For many growing companies, reaching the next stage of expansion often brings a critical question to the table: How do we fuel growth without giving up too much control? This is where secondary buyouts step in as a smart, underutilized lever. Unlike traditional capital raises, secondary buyouts allow existing shareholders—often founders or early investors—to sell a portion of their equity to a new financial sponsor. No need to issue additional shares. No need to dilute ownership. It’s a clean, strategic move that brings in fresh capital and a partner aligned with long-term growth.
We’ve seen some of the world’s most recognizable brands turn to secondary buyouts as a smart way to reward early believers while setting the stage for future growth. Facebook, for example, allowed early employees and seed investors to sell a portion of their equity in a landmark $500 million secondary transaction between 2006 and 2007, pre its Series C. Years later, Airbnb followed a similar path during its Series C/D in 2014–2015, enabling early employees and angels to participate in a $200m+ secondary sale, which helped the company attract and retain top talent while remaining private ahead of its IPO. More recently, UK-based fitness brand Gymshark executed its first institutional deal in 2020 entirely through a ~$265 million secondary transaction.
Secondary buyouts aren’t just about cashing out—they’re about professionalizing governance, bringing in a new partner who understands the next leg of the journey, and boosting your company’s reputation in the capital markets. In short, they check multiple boxes: capital, credibility, and continuity.
Secondaries signal that the business has staying power and a long runway ahead. And perhaps best of all? The cap table stays clean.
At Vault, we see secondary buyouts as more than just liquidity events—they are inflection points. We help companies assess whether a secondary is the right fit, manage investor conversations, and structure transactions that serve both strategic and financial goals. When done right, a secondary buyout isn’t just a liquidity event — it’s a growth catalyst.