Learn how deferred payment equipment financing works in Canada (60/90/180 days), true costs, lender rules, and smarter alternatives.
Deferred payment equipment financing (often marketed as “buy now, pay later”) can be a smart move in Canada when the equipment won’t generate revenue immediately—think installation, training, onboarding staff, seasonal work, or delayed contract start dates. But it’s not “free months.” In most cases, you’re either extending the term or capitalizing payments/interest, which changes total cost and sometimes changes approval requirements.
This guide explains exactly how deferrals are structured, what lenders look for, what it really costs, and how to decide between deferring payments versus using alternatives like seasonal payments, step-up schedules, working capital, or sale-leaseback.
Note on links: I’m using “internal link” prompts in the body so your CMS team can hyperlink them. A full list of internal links (URLs + suggested anchor text) is included in the QA appendix.
Deferred payment equipment financing means your payment schedule starts later than the funding date, or one or more payments are skipped, based on an agreed structure. The goal is cash-flow timing—not “cheating the math.”
It is not:
A good lender will only defer payments when the file still underwrites cleanly (capacity + collateral + conditions).
Deferred programs vary by lender, but most fall into one of these structures.
Key point: the structure you choose determines whether your payment goes up, stays similar, or the term simply gets longer.
One common approach lenders use for deferrals is pausing payments for a defined period and extending the term by the same period. (ATB Financial)
If your priority is speed + flexible structures, see our internal link: How fast equipment financing really works in Canada (internal link).
A payment deferral gets approved most often when it matches a real operational timeline.
Key point: If the equipment can’t generate revenue until it’s installed or certified, deferring payments can align cash outflow with cash inflow.
Examples:
Key point: If your slow season is predictable (not random), lenders may accept a deferral or seasonal schedule because the “conditions” are understood.
Examples:
If seasonality is your main challenge, our internal link Seasonal payment equipment leasing in Canada (internal link) is often a better fit than a pure “skip payment” promo.
Key point: If you invoice later (or get paid on milestones), deferrals can bridge the gap—but only if the underlying job is real and documentable.
In these cases, lenders may ask for:
If your bigger issue is slow-paying customers, the better tool may be receivables-based working capital (internal link: Asset-based lending vs business loans in Canada).
Deferrals get denied when they look like a patch for structural weakness rather than timing.
Key point: If the business is already strained, a deferral can increase probability of default later—especially if it’s paired with high fees or a steep step-up.
Key point: If the asset is older, niche, hard to value, or a private sale with weak documentation, lenders may refuse deferrals and instead ask for a larger down payment or shorter term.
If you’re being pushed into a big down payment because of the deferral request, see internal link: Down payment requirements for equipment financing in Canada (internal link).
Key point: Deferrals reduce early cash commitment, so lenders need more confidence in the story. If bank statements, revenue, or ownership details don’t reconcile, deferral programs often disappear.
If you’re aiming for speed with minimal paperwork, use internal link: Equipment financing with minimal documents in Canada (internal link).
Deferrals are approved when the lender’s risk view still works across the “credit brain” framework.
Key point: Deferrals change timing, not risk. Underwriters still need comfort in the same five areas.
Key point: Most delays happen after approval because borrowers underestimate funding conditions.
Common conditions precedent include:
Internal link: Equipment financing requirements and document checklist (internal link) helps you build a “no-questions” package.
Key point: Deferral deals can be monitored more closely because lenders want early warning before missed payments.
What lenders often watch:
Key point: The “free months” are rarely free—either the term extends, or the missed payments get spread across remaining months, increasing cost.
Your lender may implement the deferral by extending the term (common) or by re-amortizing, depending on their policy. (ATB Financial)
Before you accept a deferral, ask:
If the lender can’t answer clearly in writing, treat it as a red flag.
Internal link: Equipment financing fees in Canada: how to compare offers (internal link).
Key point: A deferral request often changes structure even if the equipment price is the same.
Here’s what may change:
If your real goal is simply a lower monthly payment, a deferral may be the wrong lever. Internal link: How to lower your monthly equipment payment in Canada (internal link).
Key point: Deferring payments changes cash timing, and cash timing matters for taxes, bookkeeping, and reporting—even if “the deal feels the same.”
CRA guidance explains how leasing costs (lease payments) can generally be deducted for property used in your business, with special considerations for passenger vehicles. (Canada)
If you own the equipment, depreciation is generally handled through capital cost allowance (CCA) classes and rates, which CRA lists by class. (Canada)
Canada sets deductible limits for passenger vehicle leasing costs, updated periodically by Finance Canada. (Canada)
This doesn’t affect every truck or commercial unit the same way, but it’s a common “gotcha” for owner-operators using a passenger vehicle class.
Practical takeaway: Talk to your accountant about how your structure impacts tax reporting and cash flow timing—especially around year-end.
Key point: The best deferral request is framed as a cash-flow timing tool with evidence—not as a desperation move.
Include:
Request:
Include:
Internal link: Used equipment financing in Canada: age limits, hours limits, decline reasons (internal link).
Have ready:
If you’re buying privately, expect more steps (ownership proof, lien checks, inspections). Consider internal link: Private sale equipment financing in Canada (internal link).
Key point: Many borrowers ask for deferrals when what they actually need is a different structure.
Seasonal schedules match the real earning cycle and can be underwritten more comfortably than a pure “payment holiday.”
Lower early payments with planned increases later (best when you have signed work or a predictable ramp).
If the equipment deal is fine but cash flow timing is tight, working capital solutions may be more appropriate than pushing the equipment structure into something unnatural. Internal link: Working capital vs equipment financing in Canada (internal link).
If the real issue is liquidity, sale-leaseback can unlock cash without waiting for a deferral promo. Internal link: Sale-leaseback in Canada: maximum cash-out and qualification rules (internal link).
A Canadian contractor purchased a used piece of equipment in late winter to be ready for spring jobs. The equipment was essential, but revenue from it wouldn’t start for 6–8 weeks due to scheduling and mobilization.
Challenge: The contractor didn’t want the new payment hitting the account before the equipment generated revenue.
What we structured:
Why it approved (underwriter logic):
Outcome: The business secured the equipment when pricing and availability made sense, without squeezing cash flow during the non-earning period.
If you’re considering deferred payments, don’t start by asking “Can I skip 90 days?” Start by asking: “Which structure matches my revenue timing and still underwrites cleanly?” The right answer is sometimes a deferral—but just as often it’s seasonal payments, a step-up schedule, or a different structure that preserves cash without inflating total cost.
Internal link: Equipment financing overview (internal link) and Equipment leases (internal link) are the best starting points if you want a quick structure review.
Not always. Sometimes it’s a delayed first payment; other times payments pause and the term extends, or payments get re-amortized. Ask exactly how the lender treats the deferred period. (ATB Financial)
Usually, yes—either through extra interest, extended term, or pricing adjustments. Make sure you compare total cost and end-of-term terms, not just the first few months.
It can, because the lender is taking less early cash flow. Expect stricter requirements on collateral quality, clarity of the story, and sometimes a higher down payment.
Often yes, but it depends on age/hours/condition and how easily the asset can be valued. Used or specialty equipment may reduce deferral flexibility.
CRA provides guidance on deducting leasing costs (lease payments) for business use, and lists CCA classes for owned depreciable equipment. (Canada)
Yes. Higher borrowing costs can tighten underwriting because lenders stress-test payment affordability. (Bank of Canada decisions influence overall market rates and lender pricing.) (Bank of Canada)