19 Jan 20234 min read

Earnouts in Australia: 2026 Guide for Business Sales & Mergers

Thinking about selling your business or negotiating a deal in 2026? Get ahead by understanding how earnouts can work for you—reach out to our team for tailored insights on structuring your next transaction.

Published by

Cockatoo Editorial Team · In-house editorial team

Reviewed by

Louis Blythe · Fact checker and reviewer at Cockatoo

In the fast-evolving landscape of Australian mergers and acquisitions (M&A), earnouts are an increasingly popular mechanism for structuring business sales. Whether you’re an entrepreneur selling your company, a private equity buyer, or an advisor looking to craft a win-win deal, understanding earnouts is essential in 2026. With regulatory changes, economic headwinds, and sharper buyer scrutiny, the way earnouts are negotiated and enforced is changing—often dramatically.

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What Is an Earnout and Why Use One?

An earnout is a contractual arrangement in which a portion of the sale price for a business is paid out later, contingent on the business achieving specific financial or operational targets post-sale. For example, a seller might receive $5 million upfront and another $2 million if the business hits a revenue target over the next two years.

  • Bridges Valuation Gaps: Earnouts help buyers and sellers agree on price when future performance is uncertain.

  • Risk Sharing: Sellers participate in upside if targets are met, while buyers limit overpayment risk.

  • Alignment: Earnouts can keep key staff or founders engaged post-sale, ensuring business continuity.

In 2026, earnouts are especially common in technology, healthcare, and high-growth sectors—areas where future profits are harder to predict. For example, a software startup with fast-growing but volatile revenues may attract a higher overall price if the seller is willing to accept part of it via an earnout.

How to Structure a Successful Earnout

Negotiating an earnout is as much art as science. Here are practical tips and pitfalls to watch for in 2026:

  • Be Precise with Targets: Vague targets are a recipe for disputes. Clearly define metrics (e.g., “audited EBITDA of $2 million in FY2026”), include accounting methods, and set out dispute resolution processes.

  • Control and Influence: Sellers should negotiate for continued involvement or influence over key decisions if their payout depends on post-sale performance. Buyers, meanwhile, want flexibility to run the business as they see fit—balancing these interests is crucial.

  • Cap and Floor Arrangements: Consider setting minimum and maximum earnout payouts to manage expectations and limit risk for both parties.

  • Tax and Legal Review: Engage advisors familiar with the latest ATO guidance to ensure the earnout is tax-efficient and compliant with the Corporations Act and ACCC rules.

  • Transparency and Reporting: Agree upfront on how results will be tracked and reported—mismatched data or disputes over accounting standards are a leading source of litigation in earnout deals.

Take the example of a Queensland IT consultancy sale in early 2026: the earnout was structured with quarterly reporting, independent audits, and a mediation clause. As a result, both sides had clarity and avoided the costly disputes that plagued similar deals in the past.

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Real-World Examples of Earnouts in Action

Earnouts are no longer just a tool for large corporate takeovers. In 2026, they’re being used in transactions ranging from small business sales to major cross-border M&As:

  • Startups: A Sydney fintech’s $12 million exit included a two-year earnout tied to user growth, allowing the founders to share in the upside as the acquirer scaled the platform.

  • Family Businesses: In regional Victoria, the sale of a third-generation manufacturing firm used an earnout to ensure a smooth transition and retain key customer contracts, with the outgoing owner consulting for 18 months.

  • Private Equity: PE firms are using earnouts to de-risk investments in sectors still recovering from COVID-era volatility, tying payouts to post-deal profit improvements.

These examples highlight the flexibility of earnouts—but also the need for careful planning, negotiation, and documentation.

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Cockatoo Editorial Team

In-house editorial team

Publishes and updates Cockatoo’s public explainers on finance, insurance, property, home services, and provider hiring for Australians.

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Reviewed by

Louis Blythe

Fact checker and reviewer at Cockatoo

Reviews Cockatoo’s public explainers for accuracy, topical alignment, and consistency before they are surfaced as public educational content.

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