Learn how Canadian dealers can set up profitable, compliant customer financing programs without becoming a bank, with a focus on leasing.
Dealer financing programs in plain languageTL;DR You don’t need a bank licence to offer “dealer financing” in Canada. You plug into a specialist equipment finance partner, they fund the deals, and you use payment options to close more sales.
Right now, almost half of Canadian SMEs (49.3%) are actively seeking external financing, including leases and loans.(Statistics Canada) If you sell equipment and you’re not offering a clean way to access that financing, you’re forcing customers back to their bank – and giving competitors a chance to steal the deal.
This guide walks Canadian dealers, distributors, and OEM reps through how dealer financing programs really work, what to avoid, and a practical setup roadmap.
A dealer financing program is simply a structured way for your customers to get third-party financing at the point of sale. You stay the dealer; the lender or leasing company stays the lender.
It is not:
In the Canadian equipment world, most dealer programs fall into three buckets:
You:
Your partner:
This is the lowest-friction way to start. Think of it as having “a finance desk on speed dial” without hiring staff.
Here, financing is baked into how you sell:
The program can support a menu of products:
You still don’t lend money, but from your customer’s point of view, “financing through the dealer” feels seamless.
Larger manufacturers or dealer groups sometimes go further:
In Canada, this kind of structure often rides on the back of the asset-based finance sector, which finances a huge share of equipment and commercial vehicle spending – estimated at over 40% of all capex in some recent years.(World Leasing Yearbook)
For most independent dealers, you don’t need a captive out of the gate. A tight vendor program with a strong partner is more than enough.
If your buyers can’t easily see a path to financing, many simply won’t move ahead. The data backs that up.
Statistics Canada reports that 49.3% of SMEs requested external financing in 2023, ranging from debt and leases to government programs.(Statistics Canada) A separate federal analysis of small business credit trends shows that formal debt applications actually dipped in 2024, but that’s largely because higher rates made owners cautious – not because the need vanished.(ISED Canada)
In plain English: a lot of your customers want to invest, but they’re picky about how financing fits their cash flow.
The Canadian Finance & Leasing Association (CFLA) estimates that asset-based finance and leasing consistently fund a large chunk of business investment in equipment and vehicles – with new business volumes in the asset-based finance market well over $100 billion annually in recent years.(cfla-acfl.ca)
If you’re not plugged into that ecosystem, you’re fighting uphill against:
After peaking at 5%, the Bank of Canada has cut its key rate down to 2.25% as of late 2025, with the last move in October.(Bank of Canada) That’s a huge relief compared to the tightest parts of the cycle, but borrowing costs are still meaningful.
A well-structured dealer financing program lets you:
In short: if you sell capital equipment in Canada and you don’t have a financing strategy, you’re handing that lever to someone else.
Good dealer programs are boring in the best possible way: consistent, predictable, and easy for your team to use.
You don’t need ten lenders. You need one or two that:
A partner like Mehmi can sit between you and a range of funders, so you’re not forcing customers through a single box. Their Equipment Financing and Business Loans offerings are designed to mix and match.
My contrarian view: sending everyone “back to their main bank” is not a financing strategy. Banks are excellent at some things; niche equipment isn’t always one of them.
From your customer’s point of view, structures should feel simple:
Leasing should be the default:
For repeat buyers, a revolving Equipment Line of Credit can simplify repeat purchases.
Only when the need is clearly working-capital-driven (staffing, marketing, inventory) should you pivot to a Business Loans solution.
Not every asset is equally financeable. You and your partner should agree on:
This is where you avoid surprises like: “We thought we could finance that 25-year-old crane with 20,000 hours.” Maybe you can – but it might be via Refinancing or Sales Leaseback or a different risk approach.
Documentation is where deals live or die. A solid program has:
This is the unglamorous piece that separates “we tried dealer finance” from “dealer finance now closes 40% of our deals.”
You don’t need a 50-page project plan. You need a concrete sequence your team can follow.
Two quick questions:
Even a rough tally gives you a baseline. If you already have Mehmi deals, you can review your own numbers in their systems or simply talk through trends with them.
With your partner, sketch a simple product menu by segment:
This isn’t a legal document; it’s a cheat sheet so your reps know what’s realistic.
The golden rule: talk about payment options early, not as a rescue move when someone says “too expensive.”
Practical moves:
“Are you thinking cash, bank line, or would you like to see a monthly payment option as well?”
Keep it as light as possible for your customer:
The goal is that a busy owner-operator can apply from their phone without digging up half their filing cabinet.
Work with your partner to agree on:
This is where Mehmi’s role as an independent advisor matters: they coordinate between funders and you, so your rep isn’t calling five different lenders to chase status.
A dealer financing program lives or dies with your sales team.
