Learn when $0 down equipment financing is realistic in Canada, what lenders mean by “$0 down,” and how to improve approval odds.
If you’re searching for $0 down equipment financing, you’re usually trying to solve one of two problems:
Here’s the honest answer (from an underwriter’s lens): $0 down is absolutely possible in Canada—but only when the lender can control risk in other ways (asset quality, deal structure, borrower strength, documentation, and sometimes a personal guarantee). When those pieces aren’t strong enough, lenders typically ask for some upfront commitment—either a down payment, an “advance rental,” or tighter terms.
This guide covers:
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Search intent promise: After reading, you’ll know whether $0 down is realistic for your business and asset, what lenders will require instead, and how to structure a file that gets approved.
The key point: “$0 down” is marketing shorthand, not a legal definition—and it’s often confused with “$0 due at signing” or “100% financed.”
In real deals, “$0 down” can mean any of the following:
Even in leasing, the payment structure can include multiple “upfront-like” components—down payment, trade-in, advance payments, security deposits, fees, and residual value. Those are normal moving parts in a lease quote, even when the “down payment” line shows $0.
Practical takeaway: If you want to compare offers apples-to-apples, ask one question:
“What is the total cash I need to release the equipment and start using it?”
The key point: $0 down works when the lender sees strong “capacity” and clean “collateral,” and doesn’t need cash down to offset uncertainty.
Most credit decisions still map back to the 5Cs: character, capacity, capital, collateral, conditions.
Down payments are mostly about two of those Cs:
Here are the most common conditions where $0 down becomes realistic.
Lenders move fastest and most flexibly when the asset is:
Think: standard construction equipment, common manufacturing machines, forklifts, vans, trailers, some tech stacks, etc.
If you want a reality check on how lenders price risk by machine type, use this guide:
Heavy Equipment Financing Rates in Canada — https://www.mehmigroup.com/blogs/heavy-equipment-financing
Dealer purchases are usually easier than private sales because:
That “cleanliness” matters because lenders often require specific funding items (IDs, signed docs, insurance, and correct payment setup). For example, vendor packages may require a void cheque or stamped PAD, and they may reject generic direct-deposit forms.
If you’re deciding between dealer vs private sale, read:
Private Sale vs Dealer Equipment: How to Finance Either — https://www.mehmigroup.com/blogs/private-sale-vs-dealer-equipment-how-to-finance-either
Underwriters don’t just ask, “Can you pay this month?” They ask, “Can you pay in a bad month?”
If the proposed payment fits comfortably—and you can back it up with bank statements or financials when requested—$0 down becomes much easier to justify. Documentation requirements vary by profile and deal size, but bank statements are a common request in many credit tiers.
“Character” isn’t vibes—it’s credit behavior and stability. Clean conduct reduces the lender’s need to “buy down risk” with a down payment.
Even if the down payment is $0, the deal can still be de-risked by:
To learn how lessors think about structure and monitoring terms, it helps to understand covenants and conditions precedent:
The key point: when uncertainty is high, lenders want “skin in the game” or extra protection—cash down is the simplest form of protection.
With thin history, the lender has less evidence of capacity and character. Down payment becomes a proxy for capital and commitment.
Specialized equipment, niche machines, or assets with weak resale markets often trigger:
Private sales can still be financeable, but if the seller can’t provide clean documentation (ownership proof, lien search, correct bill of sale), lenders often require more upfront money or tighter controls.
If cash flow is thin, $0 down increases the lender’s exposure (higher probability of default and higher loss severity). The lender’s instinct is to reduce exposure with:
Some soft costs can be included, but when the request becomes “finance everything, including the mess,” the risk increases.
The key point: many $0 down deals still require cash to activate funding—first payment, fees, insurance, and sometimes proof of deposit.
Here’s the most practical way to set expectations:
Also, if a deposit is paid to a vendor, lenders may require proof, and it often needs to match the payer account on the void cheque.
The key point: you can predict your odds before you apply—based on asset quality, paper trail, and payment comfort.
Score 1 point for each “yes”:
Interpretation:
The key point: a down payment is a risk tool—not a punishment. It reduces the lender’s loss if something goes wrong and proves you have capital discipline.
