Infrastructure Services M&A

Infrastructure Services M&A Advisory

Infrastructure is the defining investment theme of the decade. The $500 billion Stargate AI infrastructure initiative, the AI Infrastructure Partnership bringing together BlackRock, Global Infrastructure Partners, and Microsoft, roughly $2 trillion in federal infrastructure spending now deploying, and global digital infrastructure M&A volume exceeding $160 billion in the first half of 2025 alone have created the deepest pool of institutional capital the sector has ever seen. For founder-led infrastructure services businesses with specialty capabilities, the current window offers structural tailwinds that will not repeat for a generation.

Parkland Capital Partners is a lower middle market M&A advisory firm specializing in infrastructure services businesses across digital infrastructure, utility field services, pipeline and energy services, and specialty infrastructure trades. We advise founder and family-owned infrastructure services companies on sell-side M&A, recapitalizations, buy-side roll-ups, and strategic partnerships. Our focus is specifically on the operating services businesses that build, maintain, and upgrade infrastructure — not infrastructure assets themselves (which are typically sold to infrastructure funds and handled by bulge-bracket investment banks).

If you are operating an infrastructure services business generating $1M+ in EBITDA and thinking about a transaction in the next 12 to 24 months, this page is for you.

The Infrastructure M&A environment

The infrastructure M&A environment in 2026 is shaped by a convergence of forces that is historic in its scale. AI-driven electricity and compute demand has turned every part of the infrastructure value chain into a growth story. The $500 billion Stargate initiative (OpenAI, Oracle, SoftBank, and consortium partners) is building AI infrastructure at a scale that did not exist as a category two years ago. The AI Infrastructure Partnership (BlackRock, Global Infrastructure Partners, Microsoft, and others) represents a new hybrid investment model aligning long-term capital with operational capability and demand certainty.

Verizon closed its $20 billion acquisition of Frontier Communications in January 2026, creating a 30 million fiber passing platform across 31 states. AT&T closed its $5.75 billion acquisition of Lumen’s Mass Markets fiber-to-the-home business, extending its fiber footprint to 32 states. KKR and T-Mobile completed their Metronet joint venture in July 2025. T-Mobile closed its acquisition of UScellular in August 2025. The pace of activity at the top of the market has not slowed into 2026.

The capital behind these transactions is as deep as it has ever been. I Squared Capital announced it is targeting $15 billion for digital infrastructure investments. Tallvine is raising a $1.5 billion debut middle-market infrastructure fund. Antin Infrastructure Partners continues to expand across aviation, essential services, and adjacent infrastructure categories. The major infrastructure fund platforms — Brookfield, Stonepeak, EQT Infrastructure, KKR Infrastructure, Apollo Infrastructure, Ares Infrastructure, First Reserve, Goldman Sachs Alternatives, DigitalBridge — are all actively deploying capital. The digital infrastructure category specifically attracted over $160 billion in deal volume in just the first half of 2025 alone.

The downstream impact on infrastructure services businesses is the part of this market most founders do not fully appreciate. Every data center, every fiber passing, every megawatt of generation, every mile of transmission requires a services ecosystem to design, build, commission, operate, and maintain it. That services layer is where lower middle market PE-backed platforms, infrastructure-focused sponsors, and strategic consolidators are competing for quality founder-led businesses.

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How the market actually values infrastructure services companies

Infrastructure services multiples have widened meaningfully between average operators and best-in-class platforms. The AI data center and digital infrastructure end markets have re-rated specialty mechanical, electrical, and telecom services providers significantly. The ranges below are directional benchmarks for how credible buyers approach infrastructure services valuation in 2026. The specific multiple for any business depends heavily on end-market exposure, contract structure, and scale.

Small, owner-operated infrastructure services (under $1M EBITDA)

Typically trade on adjusted EBITDA multiples in the 4x to 6x range. Without meaningful recurring work, specialty capabilities, or end-market concentration, these businesses are priced for tuck-in integration into larger platforms.

Mid-market infrastructure services ($1M to $5M EBITDA)

Trade on adjusted EBITDA multiples in the 6x to 10x range for well-run businesses with strong customer relationships, documented safety records, specialty technical capabilities, and management teams that operate without the founder. This is the sweet spot for regional PE-backed platforms and strategic consolidators executing add-on strategies.

Regional infrastructure services platforms ($5M to $15M EBITDA)

Trade on adjusted EBITDA multiples in the 9x to 14x range when acquired by strategic consolidators or PE platforms. Businesses with strong data center, digital infrastructure, or utility T&D exposure command the upper end of this range.

