Resources / Glossary / Add-on acquisition

Add-on acquisition.

Aka. Bolt-on · tuck-in acquisition

What is an add-on acquisition?

An add-on acquisition is a smaller company that a private equity sponsor buys to expand an existing portfolio company — the platform. Rather than acquiring a standalone business, the sponsor folds the add-on into a company it already owns, increasing the platform's scale, capabilities, or reach.

Add-ons are central to the buy-and-build strategy. The sponsor first acquires a platform of sufficient size and quality, then acquires a series of add-ons around it, integrating each into the larger business. Because add-ons are smaller, they typically sell for lower valuation multiples than the platform — so combining them effectively lowers the average purchase multiple across the whole investment.

That dynamic, multiple arbitrage, is a core reason add-ons create value: cheap small companies are absorbed into a platform that is itself valued at a higher multiple, lifting the combined enterprise value beyond the sum of the parts.

How an add-on acquisition actually works

An add-on program builds value through a repeatable acquire-and-integrate loop around the platform.

  1. Establish the platform. The sponsor acquires a base company strong enough to absorb others — with capable management and scalable systems.
  2. Source add-ons. The sponsor identifies smaller targets that extend the platform's geography, products, customers, or capabilities.
  3. Acquire at lower multiples. Smaller companies are bought at lower valuations, blending down the average cost of the overall investment.
  4. Integrate. Each add-on is folded into the platform's operations, systems, and brand to capture cost and revenue synergies.
  5. Compound to exit. A larger, more diversified platform commands a premium multiple at exit relative to the prices paid for the add-ons.

The strategy depends on disciplined integration. An add-on that is acquired but never truly combined adds revenue without the synergies — and without the multiple uplift the thesis relies on.

Add-on, bolt-on, tuck-in — what's the difference?

The terms overlap heavily and are often used interchangeably. All describe a smaller acquisition made to expand a platform. Where practitioners draw a distinction, it is usually about size and integration: a tuck-in is the smallest, fully absorbed into the platform with no separate identity; a bolt-on may retain more of its own operations or brand; and add-on is the general umbrella term for both.

An add-on differs from a platform acquisition, which is the larger anchor investment a sponsor builds around. And it sits within a roll-up — the broader strategy of consolidating a fragmented industry through a sequence of add-ons attached to one or more platforms.

Frequently asked.

5 questions
01 What's the difference between an add-on and a platform acquisition?

A platform acquisition is the anchor investment — a company large and capable enough to serve as the base of a buy-and-build strategy. An add-on is a smaller company acquired afterward and folded into that platform to expand it.

The platform is bought first and sets the foundation; add-ons are bought to grow it.

02 Why are add-ons cheaper than the platform?

Smaller companies generally sell for lower valuation multiples than larger, more professionalized ones. By acquiring add-ons at those lower multiples and integrating them into a platform valued at a higher multiple, the sponsor blends down its average cost and creates multiple arbitrage.

This gap between the price paid for add-ons and the multiple the combined platform earns is a key source of value in buy-and-build.

03 Are 'add-on' and 'bolt-on' the same thing?

Largely yes — the terms are used interchangeably for a smaller acquisition that expands a platform. Some practitioners reserve tuck-in for the smallest deals that are fully absorbed, and bolt-on for ones that keep more of their own operations, with add-on as the general term.

In practice the distinctions are loose and vary by firm.

04 How does an add-on relate to a roll-up?

A roll-up is the overall strategy of consolidating a fragmented industry by combining many companies into a platform. Add-on acquisitions are the individual deals that build that platform out — a roll-up is executed through a sequence of add-ons.

One platform plus many integrated add-ons is essentially what a roll-up produces.

05 What makes an add-on acquisition successful?

Disciplined sourcing at attractive prices and, above all, genuine integration. The value comes not just from adding revenue but from combining the add-on into the platform so cost and revenue synergies are realized and the whole earns a premium multiple.

Add-ons that are acquired but never integrated leave the synergies — and much of the value — on the table.

Related terms

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