Euless, Texas Business Brokers
BusinessBrokers.net is actively building its broker network in Euless, Texas. Until additional brokers are listed locally, your best next step is to contact a broker in a nearby covered city — such as Irving, Fort Worth, or Arlington — or browse the full Texas state broker directory. A qualified broker serving the DFW mid-cities area can handle transactions across Euless just as effectively as one based inside city limits.
0 Brokers in Euless
BusinessBrokers.net is actively building its broker network in Euless.
Market Overview
Euless sits at the southern doorstep of Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport — one of the world's busiest — and that proximity shapes nearly every layer of its small-business market. The city's population of 60,421 (2024) and median household income of $82,167 give it enough purchasing power to support a dense commercial base without the deal-size extremes of larger DFW suburbs.
The top three employment sectors tell the story clearly. Retail Trade leads with 4,784 workers, Health Care & Social Assistance follows at 4,307, and Transportation & Warehousing ranks third at 4,008 — all per DataUSA 2023 figures. That third sector is the defining one. The convergence of SH-183, SH-121, and SH-360 inside or adjacent to city limits makes Euless a natural distribution and logistics node. LSG Sky Chefs, the airline catering operation supporting DFW Airport, anchors the airport-adjacent business cluster and signals the kind of specialized, aviation-linked deal flow that sets Euless apart from other mid-cities suburbs.
Euless sits within the HEB (Hurst-Euless-Bedford) corridor — a dense commercial band connecting Fort Worth to DFW Airport — which means buyers and sellers here draw from a wider pool than city lines suggest.
Texas overall ranks among the most active small-business M&A markets in the country. BizBuySell recorded 9,546 closed transactions nationally in 2024, up 5% year-over-year, and Texas benefits from no state income tax and steady population inflows that keep buyer demand competitive. For Euless specifically, the airport-corridor location means logistics, aviation services, and warehousing businesses attract a buyer profile you won't find in most suburban Texas markets.
Top Industries
Transportation & Warehousing
Transportation & Warehousing employed 4,008 Euless-area workers in 2023, making it the sector most directly tied to the city's geographic advantage. The SH-183/SH-121/SH-360 interchange gives freight operators fast access to DFW Airport and the broader Dallas–Fort Worth metro. Buyers targeting logistics businesses — last-mile delivery operations, freight brokerages, and third-party warehousing — find Euless-area deals attractive precisely because of that road and air connectivity. Transaction timelines in this segment can run longer due to specialized equipment valuations and contract transferability, so working with a broker experienced in transportation deals matters here.
Aviation Services & Airport-Adjacent Businesses
LSG Sky Chefs, the airline catering company operating at DFW Airport, is the flagship employer anchoring Euless's airport-adjacent cluster. That presence signals a broader ecosystem of ground services, hospitality, and airport-support businesses operating in the Fuller Wiser Road / SH-360 corridor. Buyers in this niche bring specialized knowledge of airline contracts and airport authority compliance — a narrower but well-capitalized pool.
Retail Trade
Retail Trade is Euless's single largest employment sector at 4,784 workers in 2023. The commercial strips along Highway 183 (Airport Freeway) carry significant foot traffic from commuters moving between Fort Worth and the airport. Retail acquisitions here require careful attention to lease-transfer mechanics — especially given Texas's requirement that brokers handling commercial lease transfers hold an active TREC real estate broker license under TRELA §1101.002.
Health Care & Social Assistance
Health Care & Social Assistance ranked second in employment at 4,307 workers in 2023, reflecting the suburban DFW pattern of strong demand for outpatient clinics, home health agencies, and behavioral health practices. A median household income of $82,167 supports a patient base with employer-sponsored insurance coverage, which improves revenue stability for clinical businesses — a key factor buyers use to assess risk in healthcare acquisitions.
Construction Materials & Manufacturing
U.S. Concrete — now part of Quikrete — operates in Euless and represents the city's industrial manufacturing base. Construction leads all Texas industries by small-business establishment count statewide, and this local presence aligns with that broader pattern. Construction-materials businesses tend to attract strategic buyers already active in the DFW building supply chain.
