Facilities management is one of the most actively consolidated categories in business services. The U.S. janitorial market alone is $100 billion+ and the vast majority of operators generate less than $10 million in revenue. Strategic consolidators and PE-backed platforms are competing aggressively for every quality regional operator. For founder-led facilities management businesses, there have never been more credible buyers at the table.
Parkland Capital Partners is a lower middle market M&A advisory firm specializing in business services, with deep sector expertise across facilities management, property management, residential and commercial services, and the broader real estate and infrastructure services ecosystem. We advise founder and family-owned facilities management businesses on sell-side M&A, recapitalizations, buy-side roll-ups, and strategic partnerships across integrated facility management, janitorial and commercial cleaning, building engineering and maintenance, specialty cleaning, security integration, and related facilities services categories. We operate within the private equity and strategic operator ecosystem rather than competing with large investment banks. Every engagement is confidential, senior-led, and targeted. We do not list businesses on public marketplaces, blast teasers to buyer aggregators, or run open online auctions.
If you are operating a facilities management business generating $1M+ in EBITDA and thinking about a transaction in the next 12 to 24 months, this page is for you.
Facilities management sits at the intersection of three durable commercial trends that are pulling consolidation capital into the sector at the highest rate in its history. Corporate outsourcing of non-core facility functions has been accelerating for a decade and is now structural rather than cyclical. Labor complexity, wage compliance requirements, and safety standards have pushed mid-sized occupiers toward integrated facility service providers that can centralize compliance risk. And specialty end-markets (semiconductor, data center, life sciences, biotech, healthcare, education) increasingly require technical service capabilities that only scaled operators can deliver at the required quality and compliance levels.
The transaction prints reflect the scale and pace of this activity. ABM Industries, the $8.75 billion revenue public facilities services leader, completed the acquisition of WGNSTAR in February 2026, expanding into semiconductor and high-technology cleanroom operations at exactly the moment AI-driven semiconductor fabrication is entering a multi-year capital expenditure supercycle. ABM also completed the acquisition of Iveagh New Opportunities Limited (Ireland) for approximately $275 million in early 2026, adding to its LMC Facilities (June 2025) and Plenum Group (June 2025) acquisitions the prior year. ABM’s average acquisition value across its tracked transactions exceeds $500 million. Rainier Partners acquired Kleen-Tech Services in September 2025, taking majority control of a national janitorial platform operating in more than 30 states across nine brands with approximately 2,000 employees. Imperial Dade (Advent International) and BradyPLUS (Kelso legacy) continue to consolidate the jan-san distribution layer.
The consolidation pattern below the mega-cap transactions is broader still. The Facilities Group, Pritchard Industries, Marsden, and a dozen additional PE-backed janitorial and facilities platforms are competing for the same regional add-ons. New PE entrants continue to form platforms in the space. Strategic consolidators in janitorial supply distribution, landscaping services (BrightView), integrated security (Convergint, Allied Universal), and building maintenance continue to pursue adjacent expansion through acquisition. The buyer universe has genuinely never been deeper for founder-led facilities services operators with defensible books.
Specialty capabilities drive meaningful premiums. Four examples from the current market:
Semiconductor and cleanroom services command premium multiples given the AI-driven semiconductor fabrication capital expenditure supercycle. The ABM/WGNSTAR transaction in February 2026 explicitly targeted this end market.
Data center facilities services have re-rated significantly given AI-driven infrastructure investment, with premium multiples paid for specialty mechanical, cleaning, and critical environment operators.
Life sciences, biotech, and healthcare specialty cleaning trade at premiums to generalist janitorial, particularly for operators with GMP cleaning, sterile environment, or healthcare compliance expertise.
Integrated facility management (IFM) platforms bundling cleaning, maintenance, engineering, and technical services command meaningful premiums over single-service operators, reflecting the one-stop-shop thesis that drives strategic buyer interest.
Five factors move the multiple more than anything else. First, contract quality. Multi-year, transferable agreements with auto-renewal provisions trade at a premium to one-year cancellable contracts. Second, end-market mix. Industrial, institutional, medical, and government concentrations command premiums over commercial office and retail exposure. Third, labor compliance documentation. Clean I-9, wage and hour, and workers’ compensation records are increasingly non-negotiable for PE diligence. Fourth, geographic density in Tier 2 and Tier 3 markets. PE-backed platforms explicitly prefer these geographies over Tier 1 cities. Fifth, management depth below the founder. Facilities services is a supervision-heavy business, and buyers underwrite the risk of founder-dependent operations directly.
