Updated June 2026
Home / Fintech M&A / Selling to Private Equity
Private equity has become one of the most active and best-paying buyers of fintech. To sell well, you run a competitive process rather than taking the first approach: tighten your recurring revenue and unit economics, prepare clean financials, and put a curated set of funds in competition. Profitable fintech businesses generally price between 8x and 12x EBITDA, with payments and capital-markets infrastructure at the top of that range and lending-heavy models lower.
Private equity likes fintech for the same reasons it likes software: recurring, contracted revenue and high incremental margins. The added draw is the take-rate. Payments processors, capital-markets infrastructure, and embedded-finance platforms earn a small slice of every transaction, which compounds as volume grows and is difficult for a customer to rip out. Funds also see a fragmented market they can consolidate: a sponsor buys a platform with strong distribution, then bolts on point solutions in compliance, data, lending, or wealth to build something larger and sell it on at a higher multiple. Regulatory licensing and bank partnerships, often seen as a burden, read to a sponsor as a moat.
A sale to private equity runs as a managed, competitive process rather than a single conversation with one buyer. It begins with preparation: a quality-of-earnings review, a clean data room, and a defensible model of recurring revenue and retention. An advisor then approaches a curated set of funds at the same time, which is what creates leverage on price and terms.
From launch to close, a well-run fintech process typically takes four to seven months: two to three weeks to prepare materials, three to five weeks in market to indications of interest, management meetings and a round of letters of intent, then eight to twelve weeks of confirmatory diligence and legal documentation. The firms that pay the most are rarely the first to call. They are surfaced by running a real process.
The single biggest value driver is the quality of your revenue. A sponsor will pay a premium for contracted, recurring economics and discount heavily for revenue that depends on a few large clients or a single bank partner.
Most fintech sales to private equity are majority recapitalizations rather than clean exits. The sponsor buys a controlling stake, you roll a meaningful slice of your proceeds into the new entity, and you stay on to run and grow the business. That rollover is where founders often make their largest return: the so-called second bite, when the sponsor sells the larger, consolidated company three to five years later. Where a business is the foundation for a roll-up it is bought as a platform at a full multiple; where it adds a capability to an existing portfolio company it is an add-on, priced lower but a faster path to close. Earnouts appear when growth or regulatory outcomes are uncertain, and should be negotiated against metrics you control.
Because a sale to private equity is usually structured as a stock sale, founders should confirm their Section 1202 QSBS eligibility early, since it can exclude a large share of the gain from federal tax.
Fintech has drawn the largest and most active private equity sponsors. Thoma Bravo, Advent International, Permira, GTCR, Hg, Nordic Capital, General Atlantic, and Silver Lake have all built sizable fintech and payments portfolios, and firms such as Francisco Partners and Warburg Pincus are regular buyers of infrastructure and data assets. Payments and capital-markets infrastructure attract the most competition; lending-heavy and balance-sheet models draw a narrower set of specialist buyers. The point of a process is to put the right several in competition at once rather than negotiating with whichever fund happened to call first.
These are working ranges for 2026. Your own multiple is set by the durability of your revenue, retention, and growth, and ultimately by how many credible buyers a process puts in competition.
Most profitable fintech businesses sell for between 8x and 12x EBITDA, and payments or infrastructure models are often valued on revenue at 4x to 6x. Where you land depends on the durability of your take-rate, retention, and regulatory standing. Recurring, contracted revenue commands the top of the range; lending-heavy or one-off implementation revenue sits lower.
Usually you sell a majority stake and retain a minority position plus your operating role. Most fintech PE deals are majority recapitalizations: the sponsor takes control of the cap table and governance, but you continue to run the company and share in the next, larger exit.
Four to seven months from launch to close is typical: a few weeks to prepare, a month or so in market, then eight to twelve weeks of confirmatory diligence and legal work. Regulatory approvals or change-of-control consents on licenses can extend the back end.
Rollover equity is the portion of your proceeds you reinvest into the newly capitalized company instead of taking in cash. When the sponsor sells the larger business a few years later, that retained stake pays out again. For many founders the second bite rivals or exceeds the first.
Not necessarily. Many sponsors actively seek smaller, profitable fintech businesses as add-ons to an existing platform, where the bar is a clean recurring revenue base rather than absolute size. Below roughly 2 million dollars of EBITDA the buyer pool narrows but does not disappear.
Quality of earnings first: is the revenue real, recurring, and properly recognized. Then retention and concentration, regulatory and compliance standing, the assignability of bank and network partnerships, and the strength of the team that will operate post-close.
The most active sponsors are listed above. In short, the largest software and fintech investors, led by firms such as Thoma Bravo and Vista, compete hardest for recurring-revenue platforms, while smaller or specialist funds buy add-ons and services businesses. A process should put several of them in competition rather than relying on one relationship.
It depends on the asset. A strategic buyer can sometimes pay more when there are real cost or revenue synergies, because the business is worth more inside theirs. Private equity competes on a clean financial basis and adds two things a strategic rarely offers: meaningful rollover with a second exit, and continuity for you and your team. The only way to know which pays more for your company is to run a process that tests both at once.
In a majority recapitalization you typically take most of the value off the table in cash and roll a minority, often 10 to 40 percent, into the new entity. A full sale is all cash but forfeits the second bite. The right mix depends on how much future upside you want to keep versus de-risk today.
Windsor Drake runs confidential, competitive sale processes for founder-led fintech companies. Request a private, no-obligation read on where your business would price today and which buyers are active in your market.
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