Due diligence is the detailed investigation a buyer (and its advisers) conducts to verify a target's condition and uncover risks before committing to a transaction. It usually begins after a letter of intent is signed and runs up to signing the definitive agreement. Its findings shape the price, the structure and the protections negotiated in the contract.
Objectives
- Confirm the information the seller has presented (financials, contracts, assets).
- Identify liabilities, risks and "deal-breakers" — litigation, tax exposures, customer concentration, environmental issues.
- Inform the valuation and the negotiation of representations, warranties, indemnities and price adjustments.
- Plan post-closing integration.
Key workstreams
| Area | Focus |
|---|---|
| Financial | Quality of earnings, working capital, debt, accounting policies |
| Legal | Corporate records, contracts, litigation, permits, change-of-control terms |
| Tax | Liabilities, structuring, available attributes |
| Commercial | Market, customers, competition, growth assumptions |
| Operational | Supply chain, IT systems, facilities |
| HR / culture | Key people, compensation, pensions, integration risk |
| Environmental / ESG | Contamination, compliance, sustainability |
Quality of earnings
A central financial workstream is the quality of earnings (QoE) review, which tests whether reported EBITDA is sustainable and "clean" — adjusting for one-off items, non-recurring revenue, owner perks and accounting choices. QoE findings frequently move the headline price.
The data room
Documents are shared through a secure virtual data room, where the buyer's advisers review materials and submit questions. The thoroughness of diligence is constrained by time, access and, in hostile or competitive situations, by limited cooperation from the target.
Why it matters
Weak diligence is a recurring cause of failed deals. Discoveries during diligence can lead to a lower price, additional indemnities or escrow, restructured terms, or walking away entirely.
See also
- Letter of intent — A preliminary document outlining the main terms of a proposed deal, mostly non-binding.
- Definitive purchase agreement — The binding contract that governs an acquisition and its terms.
- Business valuation — The set of methods used to estimate the economic value of a company or its equity.
- Mergers and acquisitions — The umbrella term for transactions that combine the ownership of companies or their assets.
External resources
Practitioner guides from Main Street Wealth, an M&A advisory firm:
- Complete M&A Process Timeline — Stage-by-stage walkthrough of a transaction from preparation to closing.