?10–20 hours/week
Business modelDropshipping, FBA, DTC, subscription?DTC Shopify store
Target ROIWhat annual return do you expect on invested capital?30–50% cash-on-cash
Risk toleranceAre you comfortable with platform-dependent businesses?No single-platform dependency
Growth leverWhere do you see yourself adding value?Paid ads, email marketing

Write these criteria down before you start searching. They become your filter β€” any deal that does not match at least five of your seven criteria gets a "pass."

Step 2: Where to Find Ecommerce Businesses for Sale

There are two main channels for finding acquisition targets: self-service marketplaces and managed brokers.

Self-service marketplaces let you browse listings directly. You do your own vetting.
  • Flippa β€” The largest marketplace by listing volume. Deal sizes range from $500 to $5M. Vetting is minimal, so buyer diligence is critical.
  • Acquire.com β€” Strong in SaaS and tech-forward ecommerce. LOI-gated access to financials. Zero buyer fees.
  • Microns.io β€” Focused on micro-acquisitions under $100K. Great for first-time buyers looking for smaller deals.

Managed brokers provide advisory, vetting, and deal facilitation. Commissions are higher, but so is deal quality.
  • Empire Flippers β€” Thoroughly vetted listings from $100K to $10M+. Financial audits included. Commission: 2–15%.
  • Quiet Light β€” Premium advisory-led transactions from $250K to $25M. Best for serious buyers who want hand-holding.

The aggregator approach: Instead of monitoring each platform individually, use Flipagora to aggregate listings from 10+ sources into a single searchable feed. Filter by price, niche, revenue, and business model β€” updated daily, free to use.

Step 3: Performing Initial Vetting (The "Filter" Phase)

When you find a listing that matches your criteria, resist the urge to dive deep immediately. First, run a quick 5-minute audit to determine if the deal deserves your time.

The 5-minute audit checklist:
  • 1. Revenue trend β€” Is revenue growing, flat, or declining over the past 12 months? Declining revenue is almost always a dealbreaker.
  • 2. Traffic sources β€” Is more than 50% of traffic from a single source? Heavy dependence on one channel (paid ads, a single SEO keyword, or one social platform) is a concentration risk.
  • 3. Margin sanity check β€” Are net margins above 15%? Anything lower leaves very little room for error after acquisition.
  • 4. Seller motivation β€” Why are they selling? "I want to focus on other projects" is normal. Evasive answers are a red flag.
  • 5. Asking price vs. SDE β€” Does the multiple make sense for this business type? A dropshipping store at 5x SDE is overpriced. A strong DTC brand at 3x may be fair.

If the listing passes this quick filter, move to full due diligence. If it fails on two or more points, move on. There are always more deals.

Step 4: Mastering Due Diligence (The "Deep Dive")

Due diligence is where acquisitions are won or lost. Most first-time buyers either skip it (disaster) or do it superficially (almost as bad). Dedicate 2 to 4 weeks to this phase.

Financial Due Diligence (P&L, Bank Records, Tax Returns)

The goal is to verify that the seller's reported numbers are real and sustainable.

  • Request 24+ months of Profit and Loss statements.
  • Cross-reference P&L figures with bank statements and payment processor records (Stripe, PayPal, Shopify Payments).
  • Verify that tax returns match reported earnings β€” discrepancies are a serious red flag.
  • Analyze seasonality. A business that does 60% of its revenue in Q4 has a very different risk profile than one with even monthly distribution.
  • Calculate the true SDE (Seller's Discretionary Earnings) by identifying legitimate add-backs: owner salary, one-time expenses, personal expenses run through the business.

Operational Due Diligence (Suppliers, Inventory, Fulfillment)

Understand how the business actually runs day-to-day.

  • Review all supplier contracts and confirm their willingness to transfer the relationship to a new owner.
  • Check inventory levels, turnover rates, and obsolescence risk.
  • Document every SOP. If the seller says "it's all in my head," that is a problem β€” you are buying a job, not a business.
  • Identify key employees or contractors. Will they stay after the acquisition?

Technical Due Diligence (SEO Health, Ad Account History, Shopify Apps)

The digital infrastructure is as important as the financials.

  • Get read-only access to Google Analytics and Google Search Console (not screenshots β€” actual access).
  • Audit organic search performance with Ahrefs or SEMrush. Check for ranking declines, lost backlinks, or Google penalties.
  • Review ad account history in Meta Ads Manager and Google Ads. Look for rising CPAs or declining ROAS.
  • Inventory all Shopify apps, plugins, and integrations. Some have recurring fees that may not appear in the P&L.