Platform-scale infrastructure services ($15M+ EBITDA, institutional quality)

Trade on adjusted EBITDA multiples in the 11x to 18x+ range when acquired by mega-cap PE, infrastructure-focused sponsors, national strategic consolidators, or public company acquirers. Platforms with clear AI data center, grid modernization, or digital infrastructure thesis alignment command multiples that can exceed this range when competitive tension is strong.

End-market exposure is the single most important multiple driver. Four examples from the current market:

AI data center services (specialty mechanical, electrical, commissioning, critical environment). Premium end market given the $500B Stargate initiative, the AI Infrastructure Partnership, and the unprecedented capital cycle in data center construction. Legence’s $475M acquisition of The Bowers Group in late 2025 specifically targeted data center mechanical capabilities.

Digital infrastructure construction services (fiber, tower, small cell, edge). Premium end market given the Verizon/Frontier, AT&T/Lumen, and Pilot Fiber/Extenet transactions deploying capital into fiber and edge infrastructure at unprecedented scale.

Utility transmission and distribution services. Premium end market given the grid modernization required to support both AI data center load and renewable integration. Public T&D services platforms like Quanta Services and MasTec continue to command premium multiples reflecting the capital cycle underway.

Pipeline integrity and midstream services. Solid mid-market category given the renewed strategic focus on natural gas and LNG infrastructure as core to the “all of the above” energy strategy.

Five factors move the multiple more than anything else. First, end-market mix. Data center, digital infrastructure, T&D, and federal infrastructure program exposure command premiums. Second, MSA and long-term customer relationship depth. Infrastructure services customers (utilities, telecom carriers, pipeline operators, federal agencies, hyperscalers) rely on multi-year master service agreements that carry meaningful transferable value. Third, licensed professional and skilled craft labor depth. Fourth, safety and quality track record, directly tied to insurance rates, surety capacity, and buyer underwriting of execution risk. Fifth, regulatory and specialty certification depth (OQ for pipeline, OSHA compliance, CMMC for federal work, specific utility certifications).

The case against generalist brokers

For founders whose businesses do fit the infrastructure services category, the case against generalist brokers is sharp. Infrastructure services businesses do not trade like generic services companies. The drivers of value are end-market exposure (AI data center, fiber and digital infrastructure, utility transmission and distribution, pipeline integrity, specialty energy, federal and state infrastructure programs), contract and backlog visibility, regulatory and licensing depth, specialty technical capabilities (critical environment, high-voltage, hazardous location, utility-scale), safety and quality track record, and the depth of skilled craft labor and licensed professional capacity. Generalist brokers miss most of this.

 

The confidentiality problem is equally serious. Many brokers list infrastructure services businesses on BizBuySell or similar marketplaces, post teasers to broker networks, or run open auctions that expose the business to buyers with no real capacity to close. In infrastructure services, that leak reaches project managers, foremen, licensed professionals, utility and telecom customers, pipeline operators, and competing firms within days. Infrastructure customers often require rigorous prequalification processes (MSA qualifications, safety audits, bonding verification, union compliance reviews) that create real sensitivity around ownership changes. A leak during a sale process can directly trigger professional and craft labor attrition, MSA recertification reviews, surety bond capacity assessments, and competitive poaching before any deal closes.

 

The right advisor for an infrastructure services business is one who understands the subsector, speaks the language of T&D services, data center mechanical and electrical trades, fiber and telecom construction, pipeline integrity services, utility field services, specialty infrastructure trade economics and knows which PE-backed platforms, infrastructure-services-focused sponsors, and strategic consolidators are paying premium multiples today for which end-market combinations.

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The buyer universe for infrastructure services

Running a competitive process means knowing who is in the market, what they are paying for, and how to position the business for each buyer type. In the lower middle market infrastructure services space, five buyer archetypes matter.

Infrastructure-focused financial sponsors

Antin Infrastructure Partners, I Squared Capital (targeting $15B for digital infrastructure), Stonepeak, EQT Infrastructure, Brookfield, KKR Infrastructure, Apollo Infrastructure, Ares Infrastructure, Goldman Sachs Alternatives, DigitalBridge, First Reserve, and middle-market infrastructure sponsors (Tallvine at $1.5B debut) are actively deploying capital across infrastructure services platforms. These sponsors typically pay premium multiples for businesses with clear end-market alignment to their fund thesis.

