An EOT buyout is usually paid for from a capital stack assembled in layers, not a single source. The two best-known pieces are the seller (often the largest layer, since most EOT sales are seller-financed, with a note repaid from future operating profits over roughly 5 to 10 years) and a senior bank loan. The rest comes from the layers below.
Mission-aligned lenders and dedicated funds. A growing set of lenders specialize in employee ownership and fill the gap banks leave.
- Community loan funds and impact lenders (community development financial institutions and similar) are the most common non-bank source. They tend to be more flexible than banks but typically want evidence of real employee control and benefit: pass-through voting on major decisions, employee representation on governing bodies, and profit-sharing tied to ownership, documented in the trust agreement and bylaws. Some set a minimum stake, often around 30% of equity held by the trust.
- Dedicated employee-ownership funds exist specifically to finance these conversions. They generally do not require a personal guarantee, which matters when ownership is spread across dozens or hundreds of employees, and some offer post-sale working-capital loans.
Junior, subordinated, and equity-like layers. Between senior debt and the seller note, deals often use mezzanine (subordinated) debt, priced a few points above senior debt, and non-voting preferred equity, which raises growth capital without selling voting control back out of employee hands. In a partial sale (the trust owns less than 100%), the non-trust portion can use the full range of small-business capital, including ordinary voting equity. Conventional private equity is usually a poor fit for a full EOT: it generally needs control and a future sale to exit, which cuts against permanent broad-based ownership.
Public and government-linked support. Because most EOT loans are repaid from future profits and a broad-based EOT cannot reasonably put one employee on a personal guarantee, credit enhancement matters. Some state loan-guarantee programs can guarantee a large share of a qualifying loan, and federal small-business investment programs have been used to lower financing costs for employee-ownership lenders. One caveat: standard federal small-business loan guarantees have generally required a personal guarantee, which usually does not fit a broad-based EOT, so confirm current terms.
These funds are themselves typically seeded by philanthropy first, then impact and institutional investors: an early but growing market, so off-the-shelf financing is real but still limited.
One tax note: the UK grants EOT sellers a capital-gains exemption, but the US does not, and US EOTs also do not get the capital-gains deferral (Section 1042) that ESOPs can use, so do not carry UK assumptions into a US deal. Financing structures are fact-specific and the sources change as this market matures; confirm the specific mix, terms, and any guarantee-program eligibility with a CPA or an attorney experienced in employee-ownership transitions.
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