A practical guide to financing a Canadian cleaning business—cover payroll gaps, vehicles, equipment leasing, and contract cash-flow timing.
Key point: Cleaning is a “cash timing” business—labour costs are immediate, while invoice cash can be 30+ days out, especially on commercial contracts.
Two timing realities create most stress:
So even when your margins are healthy, you can still be “cash poor” between invoice and payment.
If you want a broader overview of short-term options before we get cleaning-specific, start here: Private lenders for business in Canada (https://www.mehmigroup.com/blogs/private-lenders-for-business-in-canada).
Key point: The smartest financing plan separates needs into three jobs—payroll gaps, vehicles/equipment, and contract ramp-up—instead of using one expensive tool for everything.
This is “bridge cash” to make payroll, buy supplies, and keep crews moving.
Vans, cargo vehicles, floor scrubbers, extractors, pressure washers—these are assets that generate revenue over years. Short-term cash should not be paying for long-life assets.
Winning a contract can create an immediate cash need: hiring/training, uniforms, initial supplies, site setup, sometimes insurance upgrades.
If you’re trying to fund that ramp-up with a daily-debit product, you can win the contract and still lose the business.
Key point: Even in alternative lending, approvals still map to the 5Cs of credit—character, capacity, capital, collateral, conditions—just with different emphasis for cleaning.
Here’s what the “credit brain” is watching:
A helpful rule: if your contracts are stable, it’s a financing story; if your contracts are unpredictable, it becomes a risk story.
Key point: Payroll financing is about bridging cash-flow timing—not masking unprofitability.
BDC describes payroll financing as a way to sustain operations during cash-flow crunches or slowdowns, especially when businesses have limited reserves but many employees on payroll. bdc.ca
Use this quick estimate before you borrow:
Payroll gap ≈ (Weekly payroll + payroll remittances + key weekly operating costs) − (Weekly collections you can reliably count on)
If your gap is $12,000/week and you’re borrowing $60,000, you’re effectively buying five weeks of runway—unless something changes (faster collections, better deposits, higher margin work).
Key point: For cleaning companies, leasing is often the best fit for vehicles and equipment because it matches the cost to the revenue life of the asset—and protects working cash for payroll.
CRA guidance notes that leases generally include GST/HST or PST and that certain costs like insurance and maintenance are typically separate. Canada
That matters for cleaning businesses because leases can smooth tax cash flow (tax on each payment vs a large upfront tax bill), depending on province and structure.
For a practical Ontario example around tax timing and lease vs buy thinking, see: HST/GST on trucks in Ontario: buy vs lease (https://www.mehmigroup.com/blogs/hst-gst-on-trucks-in-ontario-buy-vs-lease).
Key point: Commercial contracts create “startup costs” before the first payment—financing should cover mobilization without choking operations.
Common mobilization costs for cleaning contracts:
The risk is that you fund mobilization with something that collects too aggressively while you’re still ramping.
Federal terms commonly treat payment as 30 days from receipt of an acceptable invoice or acceptance of the work (whichever is later). That means invoice quality and acceptance matter, not just performance date. Canada
Practical move: Build a “first 60 days” plan:
Financing should support that gap without creating a second gap.
Key point: An MCA can be a fast bridge for short-term needs tied to revenue, but it’s often the wrong tool for long-life assets and thin-margin contracts.
If you’re evaluating MCAs, start with:
If the underlying need is vehicles/equipment, leasing usually produces a healthier cash cycle:
Key point: If you own equipment outright (or have equity), sale-leaseback can convert that equity into working capital while you keep using the asset.
This is often a strong fit for cleaning businesses that:
Resources:
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Key point: The fastest approvals happen when your file is “underwritable” on day one—clean statements, clear contracts, and a simple story.
Have these ready:
Cleaning-specific tip: If you’re subcontracting, lenders will want clarity on:
Key point: You can’t finance your way around compliance deadlines—so build them into your cash plan.
CRA remittance due dates depend on your remitter type and history; missing them creates compounding problems (penalties + trust issues with lenders). Canada+1
CRA notes leases generally include GST/HST/PST in the payment amount, with other costs like insurance typically separate. Canada
The Bank of Canada held its policy rate at 2.25% in its December 10, 2025 decision—useful context for why borrowing costs and approvals remain sensitive. Bank of Canada
Key point: The cleanest solutions split the problem: working capital for payroll ramp, leasing for vehicles/equipment, and disciplined contract billing to shorten payment timing.
Business: Mid-sized commercial cleaning company in Ontario (multi-site retail + small medical offices)
Challenge: Won a new multi-location contract. Needed to add two crews, buy equipment, and cover payroll before first invoices cleared. Contract payments were net terms, and acceptance/invoicing process mattered.
What the “credit brain” flagged:
Structure used:
Result:
They covered payroll without stacking daily-debit products, put assets on predictable monthly payments, and stabilized cash flow after the first payment cycle landed.
If you want, Mehmi can help you map your financing to the three jobs (payroll, vehicles/equipment, contract mobilization) and pressure-test the structure from an underwriting lens—so you get funding that keeps you stable, not just funded.
Start by comparing:
Usually with working capital sized to the invoice-to-payment gap. BDC notes payroll financing can help sustain operations during a cash-flow crunch, especially when payroll is large relative to reserves. bdc.ca
Leasing is often the cleanest fit because it matches payments to asset life and preserves cash for labour. CRA notes leases generally include GST/HST/PST in the lease amount (with some costs like insurance separate). Canada
Because payroll and setup costs happen immediately, while many commercial customers pay on net terms. Federal contract terms often use a standard 30-day payment period measured from an acceptable invoice/acceptance. Canada
Sometimes, for short-term revenue-tied needs. It’s usually risky for long-term assets or thin-margin contract ramps. Learn the mechanics first: https://www.mehmigroup.com/blogs/how-merchant-cash-advances-work
Sale-leaseback can convert equipment equity into working capital while keeping the asset in use: https://www.mehmigroup.com/blogs/sale-leaseback-on-equipment-in-canada
Because source deductions have hard due dates and missing them signals cash stress and compliance risk. CRA’s remittance guidance explains due dates and remitter types. Canada+1