Selling Your Business
Selling a business in Euless follows a sequence that most Texas transactions share — but state-specific compliance checkpoints make each step more involved than sellers often expect. Plan for six to twelve months from first valuation to closing.
Valuation comes first. Euless's industry mix spans retail, healthcare, and transportation/warehousing, so multiples vary significantly by sector. A broker-provided valuation opinion (BVO) scoped to your specific industry will give you a defensible asking price rather than a guess.
Confidential marketing follows. Buyers sign a non-disclosure agreement before receiving any financials or business details. This matters especially in the close-knit HEB mid-cities corridor, where employees, suppliers, and competitors often move in the same commercial circles.
Buyer qualification → LOI → due diligence → purchase agreement → closing proceed in sequence once a serious buyer surfaces. Each stage has Texas-specific layers:
- TREC licensing: Most Euless deals involve a commercial lease assignment — Highway 183 retail storefronts, warehouse space in the airport zone, or medical office suites. Under TRELA §1101.002 (Tex. Occupations Code), any broker compensated for facilitating that lease transfer must hold an active Texas Real Estate Commission (TREC) real estate broker license. Verify your broker's TREC license number before signing an engagement agreement.
- Entity filings: Stock sales require a Texas Comptroller Certificate of Account Status (tax clearance) before the Texas Secretary of State will process entity termination or transfer filings.
- TABC businesses: Bars and restaurants holding a Texas Alcoholic Beverage Commission license require the buyer to file a new TABC application with city, county, Secretary of State, and Comptroller certifications — adding roughly 60 to 90 days to closing.
- Workforce Commission: Buyers acquiring a business with existing employees must address unemployment insurance account transfers with the Texas Workforce Commission (TWC).
The SBA Dallas/Fort Worth District Office at 150 Westpark Way in Euless can assist buyers with SBA 7(a) loan pre-qualification, which often runs parallel to the due diligence phase and affects closing timelines.
Who's Buying
Three distinct buyer segments drive most deal activity in the Euless market, each shaped by the city's position at the southern edge of DFW Airport.
Aviation and logistics operators represent the most geographically specific segment. Freight forwarders, ground-handling firms, and aviation-services companies — the kind of businesses that cluster around one of the country's busiest airports — actively look for acquisition targets with established DFW Airport-adjacent operations. LSG Sky Chefs, headquartered in Euless, illustrates the scale of airline catering and airport logistics activity anchored here. Strategic buyers in this niche are looking for contracts, certifications, and location — not just cash flow. It is a narrow segment, but one with motivated, well-capitalized acquirers.
SBA-backed individual buyers make up the broadest segment. The SBA Dallas/Fort Worth District Office sits at 150 Westpark Way in Euless — physically inside the city — making it an on-the-ground resource for buyers seeking 7(a) loan financing on deals in the $500,000 to $3 million range. Texas's no-state-income-tax environment also draws out-of-state buyers from higher-tax states who are targeting owner-operated businesses with stable cash flow, and Euless's median household income of $82,167 signals a consumer base that can support those businesses.
Strategic acquirers in retail and healthcare form the third active segment. Retail trade and health care and social assistance rank as Euless's top two employment sectors, with 4,784 and 4,307 workers respectively in 2023. Regional chains and private-equity-backed roll-ups targeting medical practices, urgent care clinics, and specialty retail along the HEB Corridor treat Euless deals as entry points into the broader DFW mid-cities market.
Choosing a Broker
Start with two non-negotiable credentials before evaluating anything else. First, confirm the broker holds an active TREC real estate broker license. Because most Euless business sales involve a commercial lease transfer — retail space on Highway 183, warehouse property near the airport zone, or a medical office suite — TRELA §1101.002 requires that any broker receiving compensation for those activities be TREC-licensed. You can verify a license number directly at trec.texas.gov. Second, look for membership in the Texas Association of Business Brokers (TABB), which signals familiarity with Texas-specific legal standards and the state's M&A transaction norms.
