Updated June 2026
Home / Cybersecurity M&A / Who Buys Cybersecurity Companies
Cybersecurity companies are bought by three kinds of acquirer: strategic acquirers (platform consolidators absorbing point solutions, plus cloud and data incumbents extending into security), private equity platforms (running security roll-ups and take-privates), and growth and crossover sponsors (backing category leaders). Pricing runs wide by sub-sector. Identity (IAM and ITDR) commands 10 to 15x revenue and category leaders reach 13 to 15x, while managed services (MSSP and MDR) sit at 1 to 3x. Who pays the most depends on whether you are a platform-grade product or a services business.
Cybersecurity valuations span a wider range than almost any other technology category, and the buyer you run toward sets where in that range you land. Three distinct pools compete: the large security platforms consolidating the market, the cloud and data incumbents extending into security, and the private equity firms that have made cyber one of their most active theses. Each prices the same business differently.
Strategic acquirers. The large security platforms consolidating point solutions into a suite, plus cloud hyperscalers, networking vendors, and data and identity incumbents extending into security. They pay the most for a capability that closes a real gap in their platform or a category they need to own.
Private equity platforms. Highly active in security roll-ups and take-privates. They underwrite to a return and pay for durable recurring revenue, strong net retention, and a defensible position; private cybersecurity has carried a high median multiple as sponsors compete for quality assets. Growth and crossover sponsors back category leaders through their scale-up phase toward a later strategic sale, paying for category leadership and durability.
A services business sold as a product, or a product sold as services, both leave money on the table. Position to the buyer who values what you actually are.
Cybersecurity deal structure tracks the buyer and the model. Strategic acquisitions of product companies are usually mostly cash at close, sometimes with an earnout or retention package tied to keeping key engineers and researchers. Private equity deals, common in roll-ups and take-privates, frequently include rollover equity and an escrow against reps and warranties, with the rollover letting you share the upside as the platform scales.
Cybersecurity M&A is driven by platformization and a relentless threat environment. The largest security vendors are assembling end-to-end suites by acquiring point solutions, while cloud, networking, and data incumbents extend into security to defend their franchises. Identity has moved to the center of modern security architecture, which is why it commands the richest multiples. Underneath the strategics, private equity has made cybersecurity one of its most active theses, competing hard for quality assets and keeping private multiples elevated.
A services business sold as a product, or a product sold as services, both leave money on the table.
Three groups. Strategic platform consolidators absorbing point solutions, plus cloud and data incumbents extending into security; private equity platforms running security roll-ups and take-privates; and growth and crossover sponsors backing category leaders.
Identity (IAM and ITDR) is bought by platform consolidators and identity incumbents and commands the top of the range at 10 to 15x revenue, because it sits at the center of modern security. Managed services (MSSP and MDR) are bought by PE consolidators and larger MSSPs and price at 1 to 3x, because the revenue is people-driven.
It runs wide by sub-sector. Public leaders trade around a 7.8x revenue median, with category winners at 13 to 15x. Identity commands 10 to 15x, while managed services sit at 1 to 3x. Product companies with durable recurring revenue price at the top of the range.
Because product and recurring software revenue is more scalable and defensible than people-driven services revenue. Buyers pay a premium for durable recurring revenue and a category position they cannot easily rebuild; managed-services revenue prices lower for the same reason.
Strategic deals for product companies are usually mostly cash at close, sometimes with a retention package for key researchers. PE deals often include rollover equity and an escrow. Services-heavy businesses carry more contingent consideration because revenue is tied to people. What you realize depends on structure, not the headline multiple.
Through a targeted process. An advisor identifies the specific platform consolidators and sponsors whose roadmap or thesis fits your sub-sector, approaches them under NDA, and runs them in parallel so you get competition without signaling to the market.
Windsor Drake runs confidential, competitive sale processes for founder-led cybersecurity 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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