Here’s how Sarah Moore, who comes from very humble beginnings, was able afford to buy a successful business without having money.
Her approach shows that buying a business is more about hustle, persistence, and finding the right deal structure than having personal wealth.
The key is finding a business stable enough that banks and sellers are willing to finance the purchase based on the business’s own merits rather than your personal assets.
Purchase structure
- She bought the business using two types of financing:
- Bank loan: 75% of purchase price
- Seller’s note: 25% of purchase price
- She put essentially $0 of her own money in (her only asset was a RAV4)
What’s a “seller’s note”?
A seller’s note is when the seller agrees to be paid part of the purchase price over time, essentially acting as a bank. For example:
- If business costs $1 million
- Buyer pays $750K at closing (from bank loan)
- Remaining $250K is paid to seller over time with interest
- It’s like the seller giving you a loan for part of the purchase price
How she made it work
- Found a stable, profitable business (eggcartons.com)
- Got the seller to agree to take 25% in a seller’s note
- Approached 20+ banks until she found one that would:
- View the seller’s note as effectively “equity”
- Provide a loan for the remaining 75%
- The bank was comfortable because:
- Business had long history of profits
- Bank loan had first priority over seller’s note
- Business was simple and stable
Key insight
You don’t need personal money to buy a business if:
- You find a good, stable business
- Seller is willing to finance part of purchase
- You can convince a bank to finance the rest
- Business generates enough cash flow to pay both loans