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Credit Review for Equipment Financing in Canada (Explained)

Understand how equipment lease approvals work in Canada—5Cs, cash flow, collateral, documents, conditions, and what flips a “no” to “yes.”

Written by
Alec Whitten
Published on
January 16, 2026

Credit Review Explained: How Equipment Deals Are Underwritten

If you’ve ever wondered why one lender says “approved” in 24 hours while another says “declined” (or asks for a down payment you didn’t plan for), the answer is usually credit review—the underwriter’s process for deciding how likely you are to pay, how bad it is if you don’t, and how the deal can be structured to reduce risk.

In this guide, you’ll learn the exact “credit brain” behind Canadian equipment leasing decisions: the 5Cs, the three risk components (PD/EAD/LGD), what documents matter, what triggers conditions and covenants, and the fastest way to present a file that gets to “yes” without surprises.

(If you want the big picture on lease structures first, start with this overview: https://www.mehmigroup.com/blogs/what-is-equipment-financing-canada-guide-for-2026)

What “credit review” means in equipment leasing

Credit review is the lender’s way of answering one simple question: “Will we get paid back—on time—under normal and stressed conditions?”

In equipment leasing, it’s not just about your score. Underwriters also care about the asset, the cash flow behind the payments, and how clean the file is (proof, consistency, and verifiable details).

A leasing underwriter is trained to look for facts and third-party verification to avoid bad-debt losses and to assess the applicant’s ability to make the agreed payments.

Two important mindset shifts for business owners:

  • Leasing approvals are often “risk + structure” decisions, not “yes/no.” Change the structure, and the decision can change.
  • Underwriters don’t “trust your story.” They trust what can be confirmed and corroborated.

The underwriting framework: the 5Cs in plain language

Underwriters tend to organize their thinking with the 5Cs: character, capacity, capital, collateral, and conditions.

If you understand how each C is “scored,” you can predict approval odds before you apply—and fix weak spots proactively.

Character: “Do you pay your bills?”

Character is the credit behaviour signal—payment history, collections, bankruptcies, and how you manage obligations. In small businesses, personal credit often matters because it’s a proxy for how the owner treats commitments and because many deals rely on personal guarantees.

Underwriter reality: One 30-day late isn’t always fatal. A pattern of late payments, unpaid taxes, or unresolved collections usually is.

Capacity: “Can the business support the payment?”

Capacity is cash-flow strength: revenue stability, margins, seasonality, and existing debt load. Underwriters want to see that the equipment payment fits comfortably in operating cash flow.

Capital: “Do you have skin in the game?”

Capital is your equity cushion—cash injection (down payment), retained earnings, and net worth. Thin capital often means higher down payment requests, shorter terms, or added conditions.

Collateral: “If things go sideways, what is the asset worth?”

The equipment itself is the primary security in many deals. Assets that hold value and are easy to remarket reduce lender loss risk; specialized or high-wear assets increase it.

Conditions: “What’s happening in the world and your industry?”

Conditions include macro rates, industry cycles, and asset market volatility. When the Bank of Canada changes its policy rate, it influences funding costs and lender risk appetite. As of December 10, 2025, the Bank of Canada held its target for the overnight rate at 2.25%. (Bank of Canada)

The three risk components underwriters price around: PD, EAD, LGD

Every lender decision can be translated into three risk pieces:

  • PD (Probability of Default): How likely is a payment failure?
  • EAD (Exposure at Default): If default happens, how much money is outstanding?
  • LGD (Loss Given Default): After repossession/remarketing, how much do we actually lose?

Credit models formalize PD/LGD/EAD thinking (even if the underwriter doesn’t say the acronyms out loud).

What this means for you:
If you can’t change PD much (e.g., thin credit history), you can still improve approval odds by reducing EAD/LGD through structure:

  • higher down payment (reduces EAD)
  • shorter term (reduces EAD)
  • stronger collateral/asset choice (reduces LGD)
  • better documentation and verification (reduces PD uncertainty)

How an equipment deal actually moves through credit (step-by-step)

A “clean” file flows. A messy file stalls. Here’s the usual path:

  1. Intake & fraud/ID checks (does the entity exist, consistent addresses, legit vendor)
  2. Credit bureau review (personal + sometimes business)
  3. Cash-flow review (bank statements, financials, contracts—depending on size/strength)
  4. Asset review (make/model/year, hours/km, vendor type, resale market)
  5. Structure decision (term, down payment, residual/buyout, conditions)
  6. Conditions precedent issued (what must be true before funding)
  7. Funding + PPSA/security registration + insurance
  8. Post-funding monitoring (in some cases)

Underwriters use “conditions precedent” to make sure key protections are in place before money goes out—like security registrations or required valuations.

