Private SaaS EV/ARR multiples have compressed materially from their late-2021 peak, creating a significant valuation gap that earn-outs are increasingly designed to bridge in European M&A. This shift means that a substantial portion of a transaction’s value for selling shareholders is now often contingent on future performance, fundamentally altering the risk profile of a sale and demanding a granular understanding of deal mechanics.
Understanding the earn-out mechanism and its prevalence
An earn-out is a contractual provision where a portion of the purchase price is paid to the seller only if the acquired company achieves specific performance targets after the acquisition. These targets are typically financial, such as ARR, EBITDA, or net revenue retention, but can also include operational milestones like product development or customer acquisition. Their increased prevalence in European SaaS M&A reflects a market where buyers are more cautious about paying peak valuations upfront, especially for companies with strong growth potential but less established profitability or market share. For shareholders, this means a deferred realization of value and an ongoing exposure to the acquired company’s performance post-sale.
Structuring earn-outs: key metrics and negotiation points
The selection of earn-out metrics is critical. For SaaS businesses, ARR and Net Revenue Retention (NRR) are frequently preferred, as they directly reflect the core growth engine and customer stickiness. EBITDA targets become more relevant for mature SaaS companies with established profitability. Shareholders must push for metrics that are transparent, controllable, and resistant to post-acquisition operational changes by the buyer. Key negotiation points include:
- Target Setting: Ensure targets are realistic and achievable, reflecting historical performance and reasonable growth projections. Aggressive targets can render the earn-out value illusory.
- Duration: Typical earn-out periods range from 1 to 3 years. Longer periods increase uncertainty and the risk of external factors impacting performance.
- Payment Structure: Consider whether payments are linear, tiered, or all-or-nothing. Linear structures offer more predictable outcomes.
- Buyer Covenants: Include clauses that prevent the buyer from intentionally hindering the achievement of earn-out targets (e.g., diverting resources, changing strategy).
- Information Rights: Secure rights to receive regular financial and operational reports to monitor progress against targets.
The impact of due diligence on earn-out terms
Thorough due diligence, both financial and technical/operational, plays a pivotal role in shaping earn-out terms. Technical/operational due diligence frequently surfaces material risks not visible in financial reporting alone, such as product scalability issues, integration challenges, or key personnel dependencies. These findings can directly influence the buyer’s confidence in future performance and, consequently, the structure and feasibility of earn-out targets. For example, if technical due diligence reveals significant refactoring is needed, a buyer might push for lower initial earn-out targets or a longer earn-out period to account for potential delays. Intecracy Ventures’ work with shareholders focuses precisely on preparing the documentation pack for diligence, ensuring that a robust and defensible narrative supports the company’s value proposition and growth projections, thereby strengthening the negotiation position around earn-out terms.
Shareholder considerations: risk, control, and valuation
For selling shareholders, earn-outs introduce a complex interplay of risk, control, and valuation. While they can bridge valuation gaps and potentially lead to a higher overall sale price, they also defer a significant portion of the consideration and expose sellers to the post-acquisition management of the buyer. Shareholders must assess:
- Risk Profile: How much of the total consideration is contingent? What is the probability of achieving the targets?
- Loss of Control: Post-acquisition, the seller typically loses operational control. The ability to influence earn-out achievement diminishes significantly.
- Valuation Impact: Earn-outs can inflate the headline enterprise value but the true, risk-adjusted value of the contingent payment needs careful assessment. Discounting future earn-out payments for risk and time value of money is crucial.
The buyer split also matters: VC/growth equity typically weights ARR and net retention heavily, making these metrics prime candidates for earn-outs. PE buyout funds, conversely, prioritize EBITDA and free cash flow. Strategics blend ARR, EBITDA, and strategic fit, often using earn-outs to de-risk integration or market expansion.
As European SaaS M&A continues to evolve, shareholders must approach earn-outs not as an afterthought but as a core component of deal strategy. Proactive preparation, robust due diligence, and expert negotiation of earn-out terms are paramount to maximizing realized value. Understanding the buyer’s perspective and aligning achievable targets with clear, enforceable covenants will be critical for securing favorable outcomes in transactions through 2026 and beyond.