Escrow
A financial arrangement in M&A transactions where a portion of the purchase price is deposited with a neutral third-party agent and held for a specified period to secure the buyer's potential indemnification claims against the seller.
What Is Escrow in M&A?
In the context of mergers and acquisitions, an escrow is a mechanism where a portion of the transaction proceeds — typically 5–15% of the purchase price — is deposited with an independent escrow agent (usually a bank or trust company) at closing. The funds are held for a defined period and released to the seller only if no valid indemnification claims are made by the buyer, or after claims are resolved.
Escrow arrangements give the buyer a readily accessible pool of funds to satisfy indemnification claims without needing to pursue the seller for payment (Corporate Finance Institute) — a particularly important protection when the seller is a financial sponsor that may distribute proceeds to investors shortly after closing.
How Escrow Works
At Closing
- The buyer pays the full purchase price as part of the sell-side M&A process, but a portion is directed to an escrow account rather than to the seller
- The escrow agent (a bank or trust company) holds the funds pursuant to an escrow agreement signed by all parties
- The seller receives the balance of the purchase price directly
During the Escrow Period
- The buyer may submit indemnification claims against the escrowed funds if breaches of reps and warranties or other indemnifiable events are discovered
- The seller may dispute claims, triggering a resolution process (negotiation, then arbitration or litigation if necessary)
- Undisputed claims are paid from escrow; disputed amounts remain held pending resolution
- Interest earned on escrowed funds is typically allocated to the seller (as the economic owner of the funds)
At Release
- Upon expiration of the escrow period (typically aligned with the survival period for general reps and warranties), remaining funds are released to the seller
- Amounts subject to pending but unresolved claims are retained until those claims are settled
- Some escrows have scheduled partial releases (e.g., 50% released at 12 months, remainder at 18 months)
Escrow Agreement Key Terms
The escrow agreement is a standalone contract between the buyer, seller, and escrow agent that governs:
- Escrow amount — the dollar value or percentage of the purchase price to be escrowed
- Escrow period — the duration the funds are held (typically 12–24 months)
- Release conditions — the circumstances under which funds are released to the seller or paid to the buyer
- Claim procedures — how the buyer submits claims and how the seller objects
- Dispute resolution — the mechanism for resolving contested claims (joint instruction, arbitration, or court order)
- Investment of funds — how escrowed funds are invested during the holding period (typically low-risk instruments)
- Fees — escrow agent fees and which party bears them
Escrow vs. Holdback
A related but distinct mechanism is a holdback, where the buyer retains a portion of the purchase price directly rather than depositing it with a third party. Key differences:
| Escrow | Holdback | |
|---|---|---|
| Held by | Independent third party | The buyer |
| Seller’s security | Higher — neutral agent | Lower — buyer controls funds |
| Administrative cost | Escrow agent fees | Minimal |
| Common in | Larger transactions | Smaller or middle-market deals |
Sellers generally prefer escrow over holdback because the neutral agent provides greater assurance that funds will be released if no valid claims arise.
Negotiation Dynamics
- Escrow size — buyers push for larger escrows (15–20%); sellers prefer smaller amounts (5–10%) or none at all
- Duration — buyers want longer periods; sellers want shorter ones to access their proceeds sooner
- Release schedule — sellers negotiate for partial early releases to reduce the amount at risk over time
- Interaction with RWI — when reps and warranties insurance is used, escrow amounts are often reduced significantly or eliminated (a consideration covered in our guide to selling a business)
Escrow in Asia Pacific
Escrow practices in Asia Pacific M&A vary by market and transaction size. In Australia and Japan, escrow arrangements are standard for mid-market and larger transactions. In Southeast Asian markets, escrow infrastructure may be less developed, and parties sometimes use alternative security mechanisms such as bank guarantees or parent company guarantees. Cross-border transactions must navigate currency denomination, interest allocation, and tax treatment of escrowed funds across jurisdictions. AI-native platforms like Amafi help advisors structure appropriate security mechanisms for cross-border Asia Pacific transactions.