Commission paid to an advisor for successfully completing a transaction
In finance, a success fee is a commission paid to an advisor (typically an investment bank) for successfully completing a transaction. The fee is contingent on successfully helping the client achieve their goal, and thus aligns the interests of the client and the advisor.
In a merger and acquisition process, a success fee is typically a percentage of the deal value or the enterprise value of the business being acquired or sold.

There are many reasons for using a contingent success fee structure for a deal or transaction.
The benefits of contingent fee structures include the following:
Like everything in business, there are tradeoffs to consider when deciding whether or not to use a success fee structure.
The potential drawbacks of contingent fee arrangements include:
Imagine a client approaches an investment bank to sell their company for the highest possible price. The following fee structure is negotiated: 2% of the transaction value up to $500 million and 5% of any excess value over $500 million. With the large percentage differential for any revenue over $500 million, the advisor is strongly incentivized to work hardget the highest possible sales price for the client.
In this example, assume the bank finds a buyer for the business willing to pay $650 million. The total success fee would be $10 million on the first portion of the transaction cost and $7.5 million on the additional value above $500 million, for a total fee of $17.5 million.
There is a wide range of fees charged on the sale of a business in investment banking. Below is a very rough guideline of ranges that can typically be seen in the industry:
Thank you for reading CFI’s guide to a success fee in the investment banking advisory business. To continue learning and advancing your career, these additional CFI resources will be helpful:
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