Give them:
Clients who succeed with dealer programs revisit training every quarter, not once a year.
Measure:
If those numbers aren’t improving after a few months, something is off in your process, your product menu, or your partner fit.
The cleanest dealer programs make leasing the hero and layer other tools on top only when needed.
Leases are aligned with how equipment is used:
They also sit in the same ecosystem as sale-leasebacks and refinancing. A customer might:
Sometimes the right answer isn’t “let’s lease it,” it’s:
That’s where facilities like Mehmi’s Equipment Line of Credit or broader Working Capital Loan products come in.
As a dealer, you don’t need to get into the weeds; you just need to open the door to those conversations.
You can run a dealer program without stepping on regulatory landmines – if you stay in your lane.
Be clear that:
This aligns with how BDC and other crown lenders talk about partnering with intermediaries through wholesale and specialty finance programs – you’re part of the distribution, not the licence holder.(BDC.ca)
In the current environment, lenders still care about:
Pitching “everyone approved, no income check” is a fast way to damage your reputation and your partner relationships.
You’ll see sensitive information:
Work with a partner who uses secure portals or encrypted email. Keep your own storage of personal data to the minimum needed, and consider referencing Mehmi’s FAQ or About Us pages if clients want more comfort around process and privacy.
A good dealer financing program is never completely “done.” You tune it like you would your inventory and pricing.
Every quarter, ask:
If the answers are “yes,” you’re on the right track even if a few individual deals feel painful.
If approvals are taking too long or certain asset types are constantly declined:
Remember: the asset-based finance industry is big, but not infinite. It tends to favour assets with real resale value and proven sectors.(cfla-acfl.ca)
Mehmi isn’t a bank. That’s a feature, not a bug.
Because Mehmi works across multiple funders and structures – from Equipment Leases and Heavy Equipment Financing to Truck Repair Financing and Invoice or Freight Factoring – your dealer program can meet customers where they actually are instead of pushing a single product.
If you’re a transport-focused dealer, for example, it matters that your partner truly understands the economics of highway tractors, tankers, logging trucks and bucket trucks. Mehmi’s Transportation Expertise is built for exactly that. Are you looking for a truck? Look at our used inventory (https://www.mehmigroup.com/inventory).
When you’re ready to explore a structured program, a practical next step is a short planning call via Contact Us. You can also browse current articles on the Blog to see how other Canadian businesses are using leasing and alternative financing.
The dealer:
A mid-sized Western Canadian dealer selling a mix of used highway tractors, trailers, and heavy construction equipment. Historically, everything was sold either cash or “go deal with your bank.”
The pain points:
Step 1: Baseline and customer profile
Together with Mehmi, they looked at 18 months of sales:
They also noted their strongest segments: regional haul and heavy construction support.
Step 2: Program design
Mehmi helped design a simple three-tier menu:
A simple grid showed what was usually financeable and what would always be “hard work.”
Step 3: Implementation
The dealer:
Mehmi:
Step 4: Results after six months
Crucially, the dealer never became a lender. They became the easiest place in town to both find the right unit and sort out payments, which is what their customers really wanted.
1. Do I need a licence to run a dealer financing program in Canada?
If you are simply referring customers to licensed lenders or leasing companies and not extending credit in your own name, you typically do not need a separate lending licence. You’re acting as an intermediary. That said, regulations can vary and change; always confirm with your finance partner and professional advisors.
2. Is dealer financing the same as vendor take-back (VTB) financing?
No. VTB or “vendor financing” in M&A usually means the seller personally carries a note for part of the purchase price.(BDC.ca) Dealer financing for equipment is different: your customers sign leases or loans with third-party funders; you get paid as the equipment supplier.
3. Are dealer financing programs only for new equipment?
Not at all. Many programs finance used equipment, private sales, and even sale-leasebacks. The key is asset quality and resale value. In practice, late-model units with good demand are easier; very old or highly specialized units might require more structure or equity.
4. How do interest rate changes affect my dealer financing program?
As the Bank of Canada has brought its policy rate down from 5% to around 2.25%, lenders have been able to sharpen pricing and terms, though spreads and risk margins still matter.(Bank of Canada) Rather than obsessing over the last 0.25%, focus on matching terms to asset life and giving your customers clear, predictable payments.
5. What’s the biggest mistake dealers make when they “add financing”?
The most common mistake is treating financing as a last-minute save instead of a core part of the offer. If you only mention financing after someone balks at price, you’ve already lost momentum. Integrate payment options into your marketing, quoting, and first conversations.
6. How do I get started with Mehmi on a dealer financing program?
A simple starting point is to contact Mehmi through Contact Us and share a snapshot of your inventory, typical customers, and average ticket. From there, you can co-create a program using tools like Equipment Leases, Equipment Line of Credit, and targeted Business Loans where they truly add value.