KKR to buy majority stake in Crowe in nearly $3Bn deal

NEW YORK, UNITED STATES — KKR and co-investors have agreed to acquire a majority stake in Crowe, the 12th-largest United States accounting firm, in a transaction valued at nearly $3 billion, with Crowe’s existing partners retaining a minority interest.
According to a report from Consultancy.us, the deal, expected to close in Q3 2026, uses an alternative practice structure that legally separates Crowe’s attest services from its non-attest consulting and advisory operations. No individual terms were disclosed beyond the total transaction value.
Crowe is a Chicago-based accounting and consulting firm with approximately 9,000 US employees; as a member of Crowe Global, it connects to a network of 46,000 professionals across more than 130 countries.
KKR capital targets Crowe’s AI capabilities and acquisitions
KKR’s capital will fund AI adoption, new capabilities, and firm acquisitions — giving Crowe institutional resources to compete against Big Four firms on AI-assisted audit, tax, and advisory platforms.
Since 2021, dozens of the top-100 US accounting firms have taken PE investment; among the top 20, only CLA and Plante Moran remain without structural PE involvement. More than an accounting rollup, this is a PE wager that Crowe competes in the same F&A BPO tier as Genpact, WNS, and Cognizant — and that tier is consolidating.
“We are excited to partner with the Crowe team to support its continued growth and investment in next-generation client capabilities,” said Chris Harrington, Partner at KKR.
Crowe’s 46,000-professional network anchors KKR’s BPO investment thesis
KKR’s wager extends beyond Crowe US to Crowe Global — the 46,000-professional network across 130-plus countries that gives Crowe a delivery footprint comparable to mid-tier BPO providers.
Crowe’s outsourced accounting practice — spanning bookkeeping, payroll, AP/AR, and CFO advisory — competes directly in the F&A outsourcing market against Genpact, WNS, and Cognizant.
The alternative practice structure gives KKR the high-growth non-attest consulting and outsourcing business while Crowe’s audit partners retain professional independence under a separate legal entity.
“With KKR’s support, we will invest even more deeply in our people, our capabilities, and the quality we’re known for,” said Steven Strammello, CEO of Crowe.
Since 2021, PE-backed accounting consolidation has swept mid-tier US firms — including Baker Tilly, EisnerAmper, and Citrin Cooperman — with Crowe among the last major holdouts to accept institutional capital.
KKR’s thesis: use institutional capital to fund technology, acquisitions, and talent, then scale margins as Crowe takes market share from partnership-model competitors with slower investment cycles.
The Crowe deal signals that accounting firms with global delivery and compliance credentials are now valued as F&A outsourcing platforms — making every top-20 accounting firm a candidate for PE-driven consolidation.

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