Public strategic consolidators in specialty trades

Quanta Services, MasTec, Dycom, IES Holdings, Comfort Systems USA, EMCOR, Valmont, MYR Group, and other public specialty trade and utility services consolidators are actively acquiring platforms with end-market exposure to data center, T&D, grid modernization, and digital infrastructure. Quanta's $2.4 trillion addressable market analysis through 2030 reflects what the public T&D services universe believes about the capital cycle underway.

PE-backed infrastructure services platforms

A deep layer of PE-backed national and regional infrastructure services consolidators are actively acquiring tuck-ins across every specialty trade category. This includes middle-market generalists, services-focused sponsors, specialty infrastructure platforms, and the growing set of infrastructure-adjacent platforms in mechanical, electrical, telecom construction, and utility services.

AI and hyperscaler-adjacent strategic operators

A new category of buyers has emerged as hyperscaler and AI infrastructure demand drives vertical integration strategies. Specialty mechanical, electrical, commissioning, and critical environment services operators positioned for data center and AI infrastructure work are attracting interest from strategic buyers with direct or consortium relationships to the hyperscaler customer base.

Independent sponsors and family offices

Opportunistic capital looking for well-run founder-led infrastructure services businesses with clear operational upside. Often move faster than institutional sponsors and offer structural flexibility, though with smaller dry powder and tighter financing dependencies.

A sell-side process that runs only one of these channels leaves money on the table. A process that runs all five, calibrated to your specific business and end-market, drives genuine competitive tension and materially better outcomes at close. We build each buyer list from named targets, reach them through direct relationships, and never rely on public listings or auction platforms to generate interest.

Infrastructure assets versus Infrastructure services

Infrastructure M&A actually describes two very different markets with very different advisory needs. Most public coverage of infrastructure M&A describes the asset side: toll roads, airports, ports, data center platforms, utility holding companies, fiber networks, and regulated energy assets changing hands between infrastructure funds and strategic owners. These transactions are typically in the hundreds of millions to tens of billions of dollars, involve deep regulatory work (FERC, state public utility commissions, FCC, CFIUS), and are handled by bulge-bracket investment banks and specialty infrastructure advisors. Houlihan Lokey, Lazard, Moelis, Jefferies, Guggenheim, Evercore, and the infrastructure-focused teams at the major investment banks lead this market. If you are selling an infrastructure asset, that is the advisor universe you want.

 

The infrastructure services market operates differently. Infrastructure services businesses are the operating services companies that design, build, commission, operate, and maintain infrastructure assets. They are almost always lower middle market in scale. They look and trade like specialty services businesses rather than infrastructure assets. The buyer universe is led by PE-backed infrastructure services platforms, strategic consolidators in specialty trades, and infrastructure-focused financial sponsors taking a services-business underwriting approach rather than an asset-based infrastructure approach. Parkland focuses specifically on this category.

 

If you are uncertain which category your business falls into, that is a conversation worth having in the first call. We will tell you honestly which advisor profile is the right fit for your specific business.

Who we serve

Parkland’s infrastructure services practice is focused on founder and family-owned businesses at the intersection of our core sector strengths: industrial services, construction management, engineering services, facilities management, and the broader real estate and infrastructure services ecosystem. We work with businesses generating $1M+ in EBITDA across the following sub-verticals.

AI data center services

Specialty mechanical, electrical, commissioning, critical environment, cleanroom-adjacent, and related services for hyperscaler and enterprise data center construction and operations. Among our highest-priority categories given the $500B Stargate initiative and the unprecedented AI data center build-out cycle.

Digital infrastructure construction services

Fiber construction (long-haul and last-mile), tower and small cell services, edge data center services, and related digital infrastructure construction services supporting the fiber and wireless capital cycle now underway.

Utility transmission and distribution services

Electric T&D construction and maintenance services, substation services, utility meter services, underground utility services, and related utility field services supporting grid modernization and data center power delivery.

Pipeline integrity and midstream services

Pipeline construction support, integrity management, specialty welding and fabrication, valve and measurement services, and related midstream services.

Specialty infrastructure trades

High-voltage electrical services, specialty mechanical services, hazardous location services, and related specialty trades serving infrastructure owners, hyperscalers, and utilities.

Grid modernization and energy transition services

Battery energy storage services, specialty grid services, and related energy transition construction and services businesses, particularly those serving utility-scale and commercial-scale end markets.

Telecom construction and services

Wireline and wireless construction services, DAS, in-building services, and specialty telecom services operators.