The 10-point due diligence checklist:
  • 24+ months of verified P&L statements
  • Bank statements cross-referenced with reported revenue
  • Tax returns reviewed for consistency
  • Google Analytics access verified (not screenshots)
  • Traffic sources analyzed for concentration risk
  • All supplier contracts reviewed and transferability confirmed
  • Inventory levels and obsolescence assessed
  • SOPs documented and complete
  • Key employee/contractor retention confirmed
  • Trademark, domain ownership, and legal compliance verified

Step 5: Valuation and Making an Offer

Understanding SDE Multiples

The standard valuation method for ecommerce businesses under $5M is based on SDE (Seller's Discretionary Earnings):

SDE = Revenue - COGS - Operating Expenses + Owner Salary + Owner Benefits + One-Time Expenses

The asking price is expressed as a multiple of annual SDE. Typical ranges:

Business ModelTypical Multiple Range
Dropshipping1.5x–2.5x
Amazon FBA2.5x–4x
DTC / Branded Shopify3x–5x
Subscription / Recurring3.5x–6x
Add-backs are expenses that get added back to earnings because they are discretionary or non-recurring: the owner's salary, a one-time website redesign, personal travel expensed through the business. Be skeptical of aggressive add-backs β€” they inflate SDE and therefore the asking price.

The LOI (Letter of Intent)

Once you have settled on a fair price, you submit a Letter of Intent. The LOI is typically non-binding and outlines:

  • Purchase price and payment structure (all-cash, seller financing, earnout)
  • Due diligence period (usually 14–30 days)
  • Exclusivity clause β€” the seller agrees not to entertain other offers during your diligence period
  • Key conditions β€” asset list, training period, non-compete terms

The LOI is your negotiating tool. Do not treat it as a formality. Negotiate hard on price, training duration, and the scope of the non-compete.

Step 6: The Legal Process and Asset Transfer

Escrow

All funds should flow through a neutral escrow service (Escrow.com is the industry standard). The buyer deposits funds into escrow, the seller transfers assets, and escrow releases payment only after both parties confirm the transfer is complete. Never wire money directly to a seller.

APA (Asset Purchase Agreement)

The APA is the binding legal contract that governs the entire transaction. It specifies:

  • Exactly which assets are included (domain, inventory, customer data, email lists, supplier contracts, IP, trademarks)
  • Which liabilities, if any, the buyer assumes
  • Representations and warranties from both parties
  • The inspection period β€” typically 7 to 14 days after asset transfer during which the buyer can verify everything works as described

Hire an attorney experienced in online business acquisitions. This is not the place to cut costs. A good APA protects you from undisclosed liabilities and gives you recourse if the seller misrepresented the business.

The Inspection Period

After assets are transferred but before escrow releases funds, you have a window to verify that everything works. Test payment processing, confirm supplier accounts, check that all analytics and ad accounts have been properly transferred. If something is missing or broken, this is your leverage to negotiate a resolution before funds are released.

Step 7: Post-Acquisition Handover and Scaling

Training from the Seller

Most deals include 30 to 90 days of seller support. Use this time wisely:

  • Week 1–2: Shadow the seller. Watch how they handle daily operations, customer service, supplier communications, and ad management.
  • Week 3–4: Take over operations with the seller available for questions.
  • Month 2–3: Run independently, using the seller as a safety net for edge cases.

Document everything during this period. The seller's institutional knowledge is one of the most valuable β€” and most perishable β€” assets in the deal.

The First 90-Day Plan

The biggest mistake new owners make is changing everything on day one. Resist that urge.

  • 1. Days 1–30: Observe and learn. Do not change pricing, ads, suppliers, or the website. Your only job is to understand the business as it runs today.
  • 2. Days 31–60: Optimize incrementally. Make small improvements based on what you have observed β€” better email sequences, improved product photos, tighter ad targeting.
  • 3. Days 61–90: Begin strategic changes. Now you have enough data and context to make bigger moves β€” launching new products, testing new traffic channels, renegotiating supplier terms.

This phased approach protects revenue during the transition and gives you a genuine understanding of the business before you start making changes.

Ready to Become an Ecommerce Owner?

Buying an existing ecommerce business is one of the fastest paths to online business ownership β€” but only if you follow a disciplined process. Define your criteria, source deals from multiple platforms, perform thorough due diligence, negotiate intelligently, and resist the urge to overhaul the business on day one.

The hardest part is often the first step: finding quality deals that match your criteria across dozens of marketplaces.

That is exactly what Flipagora solves. Browse 1,000+ ecommerce deals aggregated from 10+ sources on Flipagora β€” free, searchable, and updated daily. Start your acquisition journey today.

FAQ

What is the first step in buying an online business?

The first step is defining your investment criteria: budget, niche preference, time commitment, target ROI, and risk tolerance. Without clear criteria, you will waste weeks evaluating deals that do not match your situation. Write your criteria down before you browse a single listing, then use them as a strict filter. Tools like Flipagora let you apply these filters directly when searching across multiple marketplaces.

How do I verify the revenue of an ecommerce store?

Never rely on seller-provided screenshots alone. Request read-only access to the store's payment processors (Stripe, PayPal, Shopify Payments) and cross-reference those figures with bank statements and tax returns. Look for consistency across all three data sources over at least 24 months. Any discrepancies between payment processor data, bank deposits, and reported P&L figures should be investigated thoroughly before proceeding.

How long does it take to buy an ecommerce business?

From initial search to closing, expect 60 to 120 days for a typical transaction. The timeline breaks down roughly as: 2–4 weeks of searching and initial vetting, 2–4 weeks of due diligence, 1–2 weeks of negotiation and LOI, and 1–2 weeks for legal documentation (APA) and escrow. Larger or more complex deals can take 4 to 6 months. The post-acquisition handover and training period adds another 30 to 90 days on top of closing.

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