Understanding the Letter of Intent (LOI) in a Business Sale

The LOI is where the deal takes shape. This guide covers what an LOI includes, which terms are binding, how to negotiate effectively, and the most common mistakes founders make at this critical stage.

Published by Parkland Capital Partners · Updated 2026

What an LOI Covers

A Letter of Intent outlines the key terms of a proposed acquisition before the parties proceed to definitive documentation. It serves as the roadmap for the transaction and establishes the framework for final negotiations.

Key terms typically addressed include: purchase price and form of consideration (cash, stock, earnout, rollover equity), deal structure (asset sale vs. stock sale), key assumptions and conditions, due diligence scope and timeline, representations and warranties overview, transition and employment terms, and the expected closing timeline.

The LOI is where the commercial deal takes shape. Getting these terms right – before entering the expensive and time-consuming due diligence phase – is critical.

Binding vs. Non-Binding Terms

Most LOI terms are non-binding, meaning either party can walk away if the deal doesn’t come together during due diligence. This includes the purchase price, deal structure, and most commercial terms.

However, several provisions are typically binding: the exclusivity (no-shop) period, confidentiality obligations, expense allocation, and governing law. These binding provisions protect both parties during the diligence period.

Understanding which terms are binding is critical. You don’t want to inadvertently lock yourself into unfavorable commitments before the deal is fully negotiated.

Exclusivity and the No-Shop Period

The exclusivity provision prevents the seller from soliciting or entertaining other offers for a specified period – typically 45 to 90 days. This gives the buyer confidence to invest time and money in due diligence.

For the seller, the key is keeping the exclusivity period as short as reasonable and including clear milestones the buyer must meet. If the buyer fails to hit diligence milestones or attempts to retrade (reduce the price after exclusivity), a well-drafted LOI gives you the ability to terminate exclusivity and return to market.

Never grant unlimited exclusivity. Every day under exclusivity is a day you cannot negotiate with other buyers.

How to Negotiate an LOI

LOI negotiation is where having an experienced M&A advisor pays the greatest dividends. Key strategies include:

Never accept the first offer – there is almost always room to improve terms. Focus on the complete package: price, structure, earnout terms, post-close employment, and transition provisions all interact. Use competitive tension – having multiple interested buyers is the strongest negotiation lever available.

Negotiate earnout terms carefully. Ensure milestones are clear, measurable, and within your control. Scrutinize working capital mechanisms, indemnification provisions, and escrow terms – these seemingly technical items can have significant economic impact.

Common LOI Mistakes to Avoid

Focusing only on headline price while ignoring structure, earnout probability, and net proceeds. A $10M offer with 30% rollover and a 20% earnout delivers very different economics than a $9M all-cash offer.

Granting extended exclusivity without milestone requirements. Once you’re locked up, your leverage diminishes rapidly.

Failing to negotiate key transition terms – post-close employment, non-compete scope, and transition responsibilities should be addressed in the LOI, not left to the purchase agreement.

Signing an LOI without experienced M&A counsel reviewing every provision. The LOI sets the framework for everything that follows.

Need Help Navigating an LOI?

Parkland manages LOI negotiation to ensure our clients achieve the best possible terms.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is the purchase price in an LOI final?
The purchase price in a non-binding LOI is a commitment to negotiate in good faith at that level, but it is not final. Buyers can and do adjust price during due diligence if they discover material issues. However, in a well-run process, significant retrades are uncommon and can be grounds for terminating exclusivity.
Absolutely. Both your M&A advisor and your M&A attorney should review the LOI before you sign. The LOI establishes the framework for the purchase agreement, and issues not addressed here become much harder to negotiate later.
A retrade occurs when a buyer attempts to reduce the purchase price or change terms after signing the LOI, typically citing issues discovered during due diligence. An experienced M&A advisor helps prevent retrades through thorough pre-market preparation and structured buyer management.
45 to 60 days is typical and appropriate for most lower middle market transactions. Longer periods (90+ days) should only be granted if the buyer has demonstrated strong commitment and the transaction has unusual complexity.

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