Beyond credentials, match industry experience to the type of business you're selling. Euless's top employment sectors — retail trade, healthcare, and transportation/warehousing — each carry different valuation drivers and buyer pools. A broker who has closed logistics or aviation-services deals understands DFW Airport corridor lease structures and the strategic buyers who seek them. A healthcare-focused broker adds value for medical or dental practice sales where licensing transitions and payer contracts complicate due diligence.
Test for local market knowledge by asking specifically about the HEB Chamber of Commerce network and the broker's familiarity with commercial lease dynamics along the SH-183/SH-121 corridor. The HEB Chamber of Commerce covers Euless, Hurst, and Bedford as a tri-city commercial community — a broker with active relationships there has access to local buyer introductions and market intelligence that a generalist operating from across the metro does not.
Finally, ask directly about confidentiality protocols. Euless's mid-cities commercial community is tightly connected, and an inadvertent disclosure can damage employee morale and customer relationships well before a deal closes.
Fees & Engagement
Business broker fees in Texas are set by negotiation — no statute caps them. For deals under $1 million, commissions typically run 8% to 12% of total transaction value. For deals in the $1 million to $5 million range — the realistic window for most Euless retail, healthcare, and transportation businesses given the city's $82,167 median household income and small-to-mid business base — brokers commonly use a Double Lehman or modified Lehman Formula structure that steps the percentage down as deal size increases.
Upfront engagement fees or retainers ranging from $2,500 to $10,000 have become more common in Texas for serious sell-side mandates. Always clarify in writing whether that retainer is credited against the success fee at closing or kept separately regardless of outcome.
Formal business valuation opinions (BVOs) may be quoted as a separate line item, often in the $1,500 to $5,000 range. Given Euless's mix of aviation-corridor logistics businesses, medical practices, and retail storefronts — each with sector-specific multiples — a proper valuation is worth the cost before you set an asking price.
Before signing any engagement agreement, confirm the broker's active TREC real estate broker license number at trec.texas.gov. In Texas, a broker facilitating a commercial lease transfer without a valid TREC license is operating outside the law — and that creates risk for your transaction. Get the engagement agreement in writing, read the exclusivity period (typically six to twelve months), and understand the fee trigger conditions before you sign.
Local Resources
Several verified resources serve Euless business owners preparing for a sale or acquisition.
- [SBA Dallas/Fort Worth District Office](https://www.sba.gov/district/dallas-fort-worth) — 150 Westpark Way, Suite 130, Euless, TX 76040 | (817) 684-5500. The SBA's DFW District Office is physically located in Euless — an uncommon advantage for a city of this size. It administers SBA 7(a) and 504 loan programs that buyers frequently use to finance acquisitions in the $500,000–$5 million range.
- [HEB Chamber of Commerce](https://www.heb.org) — The tri-city chamber covering Hurst, Euless, and Bedford is the primary local business association for Euless. It's a practical starting point for networking, buyer introductions, and getting a read on local commercial market conditions before you go to market.
- [Tarrant Small Business Development Center (Tarrant SBDC)](https://www.tarrantsbdc.org) — 1150 South Freeway, Suite 229, Fort Worth, TX 76104. Hosted by Tarrant County College, the Tarrant SBDC offers free and low-cost business valuation guidance, financial statement preparation, and buyer and seller readiness coaching.
- [SCORE Fort Worth Chapter](https://www.score.org/fortworth) — 1150 S. Fwy., Fort Worth, TX 76104. SCORE provides free one-on-one mentorship from retired executives and business advisors with M&A and ownership transition experience.
- [Fort Worth Business Press](https://fortworthbusiness.com) — The regional business media outlet covering DFW-area M&A activity, deal trends, and economic developments relevant to Euless sellers tracking market conditions.
Areas Served
Commercial activity in Euless concentrates along the Highway 183 (Airport Freeway) corridor — the main commercial spine running east toward DFW Airport and west into Hurst and Bedford. This strip carries the highest density of retail, restaurant, and personal-service businesses likely to appear on the market.
The Fuller Wiser Road / SH-360 zone near the airport's southern boundary forms Euless's aviation and logistics micro-cluster. LSG Sky Chefs and airport-adjacent hospitality operations anchor this area, and it draws a distinct buyer profile compared to the city's retail corridors.
