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.
- Establish the platform. The sponsor acquires a base company strong enough to absorb others — with capable management and scalable systems.
- Source add-ons. The sponsor identifies smaller targets that extend the platform's geography, products, customers, or capabilities.
- Acquire at lower multiples. Smaller companies are bought at lower valuations, blending down the average cost of the overall investment.
- Integrate. Each add-on is folded into the platform's operations, systems, and brand to capture cost and revenue synergies.
- 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.