The documents underwriters care about (and why missing one stalls approvals)

Most delays aren’t “credit declines.” They’re documentation gaps.

Here’s what lenders commonly request, especially as deal size or risk increases:

  • Completed credit application (recent, signed)
  • Full equipment specs / vendor quote (make/model/year/hrs/km/new vs used)
  • Corporate profile/registry info (where possible)
  • Deal structure request (lease term, down payment, residual)
  • Bank statements (often 3 months in PDF for certain industries or weaker files)
  • For refinancing: registration, buyout, photos, reason for refinance

Those expectations show up explicitly in credit guidelines: lenders often require sector summary, structure details, bank statements (in a single PDF), and additional items for refinancing like equipment registration and buyout details.

Quick “credit file completeness” checklist (use this before you apply)

  • Do your business name, address, and ownership match across registry, bank statements, and application?
  • Do you have a single PDF of the last 90 days of bank statements (if requested)?
  • Is the vendor quote complete (serials/specs if available, delivery timeline)?
  • If private sale or refinance: do you have proof of ownership/registration and a payout/buyout quote?
  • Can you explain the purpose in one sentence (“Replace down unit; increase capacity; secure contract”)?

(If you’re comparing tax timing—CCA vs lease deductions—this is a helpful companion: https://www.mehmigroup.com/blogs/capital-cost-allowance-cca-vs-leasing)

What underwriters look for in cash flow (without turning it into accounting class)

Capacity often comes down to one question: after your normal expenses and existing debts, is there reliable room for this payment?

Underwriters typically sanity-check:

  • revenue consistency (deposits trend)
  • gross margin stability (if financials exist)
  • NSF frequency and overdraft behaviour
  • existing loan/lease payment burden

A practical mini-calculator (rough, but useful):

  • Average monthly deposits (last 3 months)
  • Minus: payroll + rent + existing debt payments + taxes set-asides
  • Equals: “free cash” available for new equipment payments

If the new payment would consume most of what’s left, expect:

  • higher down payment
  • shorter term
  • added conditions
  • or a decline unless there’s a strong contract/story + proof

BDC describes that lenders look at financial strength, assets, management credibility, and credit score when reviewing lending decisions. (BDC.ca)

How the asset changes the decision (collateral, resale, and “marketability”)

Collateral isn’t just “do you have equipment.” It’s how quickly and predictably it can be sold if needed.

Equipment leasing guidance calls out that lenders care about how well equipment maintains resale value and that many lessors are effectively collateral lenders.

Typical collateral “greens” and “reds”:

  • Greens: common-use assets with deep resale markets (standard trailers, many construction units, certain medical equipment)
  • Reds: ultra-specialized assets, heavy wear/tear profiles, or equipment with limited remarketing channels

This is also where used vs new matters: higher hours/km often increase LGD risk unless there’s strong maintenance proof, inspections, or recent major repair documentation.

(For a deeper dive on heavy equipment approvals specifically: https://www.mehmigroup.com/blogs/heavy-equipment-financing-canada-leasing-first-guide)

The deal levers that most often “flip” a file from no to yes

When a deal struggles, underwriters usually adjust structure, not just rate:

Notice how often the fix is not “shop a lower rate.” It’s “reduce risk in a way the lender can verify.”

Conditions precedent and covenants: what must happen before funding, and what gets watched after

Most business owners hear “approved” and assume the money is guaranteed. In credit terms, approval usually comes with conditions precedent—items that must be satisfied before funds are released.

Common conditions precedent include having security in place or completing professional valuations.

Post-funding monitoring (the part nobody talks about)

Some deals also include covenants—clauses that let the lender monitor performance after lending. A prudent lender prefers to spot warning signs before a missed payment.

In equipment deals, monitoring triggers can include:

  • repeated NSF events / overdraft escalation
  • tax arrears signals
  • sudden revenue drop (bank statement trend)
  • insurance lapses
  • major changes in ownership or operations

Credit checks: how to avoid “wasted” hard inquiries

A hard inquiry can stay on your credit report for up to 36 months, according to Equifax Canada. (Equifax)

That doesn’t mean you should fear applying—but it does mean you should avoid spray-and-pray applications when your file isn’t ready.