In plain terms, a lender is balancing:
That’s why the same borrower might get:
Also: lenders can “tighten” risk without changing the down payment by adjusting term, residual, covenants, and conditions precedent.
The key point: if you can’t get $0 down “as-is,” you can often get close by changing structure—without draining working capital.
A residual (buyout) can reduce payments and keep cash flow comfortable—but it has to match the asset’s real value curve. Push it too high and you create an end-of-term problem (or an underwriter decline).
If you want the broader decision framework, use:
Lease vs Buy Equipment in Canada — https://www.mehmigroup.com/blogs/lease-vs-buy-equipment-canada
If you’re tempted to use your LOC as the “down payment,” be careful. Many businesses end up with a permanently drawn LOC (hardcore borrowing), which removes flexibility when the slow month hits.
A good companion read:
Equipment LOC vs Business LOC (Canada): Which to Use? — https://www.mehmigroup.com/blogs/equipment-loc-vs-business-loc-canada-which-to-use
If you own equipment free and clear (or with meaningful equity), you can sometimes unlock cash via sale-leaseback and then use that cash strategically—deposit, installation, working capital buffer—without parking the asset.
Two helpful reads:
Banks, captives, independents, and broker-accessed programs don’t approve the same way.
If you want a scorecard approach:
The key point: tax treatment doesn’t “create” approvals, but it changes cash flow timing—especially GST/HST and deductibility.
If you want the straight comparison designed for Canadian operators:
Canadian Tax Benefits of Leasing vs Financing Equipment [2026] — https://www.mehmigroup.com/blogs/canadian-tax-benefits-of-leasing-vs-financing-equipment-2026
And because rates change over time, it’s worth remembering that lender pricing and approvals often move with the rate environment; the Bank of Canada publishes current interest-rate data and policy-rate context. (Bank of Canada)
The key point: if $0 down isn’t available, your goal is to avoid a down payment that creates operational stress.
Here are common “plan B” options that preserve liquidity:
If you’re in a broader cash flow squeeze, this is a strong companion read:
Cash Flow Crunch? Keep Your Business Funded — https://www.mehmigroup.com/blogs/cash-flow-crunch-keep-your-business-funded
The key point: $0 down is most common on clean, standard deals—and least common on complicated assets or private sales.
And if trucks are part of your equipment plan:
Are you looking for a truck? Look at our used inventory (https://www.mehmigroup.com/inventory).
The key point: the approval didn’t happen because the borrower “asked for $0 down.” It happened because the lender could clearly see capacity, collateral, and clean funding conditions.
Business: Ontario-based field services contractor (steady commercial clients)
Need: $118,000 equipment package to start a new contract within 3 weeks
Problem: They didn’t want to tie up cash because payroll, fuel, and materials were already rising.
What would normally break $0 down:
What we did (leasing-first):
Result: Approved with $0 down payment (but first payment still due at document signing, plus standard fees). The business kept its cash buffer and didn’t hardcode its operating line.
Takeaway: In a $0 down deal, structure and documentation are doing the job that cash down normally does.
The key point: the best $0 down outcome is the one that keeps your business safe in a slow month—not just the one that says “approved.”
If you want to pursue $0 down, focus on making your file “boringly fundable”:
Mehmi can help you sanity-check whether $0 down is realistic for your equipment and profile—and if not, what structure gets you the machine without draining working capital.
Yes—often for clean vendor deals and strong borrower/asset profiles. But “$0 down” usually means no principal down payment, not $0 cash required to start.
$0 down often still involves first payment, fees, and insurance setup. $0 due at signing is stricter and less common.
Used assets can be harder to value and resell, increasing collateral risk. A down payment reduces the lender’s potential loss if the deal defaults.
Sometimes, but private sales add verification steps (ownership, liens, seller ID, payment controls). Expect more conditions or upfront requirements than a dealer deal.
CRA guidance generally allows deducting lease payments incurred in the year for property used in your business (subject to specific rules/limits). (Canada)
GST/HST place-of-supply rules determine the applicable rate on a lease of goods/tangible personal property (facts and province matter). (Canada)