Key insights
- Earnings quality over multiples: Buyers are prioritizing durable, high-quality earnings and operational efficiency over headline valuation multiples amid higher borrowing costs and normalized post-pandemic profits.
- Active, liquid market: Presidio reported a record 19 transactions in 2025 and a first-quarter 2026 pipeline more than double last year, signaling continued consolidation momentum.
- Portfolio optimization: The mix has shifted from pandemic-era full exits to dealers rebalancing networks—trimming underperformers, doubling down on winning brands/markets, and staying in the game.
What buyers value now
- Fixed operations and used vehicles: With new-vehicle margins normalizing, parts and service plus disciplined used-car operations are central to sustaining earnings. The article reports that more than 85% of dealers say parts and service will be key this year.
- Productivity and expense control: Payroll is roughly 45% of gross profit, making output per person a critical lever across sales, service, and back office.
- Technology as a valuation lever: Clean, modern tech stacks that improve efficiency, data quality, and CX are influencing valuations. The article reports that 93% of dealers plan to increase technology use, led by AI and service-efficiency tools.
- Brand and geography: Strong brands in attractive markets command premiums. The article reports Toyota and Lexus as top targets, followed by Honda, Subaru, and Mercedes-Benz.
Deal structuring and discipline
- Underwriting to normalized earnings: Buyers are screening harder and pricing to sustainable, post-peak performance.
- Diligence priorities: Clean financials, stable leadership, scalable processes, and clear operational improvement paths are mandatory.
- Tech audits: Integrations, data governance, and measurable outcomes (e.g., AI-driven service scheduling, marketing attribution, inventory optimization) are being evaluated.
Market landscape and geography
- California case study: Despite regulatory and cost concerns, activity is strong; the article notes that one out of every nine U.S. vehicles is sold in California.
- High liquidity and demand: The article reports record-level M&A heading into 2026, with robust buyer interest and ample liquidity.
- Fragmentation runway: About 90% of the sector remains unconsolidated, with roughly 3,400 single-store owners and 18,000+ dealerships in groups under 50 stores; at ~400 deals/year, consolidation could run for decades.
- “Big get bigger,” matured: Growth is more selective, focused on sustainable integration and earnings stability.
Outlook for 2026
- Active deal flow: Portfolio optimization expected to drive most transactions.
- Winning formula: Discipline in underwriting, smart brand/market selection, and productivity gains will determine which deals close—and perform.













