No tax on wage income and proximity to Boston support a healthy base of service and manufacturing businesses.
Live medians from the Waterfall — the numbers buyers actually price on, refreshed as new listings come in.
The median business for sale in New Hampshire asks $650,000 on $246,000 of annual cash flow — about 2.6× earnings, a touch above the 2.0× national norm. Most listings fall between $250K and $1M, and the most active industries are restaurant & bar, construction & contracting, healthcare & medical.
How New Hampshire stacks up on price and what you pay per dollar of cash flow — against the U.S. median and the states next door.
| Market | Active listings | Median asking | Median cash flow | Multiple |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| New Hampshire | 207 | $650,000 | $246,000 | 2.6× |
| U.S. average | 44,073 | $350,000 | $174,028 | 2.0× |
| Maine | 106 | $605,000 | $230,286 | 2.6× |
| Massachusetts | 814 | $385,000 | $204,186 | 1.9× |
| Texas | 3,899 | $340,000 | $160,000 | 2.1× |
| Florida | 5,949 | $350,000 | $157,752 | 2.2× |
Vermont has too few active listings for a reliable median, so it's left out.
A sample of what’s live right now. Set a Buy Box to see only the New Hampshire deals that fit your thesis.
Showing 4 of 207 active New Hampshire listings · financials shown where the broker disclosed them.
Set your Buy Box to New Hampshire (plus your industries, price, and cash-flow range) and the Waterfall narrows to only the New Hampshire deals that fit your thesis — refreshed daily and de-duped. Reach the off-market owners with Owner Sourcing and Direct Mail, add the best to your pipeline in a click, and screen them fast with AI Deal Screening. For the monthly numbers, see the New Hampshire market report.
Most small businesses are priced on a multiple of cash flow — also called SDE (seller's discretionary earnings). In New Hampshire the median business sells for about 2.6× cash flow, close to the 2.0× national norm, so a business throwing off $246,000 in annual cash flow might be priced near $650,000, very roughly 2–3× depending on the specifics. Multiples rise with size, clean books, recurring revenue, and included real estate — and fall for owner-dependent or declining businesses. To value a specific New Hampshire business, start with its SDE, apply a 2–3× multiple for the category, then adjust for assets, lease terms, and growth. These are rough, illustrative estimates from public medians — not an appraisal or financial advice.
Buying a business in New Hampshire follows a clear path: define your buy box (industry, price, cash flow, location), source deals on- and off-market, screen for fit, sign an LOI, run diligence, line up financing (often an SBA 7(a) loan), and close. The hard part is sourcing — most New Hampshire businesses worth buying never hit the big marketplaces. DealStratum aggregates the on-market New Hampshire listings from the sources we track into one feed and helps you reach off-market owners directly. Expect roughly 3–6 months from search to close.
Cover the on-market sources we track in one feed (a deal aggregator filtered to New Hampshire) and go off-market directly to owners. Searching marketplaces one at a time misses both the regional broker listings and the much larger pool of owners who would sell but never list. DealStratum's Waterfall pulls the major New Hampshire sources we track into one de-duped feed; Owner Sourcing and Direct Mail reach the off-market owners. There are 207 active New Hampshire listings in the Waterfall right now.
Yes. "For sale by owner" (FSBO) businesses are listed directly by the owner with no broker — which often means a lower price (no commission baked in) but less-polished financials to verify. They're scattered across classifieds, niche marketplaces, and word of mouth, so they're easy to miss. Beyond FSBO, the largest pool is owners who haven't listed at all but would sell to the right buyer — you reach them through direct outreach. DealStratum surfaces FSBO New Hampshire listings alongside broker listings and helps you source unlisted owners directly.
Yes — semi-absentee businesses (laundromats, car washes, self-storage, route-based services, and some franchises) are among the most-searched in New Hampshire because they generate cash flow without full-time owner involvement. Truly absentee (zero owner hours) is rarer and usually means a strong manager is already in place. Set your Buy Box owner-involvement filter to "semi-absentee" and the Waterfall narrows to the New Hampshire deals that fit. Expect a slight premium for a business that runs without you.
SDE is the total financial benefit one owner-operator gets from a business in a year: net profit, plus the owner's salary, plus owner perks and one-time or non-essential expenses added back. It's the standard cash-flow figure small businesses are priced on (EBITDA is used for larger companies). When you see "cash flow" on a New Hampshire listing, it usually means SDE. The median New Hampshire business has about $246,000 in SDE and sells for roughly 2.6× that. Verifying the add-backs behind a deal's SDE is the single most important number in diligence.
