Learn how Canadian equipment dealers can set up a dealer financing program to offer monthly payments, close more deals, and protect cash flow.
Canadian dealers don’t need to turn into banks to offer financing. A dealer financing program uses a specialized equipment finance partner so you can quote monthly payments, get paid in full on delivery, and let the lender take on the credit risk and collections.
This guide walks through what a dealer financing program is, why Canadian conditions make it almost essential, and a practical, step-by-step plan to build one around equipment leasing.
A dealer financing program is a structured arrangement where your dealership sells the equipment and a third-party finance company (like Mehmi) provides the money and owns or charges the asset. You focus on equipment and customer relationships; your partner focuses on underwriting and collecting payments.
In practice, that usually means:
According to Statistics Canada’s 2023 Survey on Financing and Growth of Small and Medium Enterprises (released February 2025), 49.3% of SMEs requested some form of external financing in 2023, and 6.9% requested lease financing specifically. (Statistics Canada)
So almost half your potential buyers are already thinking in terms of financing. A dealer program keeps that discussion inside your showroom instead of at a bank branch. If you need a high-level view of the tools that support these programs, Mehmi’s equipment financing overview is a solid starting point.
The short version: your customers are under more cost pressure, external financing is common, and equipment leasing has become a standard way to protect cash flow. If you don’t offer structured payments, you’re forcing buyers to solve that problem without you.
StatsCan’s latest SME survey shows:
Separate analysis of Canadian equipment finance trends suggests that a large majority of SMEs now use some form of equipment financing for their assets, including leases and lease-to-own structures. (Medium)
In other words, the typical business buyer standing in your yard or showroom is expecting to talk about payments, not just sticker price.
Canadian lenders like BDC and CWB National Leasing point out that:
A good dealer program leans into the positives (speed, convenience, lower upfront cash) while being transparent about term and total cost. Mehmi structures its equipment leases with exactly that balance in mind.
Industry trend reports on equipment financing in Canada highlight:
Dealers who can quote an affordable monthly payment on the spot stand out; dealers who can’t are easier to walk away from.
A dealer financing program isn’t just “we know a lender.” It’s a simple system with clear roles, repeatable steps, and a financing story your sales team can tell in their sleep.
You need a Canadian equipment finance specialist that:
That’s the role Mehmi plays for many dealers through its dedicated vendor program, backed by sector content such as transportation expertise and heavy equipment financing.
You don’t need a dozen products. Most dealer programs start with:
More advanced programs might add an equipment line of credit for repeat buyers who upgrade regularly.
At minimum, your internal playbook should cover:
Mehmi’s internal checklists and public FAQ are good templates for this kind of step-by-step thinking.
Customers should see financing before they ask for it:
Mehmi’s calculator can help your team and customers explore payment scenarios quickly.
Here’s a practical blueprint you can follow without hiring a consultant.
The goal here is to decide what kind of program you need, not to get lost in spreadsheets.
Answer a few questions:
This helps your partner size the program and match underwriting to your reality. Mehmi’s eligible equipment and industries overview give a sense of what’s typically financeable.
A common mistake is to chase the lowest “teaser” rate. Instead, evaluate:
Canadian advisors like BDC stress that vendor financing is convenient and quick, but buyers should still compare options and understand term and flexibility. (BDC.ca)
A good partner will be happy to have that conversation with them. You can learn more about Mehmi’s approach on their About Us page.
Once you’ve chosen a partner, you’ll typically sign a compact program agreement covering:
From there, the partner will define internal credit guidelines and documentation expectations. Mehmi wraps this into its equipment financing framework so you’re not reinventing the wheel.
Keep it simple and visible:
This is where a partner like Mehmi adds a lot of value with pre-built funding checklists and templates, plus options like refinancing or sale-leaseback if you want to unlock equity in your own equipment.
Your salespeople don’t need to become underwriters. They just need:
Mehmi’s blog and equipment leases page are handy training resources if your team is new to leasing language.
Give the program 3–6 months, then review:
Share those numbers with your partner and adjust. For example, you might change the “default” term in your quotes or highlight seasonal structures more for certain segments.
If you want a structured review, it’s worth booking a session with Mehmi via Contact Us.
BDC notes that vendor financing is attractive mainly because of speed and convenience, but it’s often less flexible than a well-structured bank term loan. (BDC.ca)
For most independent dealers, partnering with a specialist like Mehmi hits the right balance between control, speed, and risk.
The structures you lead with will make or break adoption. The goal is to match payment patterns to how the equipment generates revenue.
