How does a private equity roll-up and buy-and-build strategy work in 2027?
Published Jun 14, 2026 · Updated Jun 14, 2026
Direct Answer
A private-equity roll-up (buy-and-build) acquires a "platform" company, then bolts on many smaller businesses bought at lower multiples to create scale and capture multiple arbitrage — but 30–40% underperform because the integration is hard. The mechanic: a sponsor buys a platform at 6–10x EBITDA, then acquires 5–50 add-ons at lower 3–6x EBITDA multiples over a 4–7 year hold, and exits the combined company at the platform multiple of 10–15x EBITDA.
The math is the engine — buy $1M of EBITDA at 4x for $4M, sell it inside the platform at 10x for $10M, and capture $6M of multiple arbitrage on every add-on. The platform acts as the operating chassis — management, financial systems, technology, brand, and customer base — that the add-ons integrate onto.
A 2026 trend favors fewer, larger add-ons (three at $15M EBITDA rather than fifteen at $3M), and roll-ups are active across HVAC, dental, behavioral health, MSP/IT, and specialty distribution.
For operators, the roll-up is a clean lesson in multiple arbitrage, the platform operating model, and why integration — not the deal — decides success.
1. How a Roll-Up Works
Platform plus add-ons
The structure has two roles: the platform (the initial, larger business bought at 6–10x EBITDA that becomes the operating base) and the add-ons (smaller businesses bought at 3–6x EBITDA and bolted on). Over a 4–7 year hold, the sponsor assembles many add-ons onto one platform and exits the whole at a 10–15x multiple.
The platform as operating chassis
The platform is the operating chassis — its management team, financial systems, technology, brand, and customer base are what the add-ons plug into. Buying scattered small companies only creates value if they integrate onto a real platform that runs them, rather than remaining a loose collection.
2. The Multiple Arbitrage Engine
Buy low, sell inside the platform
The profit engine is multiple arbitrage. A small company's $1M of EBITDA bought standalone at 4x costs $4M — but inside a platform that exits at 10x, that same EBITDA is worth $10M. The sponsor captures $6M of value on every add-on simply by repricing it at the platform's higher multiple.
Why scale lifts the multiple
Larger, more diversified companies trade at higher multiples than small ones — buyers pay more for scale, stability, and professional management. By assembling small businesses into one large platform, the roll-up lifts the whole to a premium multiple, turning many cheap parts into one expensive whole.
3. Integration Decides Success
The hard part is after the deal
The acquisition is the easy part; integration is where value is won or lost. 30–40% of PE roll-ups underperform expectations due to integration challenges, multiple compression at exit, or operational problems from poorly combined businesses. The deal model looks clean on a spreadsheet; the execution is messy.
Operational and cultural alignment
Bringing add-ons onto the platform requires operational and cultural alignment — combining systems, processes, and teams without losing what made each business work. The 2026 shift toward fewer, larger add-ons reflects this: integrating three companies well beats integrating fifteen badly.
Integration capacity, not deal availability, is the real constraint.
4. The RevOps and Operator Lessons
Value is created in integration, not acquisition
The clearest lesson is that integration, not the deal, creates the value. RevOps and operations leaders are often the ones who actually integrate acquired businesses — combining CRMs, comp plans, processes, and data. The lesson is to treat post-acquisition integration as the value-creating work it is, resourced and led seriously, because a great deal poorly integrated destroys the arbitrage on paper.
Build the platform as a real operating chassis
A roll-up only works if the platform is a genuine operating chassis that runs the add-ons. Operators consolidating anything — business units, tools, teams — should build a real shared system (data model, processes, systems of record) onto which the parts integrate, rather than leaving a loose federation.
The chassis is what turns many parts into one valuable whole.
Match integration capacity to deal pace
The shift to fewer, larger add-ons reflects a hard truth: integration capacity is finite, and over-acquiring overwhelms it. Operators should pace acquisitions and changes to what they can actually integrate well, because the 30–40% failure rate comes mostly from biting off more integration than the organization can absorb.
Discipline on pace protects the value.
5. What to Watch
The questions for 2027 are how multiple compression at exit affects roll-up returns, whether the move to fewer, larger add-ons improves the success rate, and how AI accelerates the integration that decides outcomes. Roll-ups remain active across HVAC, dental, behavioral health, MSP/IT, and specialty distribution, with the arbitrage math intact but execution the differentiator.
The durable lessons transcend private equity: value is created in integration not acquisition, build a real operating chassis, and pace acquisitions to your integration capacity.
FAQ
What is a private-equity roll-up? A buy-and-build strategy where a sponsor acquires a platform company at 6–10x EBITDA, bolts on 5–50 smaller add-ons at lower 3–6x multiples over a 4–7 year hold, and exits the combined company at the platform multiple of 10–15x EBITDA.
How does multiple arbitrage work? By buying small companies at low multiples and valuing them at the platform's higher multiple. Buying $1M of EBITDA at 4x ($4M) and selling it inside a platform at 10x ($10M) captures $6M of arbitrage per add-on — scale lifts the multiple.
Why do so many roll-ups fail? 30–40% underperform due to integration challenges, multiple compression at exit, or operational problems from poorly combined businesses. The deal math is clean, but integration is hard, which is where most value is lost.
What is the 2026 trend in roll-ups? A shift toward fewer, larger add-ons — three at $15M EBITDA rather than fifteen at $3M — because integrating a few companies well beats integrating many badly. Integration capacity is the real constraint.
What can operators learn from roll-ups? Value is created in integration, not the acquisition; build the platform as a real operating chassis the parts plug into; and pace acquisitions to your integration capacity rather than over-acquiring.
Bottom Line
A private-equity roll-up captures multiple arbitrage — buying add-ons at 3–6x and exiting them inside a platform at 10–15x for roughly $6M of value per add-on — by assembling small businesses onto a platform operating chassis. But 30–40% underperform because integration, not the deal, decides success.
For operators, the lessons are exact: value is created in integration not acquisition, build a real operating chassis the parts plug into, and pace acquisitions to your integration capacity.
Sources
- Dealroom — Private equity roll-up strategy: complete guide
- CT Acquisitions — Private equity roll-up strategy: 2026 complete guide
- IB Interview Questions — Roll-up buy-and-build strategy explained
- Source Code Deals — Buy and build strategy: a high-growth approach in 2026
- CT Acquisitions — How to build a platform acquisition strategy (2026)
- Goodwin Procter (CLS Blue Sky) — Add-on acquisitions in private equity
*Private equity roll-up review — PE roll-up reviews, rating, buy-and-build review 2027, and a review of multiple arbitrage, the platform operating chassis, and integration risk for operators.*