For field services owners
Sell your field services business.
Tiny buys profitable field services businesses with route density, repeat customers, trained technicians, and recurring service demand.

The category matters less than the business itself: real profit, customer trust, and a reason to keep it independent for the long term.
Short answer
Does Tiny buy field services businesses?
Yes. Tiny will consider field services businesses when they have repeat customers, route density, trained technicians, simple economics, and a reputation customers trust.
- Good fit: route-based services, commercial service contracts, technician work, maintenance visits, inspections, and recurring service plans.
- We like dispatch discipline, schedule reliability, customer history, and managers who can run the operation.
- A durable local or regional service business can be a strong Tiny fit even if it is not software.
Why this kind of business can last
Field services can be durable when customers need the work done repeatedly and trust the team on-site.
We like businesses with trained techs, repeat accounts, efficient routing, and clean invoicing.
Low drama matters: clear scheduling, safety, fleet, parts, and customer communication.
Strong fit and weaker fit signals
Strong fit
- Recurring maintenance contracts, repeat commercial accounts, or route-based revenue.
- Operations are run by managers, dispatchers, and technicians, not only the owner.
- Customer concentration, insurance, licensing, and safety records are understandable.
Weaker fit
- Lead-gen-driven one-off jobs with low repeat demand.
- Technician turnover, poor safety records, or messy dispatch and collections.
- A founder-only book of relationships with no second layer of management.
What happens after a sale to Tiny
We keep the team, brand, routes, and customer promises intact. The goal is not to centralize the business out of its market.
Founder transition can be flexible, especially where customer relationships or technical know-how need a careful handoff.
Tiny is not a broker, marketplace, private equity fund, or short-term flipper. We buy businesses we would be proud to own for the long term, and we try not to break the thing customers already trust.
Where to go next
Questions founders ask
Does Tiny buy non-tech field services companies?
Yes. Tiny buys durable profitable businesses, not only tech. The fit depends on profit quality, repeat demand, team strength, and low disruption risk.
What operating data should a field services owner share?
Revenue by customer type, recurring versus one-time work, technician count, routes, gross margin, safety record, churn, and owner involvement.
Talk to Tiny
If this sounds like your business, email hello@tiny.com with a short description, approximate revenue, and approximate profit. No pitch deck required.