For recurring maintenance services owners
Sell your recurring maintenance services business.
Tiny buys profitable recurring maintenance services businesses with contracted routes, renewal behavior, trained teams, and repeat customer need.

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 recurring maintenance services businesses?
Yes. Tiny will consider recurring maintenance services businesses when customers need regular visits, contracts or renewals are strong, routes are efficient, and the team can keep delivering without disruption.
- Good fit: commercial maintenance, route-based services, service plans, inspections, preventive maintenance, and recurring site visits.
- We like contracted revenue, route density, clear scopes, reliable technicians, and low customer churn.
- Durability comes from being trusted to keep something working quietly over time.
Why this kind of business can last
Recurring maintenance businesses are attractive when customers renew because the cost of neglect is obvious.
We like simple schedules, recurring routes, trained teams, and clear service standards.
The best businesses have customer history and operational rhythm that competitors cannot copy overnight.
Strong fit and weaker fit signals
Strong fit
- Recurring maintenance contracts, strong renewal rates, and clear gross margins.
- Route density, dispatch process, technician training, service records, and customer communication are solid.
- The business has low disruption risk and a manager layer beyond the founder.
Weaker fit
- One-off repair work with little recurring base.
- Poor route economics, weak scheduling, or heavy dependence on emergency calls.
- Customer relationships and pricing live only with the owner.
What happens after a sale to Tiny
We keep the routes, service standards, customer relationships, and brand intact.
Tiny can support leadership succession and operating discipline without turning the business into something customers did not choose.
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
Is contracted maintenance revenue attractive?
Yes, when renewals are real, margins are healthy, and delivery quality is consistent.
What does Tiny look for in route-based maintenance?
Route density, retention, technician capacity, dispatch quality, contract terms, gross margin, safety, and how much the founder is needed day to day.
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.