Infrastructure consulting, engineering, and PM

Specialty consulting, engineering, program management, and owner’s representative services supporting infrastructure capital programs, particularly those tied to data center, utility, and federal infrastructure programs.
If your business generates durable backlog, meaningful specialty technical capabilities, and concentrated exposure to infrastructure end markets with structural tailwinds, there is a buyer pool actively looking for it. Our job is to put you in front of the right ones.

What we do

Sell-side M&A

Full-process representation from preparation through close. This is the core of our practice.

Majority and minority recapitalizations

For founders who want significant liquidity without a full exit, recaps let you take chips off the table while keeping meaningful equity for the next chapter with a strategic or PE partner. Rollover structures and minority recapitalizations are particularly common in infrastructure services transactions and we negotiate them aggressively on behalf of sellers.

Buy-side advisory and roll-up strategies

For founders and platforms actively acquiring to scale in specific infrastructure services sub-verticals, add adjacent technical capabilities, or build end-market exposure in high-growth categories. We run structured buy-side programs targeting specific revenue profiles, service mix, end-market exposure, and technical capability goals.

Pre-process advisory

For founders 12 to 36 months out from a transaction, focused on the value drivers that move multiples in infrastructure services: end-market repositioning, MSA quality improvement, licensed professional and craft labor depth, safety and quality program documentation, specialty certification expansion, and platform readiness.

Long-term client relationships across multiple transactions

We frequently work with the same clients across multiple deals over time. That often means running a buy-side roll-up program to scale the platform, then a recapitalization or full sale years later. Our best relationships span years and several transactions because the work compounds.

The 12 months before a process matter more than the process itself

Most of the value in an infrastructure services sale is made in the year before the teaser goes out. Repositioning end-market mix toward high-multiple categories (AI data center, digital infrastructure, T&D, grid modernization), expanding MSA portfolio quality, developing licensed professional and craft labor depth, documenting safety and quality systems, cleaning up any open claims or safety incidents, expanding specialty certifications, 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 project accounting, undocumented safety systems, heavy MSA concentration, thin licensed professional depth, unresolved field claims, or founder-dependent customer relationships leaves value on the table that no process can recover. Earnouts and performance-based consideration are common in infrastructure services transactions and typically tie a meaningful portion of the purchase price to post-close performance, MSA retention, and safety metrics over 12 to 24 months. A messy book exposes the seller to real earnout risk. A clean book on strong systems reduces it materially and often allows us to negotiate tighter earnout terms or more seller-favorable definitions of qualifying performance.

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.

Our process

A Parkland sell-side engagement typically runs five to twelve months from engagement to close. We operate with five principles.

One senior advisor leads every deal, start to finish

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.

Every process is confidential and targeted

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 infrastructure services where the wrong signal to project managers, licensed professionals, craft labor, utility and telecom customers, or competitors can damage the business before a deal ever closes.

Every buyer list is built from scratch

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 infrastructure-focused sponsors, public strategics, and regional consolidator universes.

We run a genuinely competitive process

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, and in a market where infrastructure-focused sponsors often pay meaningful premiums to generalist PE and strategic buyers, the competitive tension among buyer types matters enormously. Competitive tension does not require a public auction. It requires the right buyers engaged in parallel, with the same information and the same deadline.

We protect certainty to close as hard as we protect price

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.

How we protect confidentiality

Confidentiality is operational, not a talking point. For most infrastructure services founders, the concern is concrete. A premature leak to project managers, foremen, or skilled craft labor can drive attrition at the worst possible moment in a process. A leak to utility, telecom, or federal agency customers can trigger MSA recertification or contract reviews. A leak to surety partners can trigger bonding capacity assessments that directly affect active work. A leak to competitors reaches crews within days. Every practice below is designed specifically to prevent those outcomes.

Blind teasers

The initial marketing document describes the business without identifying it. Revenue profile, service mix, end-market exposure, and geographic footprint are calibrated so buyers can evaluate fit without surfacing the company name.

Named-buyer outreach only

We reach out directly to specific, pre-qualified buyers we have vetted for strategic fit and financial capability. We do not publish listings on BizBuySell or similar marketplaces, upload mandates to buyer aggregator platforms, post on broker networks, or run any form of open online auction.

Mandatory NDA before any confidential disclosure

No buyer receives company-identifying materials until they have executed an NDA. We negotiate NDA terms with buyer counsel when required to protect the seller’s interests, including non-solicit provisions that protect against buyer poaching of licensed professionals, craft labor, or customer relationships if the deal does not close.

