Learn the real difference between leasing and financing equipment in Canada—cash flow, ownership, taxes, GST/HST, underwriting, and how to choose.
Equipment decisions shouldn’t start with “what’s the rate?” They should start with how much cash your business can safely commit every month—even when sales dip, a key customer pays late, or repairs stack up.
Here’s the plain-English difference:
Both can be smart. The “best” option is the one that protects working capital, matches your replacement cycle, and fits what underwriters will actually approve.
Key point: Ownership and end-of-term risk are the biggest differences.
CRA’s general guidance is that you can deduct lease payments incurred in the year for property used in your business, subject to rules and facts. (Canada)
For ownership, CRA’s guidance on claiming CCA and CCA rates/classes is the starting point for how depreciation works in Canada. (Canada)
Key point: “Financing” usually means you’re funding a purchase, not renting the use.
In Canadian equipment deals, “financing” commonly includes:
These are ownership-forward. You’re paying for the asset over time and typically keep it at the end with no extra buyout decision.
If you’re comparing pricing and terms across structures, this Mehmi explainer helps you avoid “rate-only” comparisons:
https://www.mehmigroup.com/blogs/equipment-lease-rates-canada-2025-guide-tips
Key point: “Lease” isn’t one product. Structure changes everything.
Most Canadian equipment leases fall into three structures:
For a deeper, operator-friendly breakdown (with red flags):
https://www.mehmigroup.com/blogs/lease-operating-vs-capital-lease-canadian-tax-implications-explained
Key point: Leasing manages cash-flow and obsolescence risk; financing manages long-run ownership cost.
A practical way to compare offers apples-to-apples is to model total financing cost, not just rate:
https://www.mehmigroup.com/blogs/equipment-financing-cost-calculator-canada-free-full-guide
Key point: Two deals can have the same “economic cost” but very different tax timing and cash timing.
CRA’s guidance is straightforward at a high level: deduct lease payments incurred in the year for property used in your business (subject to conditions, and special rules for certain assets like passenger vehicles). (Canada)
Translation for owners: leasing often gives you predictable monthly write-offs that follow your payments.
When you own, you generally deduct the cost over time through CCA classes and rates (plus interest, depending on structure). (Canada)
Translation for owners: you may not deduct the full cost right away, and the deduction pattern depends on the class and rules.
If you want the non-accountant version with examples:
https://www.mehmigroup.com/blogs/cca-classes-explained-canada-free-depreciation-calculator
Key point: GST/HST often behaves differently in leasing vs buying, and the province matters.
CRA’s place-of-supply rules determine which rate to charge. (Canada)
In many leases, GST/HST is charged on each payment (and sometimes certain fees). In a purchase, GST/HST may be paid up front (depending on the deal and supplier).
Plain-English lease-focused breakdown:
https://www.mehmigroup.com/blogs/hst-gst-on-equipment-leases-in-canada
Key point: Approvals are less about the equipment and more about the story + cash flow behind it.
Whether you lease or finance, underwriters think in risk components (probability of default, exposure, and recovery). In real-world language, they apply the 5Cs:
If you want a practical “what lenders ask for” checklist, this is a strong companion read:
https://www.mehmigroup.com/blogs/franchise-loan-approval-in-canada-exact-documents-lenders-want
Key point: Choose the structure first, then shop the price.
Upgrade-prone (lease-friendly):
Long-life/stable (finance-friendly or $1 buyout lease):
(If you’re curious about the “middle ground,” see: 10% purchase option lease—The middle ground.)
If the payment still works when revenue drops 15–20% for a month, you’re probably in the right zone. If it only works in a perfect month, restructure.
Key point: Leasing is often the safer choice when cash flow and flexibility matter more than early ownership.
If you’re in a tougher credit season, this can help you understand what still gets approved (and why):
https://www.mehmigroup.com/blogs/bad-credit-equipment-financing-canada-approval-tips-for-2026
Scenario (anonymous, realistic):
A Canadian service business needed $120,000 of equipment to expand capacity before a busy season. They had two offers:
What the owner wanted: “lowest payment.”
What the business needed: enough cash left over to hire and cover seasonal receivables swings.
Underwriter reality (5Cs):
Decision: They took the lease structure to preserve liquidity, then planned a buyout decision later once the busy season results were proven.
Result: They avoided a cash squeeze during hiring, met customer demand, and kept flexibility at renewal/buyout time.
Takeaway: In growing businesses, “cheaper payment” can be riskier if it requires a cash drain up front.
Mehmi’s role is usually to help you structure the deal so it matches real operations: term length, buyout option, cash requirements, documentation, and approval strategy—then compare options fairly.
If you’re deciding between a lease quote and a finance quote, these related guides can help you get specific fast:
CRA’s general guidance is that you can deduct lease payments incurred in the year for property used in your business, subject to rules and the facts of your situation. (Canada)
Usually no. Ownership typically means you deduct the cost over time using CCA classes and rates (plus interest, depending on structure). (Canada)
Often yes. In many leases, GST/HST is charged on payments; in purchases, it may be paid up front. The province depends on CRA place-of-supply rules and which rate applies. (Canada)
Compare total cost, fees, term, and end-of-term obligations (buyout, return conditions). Start here: https://www.mehmigroup.com/blogs/equipment-financing-cost-calculator-canada-free-full-guide
It depends. Leasing can be easier when collateral is strong and the structure matches replacement cycles. Financing can be easier when you have strong cash reserves and long-term stability. In both cases, Capacity (cash flow) is the deciding factor.
Itemized quote, bank statements, and basic financial/tax documentation—plus a clear use-case story. This lender-doc checklist is a helpful starting point: https://www.mehmigroup.com/blogs/franchise-loan-approval-in-canada-exact-documents-lenders-want