This is one reason many operators use a broker approach: reduce wasted hits by matching the file to lender programs first. (Related: https://www.mehmigroup.com/blogs/equipment-financing-broker-canada)

The Canadian tax angle underwriters won’t explain—but you should plan for

Credit teams focus on repayment and recovery, not tax optimization. But you should still plan the cash-flow impact of tax timing.

  • CRA outlines common CCA classes and rates for depreciable property used in business. (Canada)
  • CRA also explains input tax credits (ITCs) and eligibility for GST/HST registrants. (Canada)

Practical takeaway: even if lease payments are deductible and ITCs can apply, your approval still depends on actual cash flow, not tax theory. Don’t rely on “tax savings” to cover a payment.

(If you want the tax comparison guides:

The “credit memo” mindset: what a strong file sounds like

Underwriters are trained to evaluate both qualitative and quantitative characteristics in a structured way. So your job is to make the file easy to write up.

A strong file answers these questions clearly:

  • Who are we lending to? (entity, owners, experience)
  • What’s the equipment and why now? (replacement, growth, contract)
  • How will it be paid? (cash flow evidence)
  • What happens if things go wrong? (asset marketability, insurance, contingency)
  • What structure reduces risk? (term/down/residual that fits capacity)

If you’re refinancing equipment, lenders often want registration, buyout/payout, photos, and a clear reason for refinance. (Guide: https://www.mehmigroup.com/blogs/equipment-refinance-canada-cash-out-sale-leaseback)

Case study: how the same business got a “no,” then a clean “yes”

Business: Ontario-based specialty contractor (5 years operating)
Need: Replace a down unit quickly to keep a time-sensitive contract
Asset: Used equipment with higher hours than typical “A-lender” comfort

Initial outcome: Decline from a lender that wanted newer collateral + stronger financial statements.

What changed (the underwriter-friendly version):

  • Capacity proof: Provided 90 days bank statements showing consistent deposits and no NSF pattern (capacity support).
  • Collateral de-risking: Chose a slightly newer unit with better resale comps and provided maintenance/inspection documentation (LGD reduction).
  • Structure adjustment: Increased down payment modestly and shortened term to reduce exposure (EAD reduction).
  • Clear purpose narrative: One sentence: “Replace down unit to fulfil signed contract; avoid penalty/downtime.”

Result: Approval at a structure that matched real cash flow—fewer surprises, faster funding, and a plan for end-of-term options.

If you want a sense of who’s competitive for which profiles, these comparisons help:

How Mehmi approaches credit review (calm, practical)

Mehmi’s job in equipment finance is to translate your business into an underwriter-ready file—then structure the lease so the risk story makes sense (capacity + collateral + conditions), especially when a bank box doesn’t fit.

If you want a second set of eyes, share a redacted quote or the key deal facts (asset, year, use, time in business, rough revenue, and any credit landmines). We’ll tell you what an underwriter will likely flag—and what levers usually fix it.

(If you’re choosing between providers, this scorecard guide is useful: https://www.mehmigroup.com/blogs/best-equipment-financing-company-canada-2026-guide)

FAQ: Equipment credit review in Canada (6)

1) Do equipment lenders look at personal credit in Canada?

Often, yes—especially for owner-managed businesses and smaller files. It’s a key proxy for payment behaviour and personal commitment.

2) What’s the biggest reason equipment deals get declined?

Most commonly: weak capacity evidence (cash flow), collateral issues (old/specialized assets), or unverifiable information (incomplete docs).

3) What bank statements are underwriters looking for?

They’re looking for consistency: deposit trends, NSF frequency, overdraft reliance, and whether the story matches reality (seasonality included). Certain industries may be asked for the last 3 months in one PDF.

4) Can a start-up get approved for equipment leasing?

Sometimes—especially with documented industry experience and proof of contracts/work (industry-dependent). Some sectors require specific proof for 0–2 year businesses.

5) How does the equipment itself affect approval?

Collateral drives recovery risk. Marketable assets with strong resale demand reduce LGD risk; specialized or high-wear assets increase it.

6) How long do hard credit inquiries stay on my credit report?

Equifax Canada notes hard inquiries may stay on your report for up to 36 months. (Equifax)

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