A tight executive summary, not a 100-page CIM

Most firms produce oversized CIMs that tell sophisticated infrastructure services buyers what they already know. We do not. We focus on a sharp, well-written executive summary that frames the strategic thesis, the end-market and MSA economics, the technical capabilities, and the numbers that matter, paired with a well-organized data room that gives serious buyers the materials they actually need to underwrite.

Tiered information disclosure

Sensitive information is released in stages. High-level financials and the executive summary come first. MSA detail, backlog visibility, and end-market concentration come after NDA and initial interest. Deep diligence materials, including full customer lists, individual MSAs, safety records, and licensed professional compensation data, are released only after LOI is signed.

Controlled management involvement

In most processes, only the founder and a small number of trusted corporate leaders initially know the business is in a transaction. Project managers, foremen, licensed professionals, and regional leadership are not informed until post-LOI. We coordinate carefully on when and how to expand the information circle, tying broader management exposure to specific diligence milestones.

Buyer vetting before any disclosure

Before a buyer receives any company-identifying information, we verify identity, fund or platform credentials, and track record of closing in infrastructure services specifically. Tire-kickers, competitors fishing for customer and labor intelligence, and platforms without real acquisition capacity do not make it past the initial gate.

We manage the data room and confidentiality end to end

We own the workflow, from NDA execution through buyer access controls, document tracking, and Q&A coordination. The founder stays focused on running the business while we manage the process.

Employee, customer, and community communications managed last

Any communication to project managers, licensed professionals, craft labor, customers, or the broader market is coordinated only after an LOI is signed, confirmatory diligence is substantially complete, and the founder has approved the messaging and timing.
The result is a process where the right buyers see the right information at the right time, and no one else learns the business is in a transaction until the founder is ready for them to know.

Culture, legacy, and the outcome that actually matters

Economics matter. They are not the only thing that matters.

The best outcomes we deliver for infrastructure services founders are the ones where the buyer honors the legacy of the business, takes care of the project managers, licensed professionals, foremen, and skilled craft labor who built it, and continues to serve the utility, telecom, hyperscaler, and federal agency customers who trust the brand. Infrastructure services is a deeply relationship-driven business at every level. Customers hire the business because of the execution reliability and safety culture it has built over decades. Project managers and foremen hold customer relationships together across project cycles. Skilled craft labor delivers the work that keeps MSAs renewing. A high headline price from a buyer who cuts compensation, disrupts safety culture, or breaks customer trust is not a win. It is a reputation cost that follows the founder through every future conversation in the industry, and often creates direct financial exposure through earnout clawbacks tied to MSA retention and safety performance.

This is especially true given the industry’s chronic skilled labor and licensed professional shortages. 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, compensation structures, and integration pressure. The right buyer has done this many times and knows how to preserve the team, safety culture, and customer relationships. The wrong buyer does not, and the consequences compound quickly in a business where a single safety incident or MSA loss can reset the growth trajectory.

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 teams, customers, and safety cultures 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. Infrastructure services companies do not slow down for a sale. Projects run. MSAs renew. Emergencies arise in the field. Customer calls come in. 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.

Why Parkland

We are a Dallas-based lower middle market M&A advisory firm with deep sector focus across industrial services, construction management, engineering services, facilities management, property management and real estate services, and the broader infrastructure services ecosystem. Dallas-Fort Worth is a critical market for infrastructure services, driven by its position as the third-largest data center market in North America, Samsung Taylor semiconductor fabrication, Texas Instruments expansion, ERCOT grid modernization priorities, and Texas’s central role in the midstream and pipeline services economy. That geographic concentration puts us in daily contact with the infrastructure services operators, sponsors, and strategic consolidators most actively transacting in the category today.

We work within the private equity middle market and strategic operator ecosystem, not as competitors to large investment banks. For infrastructure asset transactions, we openly recommend that founders engage bulge-bracket investment banks or specialty infrastructure advisors. Our lane is the infrastructure services businesses — the operating services companies building and maintaining infrastructure — and we focus there because that is where our sector fluency and buyer relationships create real advantage.

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.

When to start the conversation

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 end-market exposure, MSA quality, or licensed professional depth holding back the multiple? Which infrastructure-focused sponsors and strategic consolidators 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 infrastructure services founders generating at least $1M in EBITDA.

