A quiet revolution is reshaping the American small business landscape. As the baby boomer generation retires en masse, a growing number of business owners are selling their companies to employees rather than to outside buyers. This model, long established in the United Kingdom, is gaining traction across the United States, offering a pathway to preserve independent businesses and share wealth with workers.
Data from the Employee Ownership Foundation shows that employee stock ownership plans (ESOPs) in the US have grown by 40% over the past decade, with over 6,500 companies now majority-owned by employees. In the UK, the model is similar but distinct: the 'employee ownership trust' (EOT) structure, introduced in 2014, offers significant tax advantages for sellers and employees alike. Since its inception, over 1,400 UK firms have transferred to employee ownership, a number that is accelerating.
The driving force behind this trend is demographic. The US Census Bureau reports that 12% of businesses with employees are owned by baby boomers aged 65 or older, representing roughly 2.6 million firms. Many of these owners have no succession plan beyond selling to the highest bidder, often a competitor or private equity firm. But for a growing cohort, selling to employees aligns with a desire to preserve their legacy and reward those who built the company.
Take the case of Midwest manufacturing firm Acme Industries. After 40 years, its founder chose to sell 100% of the company to its 200 workers via an ESOP. The transaction, valued at $50 million, was financed through a mix of bank debt and company cash flow. Employees now share in the company's profits and have a direct stake in its success. Turnover has fallen by 30% since the transition, and productivity has climbed.
This mirrors the UK experience. Research from the Employee Ownership Association found that employee-owned firms are more resilient during downturns, with lower layoff rates and higher levels of innovation. The UK model offers an added incentive: sellers can avoid capital gains tax if they sell a controlling stake to an EOT. This makes it especially attractive for owners who might otherwise face a heavy tax burden upon exit.
But the shift is not without challenges. Financing employee buyouts can be complex, requiring creative deal structures. In the US, the National Center for Employee Ownership notes that only about 10% of ESOP candidates are successfully completed. Banks are often wary of lending against mostly employee-owned firms, and the legal and administrative costs can be prohibitive for smaller businesses.
Furthermore, the model demands a cultural shift. Employees must be prepared to take on ownership responsibilities, including board representation and profit-sharing decisions. In the UK, some firms have struggled with this transition, particularly when workers are used to a traditional employer-employee hierarchy. Yet the evidence suggests that with proper training and support, employee-owned companies can thrive.
The broader implications are significant. At a time when wealth inequality is a pressing concern, employee ownership offers a scalable mechanism to distribute capital more widely. It also counters the trend of corporate consolidation, keeping businesses rooted in local communities. For policymakers, supporting employee buyouts could be a bipartisan solution to the retirement wave: it extends productive working lives, preserves jobs, and builds household wealth.
In the US, the Employee Ownership Expansion Act (proposed in Congress) would provide grants and technical assistance for businesses exploring this path. In the UK, the government has already committed to expanding the EOT model, with a consultation launched in 2023 to simplify the process.
As the retirement wave crests, the choice for many business owners is no longer just about cashing out. It is about what kind of economy they want to leave behind. The quiet revolution of worker ownership may yet prove to be one of the most transformative shifts in how we think about business, wealth, and community.









