Business services is expected to be one of the most active M&A areas in 2026 as corporates and sponsors pursue scale, specialisation, and recurring, tech-enabled revenue. Consolidation continues across professional and managed services, technology-enabled outsourcing, compliance-driven segments, and cybersecurity and risk platforms. As platform build-outs mature, investor focus is shifting towards integration, operational performance, and differentiation through data, workflow automation, and AI-enabled delivery.
Platform scale and recurring revenue remain the core M&A thesis
Private equity continues to focus on scalable platforms with recurring-revenue business models and resilient demand characteristics. Even amid macro volatility and uneven recovery, confidence in the sector remains high. Buy-and-build strategies in professional and technical services continue to attract outsized investor interest, while valuation discipline is increasingly differentiating outcomes. Assets demonstrating pricing power, mission-critical workflows, and low churn continue to command premiums.
Accounting services move from acquisition-led growth to operational delivery
Deal flow in accounting services continues, but the market has moved beyond the initial platform land grab. The value creation lens has shifted from acquisition-led growth to execution and integration. Sponsors are now focused on converting consolidation into performance through standardised delivery models, tighter pricing and utilisation discipline, cross-selling across service lines, and professionalised back-office functions that support margin expansion and scalability. While exits remain achievable, outcomes increasingly depend on proof of integration and organic growth. Competitive auctions and a large group of interested buyers continue to sustain elevated multiples for assets that can demonstrate repeatable post-acquisition value capture, with diligence and value creation plans concentrated on integration readiness and measurable operating model improvements.
Regional M&A patterns reflect regulatory constraints
Regulatory dynamics remain an important factor behind regional M&A trends because they support stable revenue streams. In Europe, for example, regulatory frameworks continue to shape deal activity. Germany’s tighter private equity restrictions in accounting and tax are likely to dampen volumes and push investors towards less regulated adjacencies, such as consulting and infrastructure-related services. By contrast, the UK and US remain attractive markets for platform expansion and add-on activity.
Platform models extend into new professional services verticals
Legal services are emerging as the next high-growth, “platformable” vertical of professional services as the sector shifts from partner-dependent economics towards more scalable delivery models enabled by specialisation, process standardisation, and technology. This trend is most pronounced in the UK and parts of Europe, where consolidation is accelerating and scaled platforms are being rewarded for repeatable execution and integration synergies. In the US, investor interest is building for consumer-facing legal services, a market historically off-limits to nonlawyer ownership due to professional conduct rules. However, evolving ownership models and structural changes in states like Arizona are beginning to open the door for outside capital in legal services, a trend that could accelerate private equity activity. Across markets, the winners will be those firms that can demonstrate scalable client acquisition and operational integration, not simply acquisition-driven growth.
Tech-enabled services enter a faster consolidation phase
Technical staffing and technology-enabled business process outsourcing are entering a faster consolidation phase as buyers respond to persistent labour shortages, wage inflation, and sustained demand for capacity for digital transformation execution. Strategic acquirers are pursuing scale to secure scarce talent; broaden delivery capabilities across cloud, data, and AI; modernise applications; and expand managed-services footprints. Private equity firms are leaning into platform builds and add-on programmes to create differentiated, multi-vertical service providers. Blackstone’s approximately $3.5bn tender offer for TechnoPro, Japan’s leading IT services provider, highlights sponsor conviction in scaled services platforms where multi-year value creation is increasingly driven by operational improvement and strength of the workforce supply chain, rather than multiple expansion. We expect strong investor interest to drive more pre-emptive bids and bilaterally negotiated transactions as buyers compete for high-quality assets in the segment.
In the US, IT managed services and cybersecurity remain active M&A themes, supported by sustained demand from mid-sized enterprises seeking integrated offerings that combine IT operations, security, and compliance. Sponsors are also showing heightened interest in certification and audit-related services, given their attractive recurring-revenue profiles and direct linkage to cyber risk management.
Looking ahead, digital engineering and enterprise application consulting are expected to gain traction as buyers target underpenetrated, high-margin niches with clear value-creation levers, including vertical specialisation, modernisation road maps, and scalable delivery models. Recent strategic activity, including Capgemini’s $3.3bn acquisition of WNS, underscores continued appetite for scaled, tech-enabled services platforms, and adjacent intelligent-operations capabilities.
Overall, deal momentum in business services is expected to remain strong through 2026, driven by private equity’s emphasis on professionalisation and platform expansion. At the same time, growing scrutiny around valuations, exit timing, and multiple sustainability will remain important considerations for dealmakers.