Yes — the SBA 7(a) loan is the most common way buyers finance a New Hampshire acquisition. It commonly funds up to 90% of the purchase price (you put about 10% down, sometimes partly as a seller note), often with 10-year terms for a business or up to 25 years if real estate is included. The business needs enough cash flow to cover the debt (lenders typically look for roughly a 1.25× debt-service coverage ratio), and you'll need decent credit and relevant experience. Many New Hampshire deals around the $650,000 median sit comfortably in SBA range. This is general information, not financial advice — confirm current terms with an SBA lender.
Rarely fully, but low-money-down is realistic. The two levers are seller financing (the owner carries a note you repay from cash flow) and the SBA 7(a), which can require as little as 10% down — and that 10% can sometimes be partly a seller note or investor equity. "No money down" usually means combining a motivated seller, an SBA loan, and occasionally a partner. It's harder, demands a stronger deal and buyer, and the business must cover the larger debt load — so focus on solidly cash-flowing New Hampshire businesses where the numbers support it.
The median asking price for a New Hampshire business is $650,000, with most listings between $250K and $1M. There are smaller owner-operated businesses under $250K (43 listed right now) and larger lower-middle-market deals from $1M–$5M. On top of the purchase price, budget for diligence, legal, and working capital. With an SBA loan you'd typically need about 10% of the price as a down payment.
The most affordable New Hampshire businesses are owner-operated service and home-based businesses — 43 are listed under $250K right now. They tend to be smaller, more owner-dependent, and lighter on assets, so the trade-off for the lower price is that you're often buying yourself a job rather than a hands-off asset. Set your Buy Box price ceiling and the Waterfall shows only the New Hampshire deals in your budget.
The essentials: Why is the owner really selling? How is cash flow (SDE) actually calculated — what are the add-backs? How concentrated is revenue among the top few customers? How owner-dependent is the business day to day? What's the condition of the lease, equipment, and any included real estate? Are there licensing or transfer requirements (relevant for New Hampshire restaurants, liquor, and healthcare)? What happens to key staff after the sale? Get tax returns and P&Ls to verify the numbers before signing anything beyond an LOI.
About 2.6× cash flow (SDE) at the median, versus the 2.0× national norm. That works out to roughly a 38% annual owner-earnings yield, meaning a business bought at the New Hampshire median returns its purchase price in about 2.6 years of cash flow. Multiples vary by industry, size, and quality: stable, larger, real-estate-backed businesses fetch higher multiples; small, owner-dependent ones trade lower.
New Hampshire runs about 2.6× cash flow at a $650,000 median asking price. Nearby: Maine ($605,000, 2.6×); Massachusetts ($385,000, 1.9×); Texas ($340,000, 2.1×); Florida ($350,000, 2.2×). Pricing across the region is broadly similar, so selection and your specific buy box usually matter more than the state line.
Yes — most of them. The strongest New Hampshire businesses are owner-operated and never publicly listed; their owners would sell to the right buyer but have never put up a listing. You reach them by sourcing the owner and contacting them directly through targeted outreach. This off-market pool is far larger than what's on any marketplace, and it's where the least-competitive deals are.
No — buyers aren't required to use a broker, and many source and close deals on their own. Brokers represent the seller and are paid by the seller, so they don't work for you. What actually helps a buyer is coverage and process: seeing every listing in one place, reaching off-market owners, and screening fast. A buy-side attorney is worth it at closing, but for sourcing and screening, the right tooling replaces most of the legwork.
Typically 3–6 months from starting your search to closing, though it varies. Sourcing and screening can take weeks to months depending on how tightly your buy box is defined; once you're under LOI, diligence and SBA financing usually add 60–90 days. Deals with clean books, a cooperative seller, and pre-arranged financing close faster. Having your buy box, proof of funds, and lender lined up before you find the deal is the biggest time-saver.
Two ways. First, check whether it's already listed — it may be on a broker site or marketplace you haven't searched, which a deal aggregator catches in one place. If it isn't listed, reach the owner directly: many will entertain an offer even without a listing, especially near retirement. Identify the owner, confirm contact details, and send a direct, respectful inquiry. DealStratum's Owner Sourcing and Direct Mail are built for exactly this.
General information only, not financial, valuation, or legal advice. The price and multiple figures above are rough, illustrative estimates drawn from public listing medians and SBA program norms — they are not an appraisal or a guarantee of any price or loan terms. Confirm current terms with an SBA lender and value any specific business with a qualified advisor.
Turn on the Waterfall, filter to New Hampshire, and watch the matches come to you — on-market and off.