Selling a behavioral health practice is a personal and professionally complex endeavor. Whether you are looking to retire or join a larger platform, the transition requires a strategic approach to protect the value you’ve built.
In the current market, buyers are looking for stability, compliance, and scalability. To ensure your practice attracts the right offers, avoid these five common mistakes during the sale process.
In the behavioral health sector, compliance is currency. Buyers conduct rigorous clinical due diligence. If your patient files are incomplete, or if your clinical supervision records are not up to date, it signals high risk.
The Mistake: Waiting until the Letter of Intent (LOI) is signed to audit your charts.
The Fix: Conduct a "mock audit" six months before going to market to ensure all documentation meets state and payer standards.
Buyers value predictable cash flow. If your practice has a high "Days Sales Outstanding" (DSO) or a significant amount of aged accounts receivable, it can lead to a lower valuation or a "haircut" on the purchase price.
The Mistake: Failing to clean up your balance sheet and collect on old claims before entering due diligence.Valuations in behavioral health often center on a multiple of EBITDA (Earnings Before Interest, Taxes, Depreciation, and Amortization). Sellers often make the mistake of assuming their net profit is their EBITDA, forgetting about "add-backs."
The Mistake: Not properly identifying non-recurring expenses or personal expenses that won't continue under new ownership.The value of a behavioral health practice is largely tied to its clinicians. If your key providers leave during or shortly after the sale, the practice’s value can plummet.
The Mistake: Not having employment agreements or non-competes in place, or failing to consider a communication strategy for staff.
The Fix: Identity your key players early and consider stay bonuses or other incentives to ensure clinical continuity post-close.
Heavy reliance on a single payer (e.g., 80% of revenue from one state contract or one private insurer) is a red flag for buyers. If that contract is terminated or rates are slashed, the business is in jeopardy.
The Mistake: Entering a sale with high concentration risk.
The Fix: If possible, spend the year prior to the sale diversifying your contracts to show a more resilient revenue base.
Selling your practice is likely the most significant financial event of your career. At Evergreen M&A, we specialize in connecting high-quality behavioral health practices with the right buyers. We help you navigate these pitfalls, optimize your valuation, and ensure your legacy of care continues.
Ready to explore your options? Contact us for a confidential valuation and strategy session. Please reach out to Managing Director Hannah Huke at hannah@evergreenforfounders.com.