Search Fund: What It Is, How It Works, and How to Use One

By Charlie Brennan • Published June 22, 2026 • Updated June 22, 2026 • Educational content only — not financial, legal, or tax advice.

A search fund is a structured vehicle in which an entrepreneur — called a searcher — raises a small amount of capital from investors to fund 1–2 years of searching for a business to acquire. Once the right business is found, the investors have the right to participate in the acquisition financing. The searcher then steps in as CEO and operates the acquired business.

The search fund model originated at Stanford in the 1980s and has become one of the primary paths for MBA graduates and entrepreneurial professionals to acquire and run established businesses without starting from scratch.

The Two Phases of a Search Fund

Phase 1: The Search

The searcher raises $400,000–$600,000 from a group of individual investors (typically 10–15 people who invest $25,000–$50,000 each). This money pays the searcher's salary, travel, deal costs (legal, due diligence), and operating expenses during the search period. Investors receive pro-rata rights to participate in the eventual acquisition in exchange for their search capital.

The search typically lasts 18–24 months. Searchers review hundreds of opportunities, pursue a few dozen seriously, and aim to close one acquisition.

Phase 2: The Acquisition and Operation

Once a business is identified and a Letter of Intent is signed, the searcher returns to their investors to raise acquisition equity. The investors who backed the search get the first right to invest in the acquisition at a preferential rate. Additional capital may come from new investors, the SBA, seller financing, and mezzanine debt.

After close, the searcher becomes CEO of the acquired company and works to grow it — typically targeting a 5–7 year hold before sale.

Self-Funded Search: The SMB Alternative

The traditional search fund model is investor-backed, but a growing number of searchers operate "self-funded" — running a search on their own savings without raising outside capital. Self-funded searchers retain full equity but must fund their living expenses and deal costs personally. This model is common in the small business acquisition community (deals under $2M) and has lower overhead than a traditional fund.

Target Businesses for Search Funds

Traditional search funds target businesses with $1M–$5M in EBITDA — profitable, established, and large enough to support a management team and debt service. Self-funded searchers often target smaller businesses in the $200K–$2M SDE range. Common sectors: software, professional services, healthcare services, specialty manufacturing, and B2B services with recurring revenue.

Search Fund vs. Direct Acquisition

An individual buying a business directly (using personal savings and SBA financing) is a simpler structure than a search fund: no outside investors, no equity dilution, no reporting obligations. The trade-off is that direct buyers must fund the search period themselves and typically have less capital available for larger acquisitions. Search funds enable access to larger deals but cost equity — investors typically end up with 70–80% of the business at close.

Related Terms

Sources & Further Reading

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Charlie Brennan

Studied M&A deal structures by analyzing 50+ business acquisition opportunities, with a focus on valuation, financing terms, seller motivations, and operational risk. Built practical acquisition tools for business buyers.