Facilities management does not trade like a generic services business. The drivers of value are contract duration and transferability, customer concentration and end-market mix, recurring revenue composition (daily cleaning and portering trade at a premium to project-based cleaning), labor model and compliance documentation, wage tier and supervision structure, specialty capabilities (cleanroom, healthcare, biotech, data center), geographic density in target markets, and safety and quality track record. Generalist brokers miss most of this. They price the business on a blunt SDE or EBITDA multiple against generic small-business comps, cast a wide net of buyers who are not actually transacting in facilities management specifically, and leave substantial value on the table.
The confidentiality problem is just as serious. Many brokers list facilities management businesses on BizBuySell or similar marketplaces, post teasers to broker networks, or run open auctions that expose the company to buyers with no real capacity to close. In facilities management, that leak reaches supervisors, account managers, front-line labor, key customers, and competing operators within days. Facilities management customers often require multi-year prequalification processes and are sensitive to ownership changes, particularly in institutional, healthcare, and government end markets where vendor approval cycles are lengthy. Front-line labor and supervisor attrition during a sale process directly damages service quality, which triggers customer churn and compounds into earnout clawbacks.
The right advisor for a facilities management business is one who understands the subsector, speaks the language of contract transfer rates, labor hour economics, wage tier structure, end-market concentration, compliance diligence and knows which PE-backed platforms, public strategics, and independent sponsors are paying premium multiples today for which end-market and geographic combinations.
ABM Industries ($8.75B revenue, 14+ tracked acquisitions, $502M average deal value), Aramark, Sodexo, Compass Group, ISS, and the IFM divisions of the Big 5 commercial real estate firms (CBRE Global Workplace Solutions, JLL Work Dynamics, Cushman & Wakefield Services, Newmark) are actively acquiring to extend scale, geographic reach, and technical capabilities. These buyers bring the strongest balance sheets and the most disciplined diligence processes, and pay premiums for institutional-quality platforms that slot cleanly into their integrated offerings.
A deep layer of PE-backed national and regional facilities consolidators are actively acquiring across the space. Kleen-Tech Services (Rainier Partners), The Facilities Group, Pritchard Industries, and 15+ additional PE-backed platforms operate roll-up strategies targeting specific geographies, end-markets, or service lines. New PE entrants continue to form platforms, ensuring a steady stream of new competitive bidders for quality assets.
Imperial Dade (Advent International, ACE & Company, Ergo Partners), BradyPLUS, Veritiv, and other jan-san supply distribution consolidators frequently acquire service operators as vertical integration moves into customer relationships and recurring service revenue.
Marsden, large regional independents, and family-owned operators with meaningful acquisition programs compete for regional add-ons. These buyers often move faster than PE platforms and can pay competitive prices when the strategic fit is right.
Opportunistic capital looking for well-run founder-led facilities businesses with clear operational upside. Often move faster than institutional sponsors and offer structural flexibility, though with smaller dry powder and tighter financing dependencies. Independent sponsors carry higher completion risk because they raise equity and debt transaction-by-transaction.
For founders and platforms actively acquiring to scale in specific facilities sub-verticals, add adjacent services, or build geographic density in target markets. We run structured buy-side programs targeting specific revenue profiles, service mix, end-market exposure, and contract quality goals.
Most of the value in a facilities management sale is made in the year before the teaser goes out. Converting one-year cancellable contracts into multi-year agreements with transfer provisions, reducing top-customer concentration, documenting wage tiers and labor compliance cleanly, repositioning end-market mix toward higher-multiple categories (industrial, medical, institutional, specialty), developing a supervisor structure that operates independent of the founder, and cleaning up 36 months of normalized financials can each add tens of percent to the final sale price.
The reverse is also true. Going to market with messy financials, undocumented wage and hour practices, heavy customer concentration, unclear contract transferability, or founder-dependent account management leaves value on the table that no process can recover. Labor compliance diligence in facilities management is unusually rigorous given the wage and hour, I-9, and workers’ compensation exposure embedded in the labor model. Clean records reduce diligence friction and allow us to negotiate tighter earnout terms. Messy records create real transaction risk.
We work with founders well before the official engagement, sometimes for a year or more, to position the business for the outcome they actually want.
A Parkland sell-side engagement typically runs five to twelve months from engagement to close. We operate with five principles.
You do not get handed off to an analyst once the engagement letter is signed. The person you meet on the first call is the person negotiating your LOI.
We do not post businesses on public marketplaces, blast teasers to buyer aggregator lists, or run open online auctions. Every outreach is direct, curated, and tailored to your specific business. Confidentiality is protected at every stage, which matters most in facilities management where the wrong signal to supervisors, front-line labor, key customers, or competitors can damage the business before a deal ever closes.