Common questions

Should I use a bulge-bracket investment bank or specialty infrastructure advisor instead of Parkland?
Depends on your business. If you are selling infrastructure assets (toll roads, utilities, airport or port assets, regulated energy assets, scaled fiber or tower platforms, data center platforms), a bulge-bracket investment bank or specialty infrastructure advisor is almost certainly the right call. Houlihan Lokey, Lazard, Moelis, Jefferies, Guggenheim, Evercore, and the infrastructure-focused teams at the major investment banks lead that market for good reason. Where Parkland adds genuine value is in infrastructure services businesses — operating services companies with specialty capabilities, MSAs with utility, telecom, hyperscaler, or federal customers, and services-business economics rather than infrastructure-asset economics. These businesses typically trade to PE-backed services platforms, public specialty trade consolidators, or infrastructure-focused financial sponsors taking a services-business underwriting approach. We will tell you in the first conversation where we are the right fit and where you might be better served elsewhere.
Significantly. AI data center services, digital infrastructure construction, and grid modernization services are the single most important premium end-market categories in infrastructure services M&A today. The $500B Stargate initiative, the AI Infrastructure Partnership (BlackRock, GIP, Microsoft), and the roughly $160B in digital infrastructure deal volume in the first half of 2025 alone reflect capital deployment at a scale the sector has never seen. For founders with this exposure, the current window is exceptionally strong. Legence’s $475M acquisition of The Bowers Group in late 2025 is directionally representative of what the market pays for platforms positioned into data center end markets.
Infrastructure services businesses with federal customers, critical infrastructure exposure, or foreign buyer interest can face CFIUS (Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States) review, FCC review (for telecom-adjacent services), FERC review (for utility-adjacent services), and state public utility commission approvals. In most lower middle market infrastructure services transactions, these approvals are manageable and do not materially delay close, but they require advisor awareness from the earliest days of the process. We coordinate with specialty counsel on regulatory workstreams and structure processes to minimize regulatory friction from buyer selection through close.
Most sell-side processes run six to twelve months from engagement to close. Clean financials, well-organized MSA and backlog documentation, and diligence readiness compress the timeline. Unresolved safety claims, surety complexity, licensed professional succession issues, or regulatory approval requirements (CFIUS, FERC, FCC) can extend it.
We typically engage with infrastructure services businesses generating $1M+ in EBITDA. For pre-process advisory, we will work with earlier-stage businesses if there is a clear path to transaction readiness.
Our engagements are structured with a monthly retainer paid throughout the engagement period, plus a success fee at close typically structured as a percentage of transaction value. The retainer covers the active work of running the process, and the success fee is calibrated to deal size, complexity, and structure. We walk through the economics in detail during the initial consultation.
MSAs with utility, telecom, hyperscaler, pipeline, or federal agency customers are among the most important value drivers in infrastructure services M&A. Multi-year master service agreements with clear assignment provisions, demonstrated renewal history, and favorable pricing mechanics trade at premium multiples. MSAs with unfavorable termination provisions, concentrated customer exposure, or unclear assignment language face multiple compression. For founders with MSA-heavy revenue models, the pre-process work of documenting MSA economics, renewal history, and assignment mechanics is among the highest-leverage value creation opportunities.
Directly, and more than most founders realize. Safety performance (EMR, TRIR, DART rates) affects insurance costs, surety capacity, customer prequalification status, and buyer underwriting of execution risk. Businesses with industry-leading safety metrics trade at premium multiples. Businesses with elevated safety metrics, open OSHA issues, or recent incidents face meaningful multiple compression and often see earnouts structured around ongoing safety performance. Clean safety documentation and a track record of continuous improvement are among the most important pre-process work items.
Earnouts and performance-based consideration are common in infrastructure services transactions, typically tying 15% to 35% of the purchase price to post-close performance (revenue, EBITDA, MSA retention, key professional retention, safety metrics) measured over 12 to 24 months. Parkland negotiates earnout terms aggressively on behalf of sellers, including narrower performance definitions, seller-favorable measurement methodologies, and protection against buyer actions that could interfere with earnout achievement. How the earnout is structured often matters as much as the headline multiple.
Yes. We run buy-side mandates for founders and platforms executing roll-up strategies across infrastructure services sub-verticals. Many of our best client relationships involve multiple transactions over time, often a buy-side program to scale the platform followed by a recapitalization or full sale, or a recap today with a roll-up strategy to follow.
Yes. We advise on secondary sales, sponsor-to-sponsor transactions, and minority recapitalizations for infrastructure services platforms with existing institutional capital on the cap table.

Request a Consultation

Complimentary consultations are available for infrastructure services founders generating at least $1M in EBITDA. We will give you a candid read on your positioning, the likely buyer universe for your specific business, and what the market is currently paying for infrastructure services platforms like yours.