For many dealers, the core offerings are:
Specialist lessors also point out that leasing can offer tax advantages in some cases, but customers should confirm with their accountant. (CWB National Leasing)
CWB National Leasing and others emphasize seasonal and flexible scheduling as a major benefit: pay when the equipment is earning its keep. (CWB National Leasing)
That thinking is built into:
Mehmi has tailored offerings like Rent Try Buy for hospitality, which are particularly useful for restaurants and hotels testing new concepts or layouts.
The main focus of a dealer program should be equipment leasing. But in some situations, your customer might need working capital in parallel—for marketing, inventory, or extra staff to put that equipment to use.
In those cases, a partner like Mehmi can complement leases with:
The key is not to jam everything into a single, messy structure. Leases are for equipment; term and revolving products are for broader cash-flow needs.
Being candid, there are a few traps Canadian dealers fall into when they “dabble” in financing. Avoid these and your program will be far more effective.
If you only mention financing after a customer says the price is too high, it feels like a rescue play. Better to normalize it from the start:
“Most of our customers lease this equipment. Based on what we’ve discussed, that’s about $X/month plus tax, OAC.”
When customers see monthly payments alongside the capital cost, they focus on value and ROI instead of sticker shock.
With rates higher than a few years ago, it’s tempting to let customers rate-shop endlessly. The contrarian view:
BC and national data show that cost is increasingly a reason some firms avoid financing altogether. (ISED Canada)
Your job is to help customers see the full picture—how payments match revenue, preserve their bank lines, and keep tax and upgrade options open.
Big OEMs sometimes run full captive finance arms. For a mid-sized dealer, replicating that model usually means:
A focused dealer program with a specialist like Mehmi gives you most of the benefits of “captive-like” financing without putting your balance sheet on the line. If you later want to leverage your own fleet, you can selectively use tools like asset based lending or refinancing/sale-leaseback.
Mehmi acts as an embedded finance partner for Canadian equipment dealers rather than just a rate sheet. In practical terms, a typical program includes:
Their business loans overview shows how they can also support broader growth plans (e.g. working capital) without diluting the primary focus on equipment leasing.
If you want to explore what that would look like for your dealership, you can start with the vendor program page and then reach out via Contact Us.
Background
A regional industrial equipment dealer in Alberta sold compressors, generators and light construction gear to contractors and energy-services firms. Average deal size was $60,000, with some larger packages over $200,000.
They had no structured financing program. Sales reps would occasionally suggest “talk to your bank” or pass along contact info for a lender, but there was:
The pain
A simple look back at 12 months of quotes showed:
Feedback from lost-deal calls confirmed that many buyers struggled to align large equipment cheques with project timing and bank covenants.
The solution
The dealer partnered with a Canadian equipment finance specialist like Mehmi and set up a formal dealer financing program:
They also:
Results in the first 9–12 months
After a full season:
Perhaps most importantly, financing became part of their value proposition—not an awkward afterthought. When a customer asked “How much is it?”, the answer was naturally given as both a capital cost and an affordable monthly payment.
Referring customers to their banks means you lose control of the financing conversation. Approvals can take weeks, customers may be declined for reasons you don’t see, and your quote goes cold.
A dealer financing program is a structured partnership with an equipment finance specialist such as Mehmi. You can:
The bank may still play a role in your customer’s overall financing, but your program keeps equipment decisions moving.
In most provinces, equipment dealers do not need a separate lending licence just to introduce customers to a third-party finance provider, as long as:
BDC and other Canadian institutions discuss vendor financing as a normal part of equipment purchases, and the regulatory burden generally sits with the lender, not the dealer. (BDC.ca)
A partner like Mehmi will confirm any specific compliance points during onboarding.
Yes—if your partner is set up for it. Many banks prefer established businesses with strong financial statements. Specialist lessors are often more flexible and look at:
Canadian leasing providers actively market to new and growing businesses, and industry data suggests approvals often come through within a few business days for straightforward files. (Medium)
Mehmi’s credit approach, reflected in its equipment financing and business loans offerings, is built to accommodate more than just perfect-profile borrowers.
Often yes. Many Canadian equipment lessors will finance:
CWB National Leasing and similar providers openly describe this “one payment for the whole solution” approach. (CWB National Leasing)
Mehmi can usually structure leases that reflect your full quote, subject to underwriting and tax rules.
In a well-run dealer financing program, you’re typically funded within a few business days after:
Major Canadian leasing providers advertise quick payouts after a complete funding package is received, and a specialist like Mehmi designs its vendor program around the same expectation. (CWB National Leasing)
A typical path looks like this:
You can start that conversation through Contact Us, explore Mehmi’s vendor program, and browse related topics on the blog and FAQ.