A Canadian case study showing why a bank declined an equipment deal—and the exact broker changes that got it approved (structure, docs, risk).
If your bank said “no,” it usually wasn’t because your business is “bad.” It’s because your request didn’t fit that bank’s risk box at that moment—credit policy, cash-flow coverage, collateral rules, sector appetite, or paperwork requirements.
In this case study, the approval happened because the broker changed three things:
We’ll walk through exactly what changed, how lenders think (in plain language), and a repeatable “decline-to-approval” checklist you can use in Canada.
A bank decline is often less about you and more about fit.
Banks lend inside a strict framework because they must hold capital against risk (their “risk-weighted assets”). If your deal falls outside policy, the banker can like you and still be forced to decline.
Common bank decline triggers we see in Canadian equipment files:
One important nuance: interest rates in Canada are also influenced by the Bank of Canada policy interest rate (the overnight rate target), which affects funding costs across the system—so lenders can tighten quickly when conditions change. (Bank of Canada)
When a lender reviews an equipment file, they’re essentially running the 5Cs:
Do you pay bills on time? Are there collections, tax arrears, unexplained NSFs, or story gaps?
Can the business afford the payment without starving operations? (Banks and lessors look at cash flow, bank statements, and payment-to-revenue logic.)
Do you have skin in the game—cash down, liquidity, retained earnings, or a cushion?
If everything goes wrong, can the lender recover enough value from the asset to limit losses?
What’s happening in the market/industry right now—and does your timing increase risk?
Under the hood, lenders simplify this into risk components:
A broker “changes the deal” by lowering PD (better proof + stronger story), lowering EAD (right-sized amount/term), and lowering LGD (better collateral + clean title + tighter funding controls).
A broker doesn’t have magical approval powers. What they do have is:
If you want a practical reference point for deal math, Mehmi’s equipment financing calculator helps you model term length, down payment, and payment scenarios before you resubmit anywhere.
Use: Equipment Financing Calculator Canada
A Canadian contracting business (anonymous) needed a $148,000 piece of used equipment to take on a new set of jobs for the spring season.
The bank’s decline wasn’t personal. It was a combination of:
This is a very common pattern: the business is viable, but the timing + structure make the risk look worse on paper than it is in reality.
Instead of financing every dollar tied to the purchase and incidentals, the broker carved the file into a clean equipment transaction:
Result: the lender’s worst-case exposure dropped.
The bank discussion was framed like a “flat monthly obligation.” The broker structured it like a real operating business:
This matters because lenders don’t only fear default—they fear payment stress that creates default.
The broker tightened the asset file:
This improves recovery confidence if the lender ever needs to repossess.
Instead of “we need equipment,” the submission explained:
The broker placed the deal with a non-bank equipment finance lender that was comfortable with:
Result: approved and funded on a leasing structure with conditions met at closing.
Even after an approval, funding doesn’t happen until conditions precedent (CPs) are satisfied—these are the “must be true before money moves” items.
In equipment finance, CPs often include:
When a broker gets a deal over the line quickly, it’s usually because they treat CPs like a closing checklist, not an afterthought.
In Canada, the after-tax and cash-flow impact of leasing vs buying can look very different than a generic U.S. article suggests.
Two practical points to discuss with your accountant:
And if you’re buying/owning assets, the CRA’s CCA classes determine how depreciation is claimed over time (important for tax planning and financial statement presentation). (Canada)
If you want a deeper, very practical comparison angle, see: Vancouver equipment lease vs loan cost comparison
Not every “no” should be overturned.
If the payment is only affordable when everything goes perfectly, approval can become a trap—because your operating line, payroll, maintenance, and fuel will still need oxygen.
In those cases, the smartest move might be:
If you own equipment already and need working capital without stopping operations, explore: Sale-leaseback in Canada: unlock cash fast
Or run the numbers step-by-step here: Calculate an equipment sale-leaseback
Ask your banker: “What’s the primary reason code—capacity, collateral, time in business, credit, or policy?”
That single sentence determines the fix.
Most “approved-but-not-funded” deals die in documentation.
If your deal involves a private seller, the rules tighten. Start here:
Calgary private sale equipment financing in Alberta
If your equipment is coming from the U.S., treat it like two projects (funding + import logistics):
How to finance U.S. equipment as a Canadian business
Credit score isn’t everything, but it’s never nothing.
If you want the realistic Canadian ranges and how lenders offset weaker credit with structure, read:
Ask yourself:
If “no,” the fix is usually structure + cushion, not “try another lender and hope.”
If you’ve been declined and you want a realistic path to approval, Mehmi can help you translate the decline into a lender-ready plan—structure, story, and closing package, not just another application.
A good next step is a 10-minute “go/no-go” review of (1) equipment details, (2) bank deposits, and (3) how you want the deal to feel (lowest payment vs fastest approval vs lowest cash down).
No. Different lenders have different risk appetites, especially for time in business, credit bands, and used equipment. A decline often means “not in our policy box,” not “never.”
Almost always: structure (term/down/buyout), verification (clean asset + clean docs), and capacity proof (bank statements + explanation of seasonality and contracts).
Leasing is often preferred when you want to preserve cash and keep bank lines available. Tax treatment and cash-flow timing matter; lease payments are generally deductible if used to earn business income, and GST/HST ITCs may apply when eligible. (Canada)
A clean vendor invoice, equipment specs/serials, IDs, void cheque/PAD, insurance certificate, and recent bank statements (especially for newer businesses or specific sectors).
Reapplying unchanged. If nothing changed, the outcome usually won’t change. Fix the objection first (capacity/collateral/time-in-business/policy).
Often, no. Bundling working capital into an equipment request can raise exposure and weaken the collateral story. Many approvals happen when the equipment deal is kept “clean,” and working capital is addressed separately.