Central Euless, around Main Street and Midway Drive, serves the residential base with neighborhood retail, personal services, and local restaurants — businesses sized for owner-operators rather than institutional buyers.
The broader HEB mid-cities market — Hurst, Euless, and Bedford — functions as one integrated commercial zone united under the HEB Chamber of Commerce. Buyers and sellers routinely cross municipal lines when evaluating deals, so an Euless listing competes with and attracts interest from the full HEB corridor.
Brokers serving Euless also cover adjacent markets including Grapevine, Irving, Fort Worth, Arlington, North Richland Hills, and Grand Prairie, expanding the addressable buyer pool — particularly for airport-corridor and logistics-oriented businesses.
Last reviewed by BBNet Editorial Team on May 2, 2026.
Frequently Asked Questions About Euless Business Brokers
- What does a business broker charge in Euless, Texas?
- Most business brokers charge a success fee — a commission paid only when the deal closes. The standard range runs from 8% to 12% of the sale price for smaller businesses, with some brokers applying the Lehman Formula on larger transactions. Many also charge an upfront retainer or valuation fee, though structures vary. Always confirm the full fee agreement in writing before signing an engagement letter.
- How long does it take to sell a business in Euless?
- Most small-to-mid-size business sales take six to twelve months from listing to close, though the timeline shifts based on industry, deal size, and how clean your financials are. Businesses tied to DFW Airport — logistics, warehousing, airline catering support — can attract institutional buyers who move faster. Retail and healthcare businesses along the HEB Corridor may need more time to find the right operator-buyer.
- What is my Euless business worth?
- Valuation starts with your Seller's Discretionary Earnings (SDE) or EBITDA, multiplied by an industry-specific multiple. Location matters: Euless businesses with contracts tied to DFW Airport proximity or serving the corridor's growing consumer base may command stronger multiples than comparable businesses in less strategic locations. A formal broker opinion of value or a certified business appraisal gives you a defensible number before you list.
- Do I need a licensed broker to sell my business in Texas?
- Not always — but the license question depends on what you're selling. Under Texas law (TRELA §1101.002), anyone who facilitates the transfer of a commercial lease as part of a business sale must hold an active Texas Real Estate Commission (TREC) broker license. If your business sale includes real property or a lease assignment, working with a TREC-licensed business broker protects both parties and keeps the transaction legally sound.
- How is confidentiality protected during a business sale in the HEB mid-cities area?
- Confidentiality starts with a Non-Disclosure Agreement (NDA) signed before any buyer sees financials, staff lists, or customer data. A good broker also markets the business without naming it — using a blind profile that describes the opportunity without revealing the identity. In a tightly connected community like the HEB mid-cities corridor, where employees and competitors often know each other, strict NDA enforcement and controlled buyer vetting are especially important.
- Who are the typical buyers for businesses in Euless?
- Euless attracts a mix of individual owner-operators, regional strategic buyers, and logistics-focused investors. Its position directly adjacent to Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport draws buyers specifically seeking aviation services, freight, and warehousing businesses. Retail and healthcare businesses along the HEB Corridor tend to attract first-time buyers and existing operators looking to expand into a market with a median household income of $82,167 and a diverse, growing population of more than 60,000.
- Which types of Euless businesses are easiest to sell right now?
- Businesses with strong, documented cash flow and a clear reason for their location tend to move fastest. In Euless, that points to transportation, logistics, and warehouse operations — the top-three employment sector by worker count in 2023 — as well as retail and healthcare businesses serving the HEB mid-cities population. Service businesses with transferable customer contracts and minimal owner-dependency also attract buyers quickly, regardless of industry.
- What Texas-specific legal steps are required to close a business sale?
- Texas business sales typically require a Bill of Sale, an Asset Purchase Agreement or Stock Purchase Agreement, and — if a commercial lease transfers — a TREC-licensed broker involved in that portion of the deal. You'll also need to address Texas Comptroller bulk sale notifications to protect the buyer from inherited sales tax liabilities. Consulting a Texas business attorney alongside your broker before you enter due diligence helps prevent deal-killing surprises at the closing table.