We do not recycle. For each mandate, we construct a buyer universe tailored to your specific sub-vertical, scale, end-market exposure, and strategic fit, drawing on our proprietary database, active coverage relationships, and direct conversations with the public strategics, PE platforms, and regional consolidator universes.
The goal is multiple credible bidders at LOI stage with real economic tension between them. That is what drives the final 10% to 20% of enterprise value that matters most. Competitive tension does not require a public auction. It requires the right buyers engaged in parallel, with the same information and the same deadline.
A high headline LOI that falls apart in diligence, or erodes materially through earnout mechanics and purchase price adjustments, is worth far less than the LOI number suggests. We vet bidders for real capability to close, negotiate earnout terms aggressively on behalf of sellers, and structure the process to keep the right buyers engaged through signing and funding.
Economics matter. They are not the only thing that matters.
The best outcomes we deliver for facilities management founders are the ones where the buyer honors the legacy of the business, takes care of the supervisors and front-line staff who built it, and continues to serve the customers who trust the brand. Facilities management is one of the most people-intensive business categories in the lower middle market. Supervisors hold account relationships together. Front-line labor delivers the service that keeps contracts renewing. Account managers maintain the trust that closed the business in the first place. A high headline price from a buyer who centralizes operations at the expense of supervisory depth, cuts front-line compensation, or disrupts cultural continuity is not a win. It is a reputation cost that creates direct financial exposure through clawbacks tied to contract retention and revenue performance.
This is especially true in a labor market that remains structurally tight for facilities labor and supervision. Every buyer is underwriting the risk that acquired teams will walk out, and every founder should be thinking about what the business looks like 12 to 18 months post-close under different ownership and compensation structures. The right buyer has done this many times and knows how to preserve the team. The wrong buyer does not, and the consequences compound quickly.
We spend real time on cultural fit. We vet buyers not just on financial capability and strategic rationale, but on how they have actually treated supervisors, front-line labor, and customers they have acquired in the past. We talk to former sellers on the other side of acquisitions. We advise our clients on which bidders will be good stewards and which ones will not, even when the economics say otherwise. Sometimes the right answer is not the highest offer. It is the right partner at a strong price.
We also believe the process itself should be as smooth as possible for founders who are running their businesses at the same time. Facilities management companies do not slow down for a sale. Contracts renew. Supervisors need support. Customer service calls come in. Emergencies happen at the property level. We run tight timelines, protect our clients’ calendars, manage diligence requests so they do not become a second full-time job, and stay selective on which buyers we bring to the table so that energy is spent on real bidders only.
We are a Dallas-based lower middle market M&A advisory firm with deep sector focus on business services, property management, residential and commercial services, facilities management, and the broader real estate and infrastructure ecosystem. Dallas-Fort Worth and the broader Sunbelt are among the most active markets in the country for facilities management consolidation, driven by strong institutional occupier growth, data center development, semiconductor fabrication investment, and healthcare expansion. That geographic concentration puts us in daily contact with the strategic operators, PE sponsors, and independent capital sources most actively transacting in facilities management today.
We work within the private equity middle market and strategic operator ecosystem, not as competitors to large investment banks. Our clients are founder-led businesses and the institutional capital partners that buy them, invest alongside them, and grow with them. That positioning is deliberate. It keeps us close to the buyers actually transacting in the lower middle market facilities management space and focused on the kind of relationship-driven process that delivers real outcomes for founders.
Every mandate is run confidentially and bespoke to the business. We do not run open auctions, list companies on public marketplaces, or push teasers to aggregator networks. Information is shared only with named buyers we have vetted and qualified, under NDA, on a timeline we control.
The best time to engage an M&A advisor is 12 to 24 months before you intend to transact. The earliest conversations are about positioning, not process. What would a buyer pay for this business today? Where is the customer concentration, contract quality, or labor compliance gap holding back the multiple? Which strategic consolidators and PE platforms should we be building relationships with now? What would it take to reach platform multiple territory in the next 24 months?
Those are the conversations that change outcomes. We offer complimentary initial consultations for facilities management founders generating at least $1M in EBITDA.
It complicates positioning, yes. PE-backed facilities platforms explicitly prefer Tier 2 and Tier 3 city concentrations over Tier 1 markets, partly because competitive dynamics in Tier 1 cities are tougher and margins are typically compressed, partly because talent retention is more challenging in Tier 1 metros. That does not make Tier 1-concentrated businesses unsellable, but it does narrow the buyer universe toward specific types of buyers (public strategics, national IFM platforms, and sponsors with explicit Tier 1 thesis) and typically trims the multiple somewhat. Positioning for the right buyer universe is critical in these situations.