Typical down payment ranges for equipment financing in Canada, what drives them, and how to structure a lease to keep upfront cash low.
When Canadian business owners ask about down payments for equipment financing, they’re really asking two things: (1) “How much cash do I need to get approved?” and (2) “How do I keep that cash low without getting trapped in a bad deal?”
Here’s the practical answer: most approvals are about reducing lender risk. The down payment is one of the easiest levers to pull—especially when the business is newer, the asset is used/older, or the credit story is mixed. In many cases, you can lower (or reshape) the upfront cost by choosing the right lease structure, improving the “fundability” of the equipment, and packaging the file the way underwriters actually think.
If you want a broader primer first, start with Mehmi’s overview: What Is Equipment Financing? Canada Guide for 2026.
Key point: In equipment deals, “down payment” can mean different cash components depending on whether it’s a lease or a loan. So before you compare offers, you need to compare apples-to-apples upfront cash.
Most Canadian equipment financings fall into one of these buckets:
One reason leasing is so popular is that it can reshape the upfront requirement—sometimes reducing the “classic down payment” by using residuals or structuring payments to match cash flow. If you want the full leasing walkthrough, see Equipment Leasing in Canada: 2026 Guide.
Key point: Down payments are risk-based. Stronger credit + stronger cash flow + stronger equipment = less money down. The reverse is also true.
This aligns with what we see across Canadian SME equipment deals—and it’s consistent with Mehmi’s own benchmarks (including the scenarios in Equipment Loan Down Payment).
Key point: A down payment is not “punishment.” It’s a risk control. Underwriters are paid to avoid surprise losses, not to admire the equipment.
A simple way to understand this is the 5Cs of credit (how most lenders think, whether they admit it or not):
That “capital” C is where down payment lives. And in risk math (without turning this into a textbook):
In other words: money down is one of the fastest ways to turn a “maybe” into an approval—but it’s not the only way.
(If you’re building your application package, this internal lender checklist is the fastest route to “fundable”: )
Key point: Down payment is negotiable only when you improve the risk story. These are the levers that actually move the number.
Newer businesses are harder to score because there’s less history to prove stability. Many lender programs treat 0–2 years differently and may ask for more upfront—unless you can show strong operator experience and clean bank behaviour.
What helps: contracts/work orders, proof of experience, and bank statements showing consistent deposits.
A lower score or recent delinquencies often leads to more money down. Even when the business is decent, lenders use credit as a quick proxy for repayment habits.
BDC’s common breakdown is: Poor 300–559, Fair 560–659, Good 660–724, Very Good 725–759, Excellent 760–900. (BDC.ca)
What helps: show current stability (clean last 90 days), not just explanations.
Contractors, transportation, hospitality, and seasonal operators can absolutely get approved—but the structure has to match the slow months.
What helps: seasonal payment structures, step-up/step-down plans, or a term that doesn’t choke working capital.
Related read: Step-Down Payment Plans for Equipment Leasing (Canada).
High monthly obligations compress capacity. When capacity is tight, lenders often ask for more upfront to reduce exposure.
What helps: shorten the ask, choose a more liquid asset, or structure a residual so the payment fits.
Standard, in-demand assets usually require less down. Weird/specialty assets often require more because resale is uncertain.
What helps: choose equipment with a strong resale market, provide comparable listings, and avoid “hard-to-price” builds.
Older used equipment can still be financeable, but you may see higher down payment requirements—especially if the asset is near major maintenance thresholds.
This shows up directly in lender documentation rules (e.g., repair invoices for major work on trucks or high-km units).
Smaller ticket deals often have streamlined approvals. Larger deals usually demand more documentation—and sometimes a stronger borrower contribution.
BDC’s business-loan prep list explicitly includes proof of funds availability for down payment and purchase documents/quotes.
Private sales can be done, but lenders typically want tighter controls: clean bill of sale, proof of ownership, payout letters, verified registration/VIN/serials, and controlled disbursement.
What helps: buy from reputable dealers, provide inspection reports, and keep the paperwork clean.
Many owners budget the equipment price and forget tax timing.
For leases, CRA notes leases generally include GST/HST (or PST where applicable) on the lease amount, while some costs like insurance/maintenance are separate. (Canada)
And depending on the asset, there are specific GST/HST rules around where the vehicle is registered and lease duration. (Canada)
What helps: treat taxes as part of your cash-flow plan, and don’t empty your operating buffer just to reduce down payment.
Key point: The goal isn’t “lowest money down.” The goal is “lowest money down that still keeps total cost and flexibility sane.”
Here are the most reliable strategies we use in real approvals:
A properly structured lease can reduce upfront cash by using:
If you’re comparing quotes, do it by total cash and total cost, not just “monthly.” Start here: Equipment Lease Rates Canada: 2025 Guide & Tips.
Underwriters want equipment that is:
A clean quote/invoice is often the single biggest speed + approval lever. If you want the lender-grade doc list: Documents Needed for Equipment Financing in Canada.
Sometimes you can reduce the initial “cash down” by using:
The trick is to ensure the structure doesn’t create a balloon risk you can’t comfortably manage.
If you own equipment free-and-clear (or close), a sale-leaseback can sometimes free working capital—without a giant cash injection upfront (the details matter, and not every asset qualifies).
Underwriters hate two things: missing documents and unclear story.
A tight package usually includes:
If you want the step-by-step checklist format, use: Equipment Financing Application Checklist (Canada).
Key point: Many “surprise” costs happen at funding, not approval. Plan for them early so the deal doesn’t stall when you’re trying to take delivery.
A standard funding package often requires:
Real-world tip: if you pay a deposit to a vendor, keep proof that it came from the same account on your PAD/void cheque—lenders often match these to prevent fraud and misdirection.
Key point: The best down payment is the one that improves approval odds without draining your operating buffer.
Use this quick mental model:
If you want a full cost walk-through (loan vs lease math), use: Equipment Financing Cost Calculator Canada (Free) + Full Guide.
Key point: We usually win approvals by stacking small advantages—not by arguing with the lender.
The situation (Ontario service contractor):
A 3-year-old service business needed a used $165,000 piece of equipment to take on a higher-margin contract. Owner credit was “fair,” deposits were consistent but seasonal, and the asset was used with enough hours that one lender got nervous.
Initial lender response:
Approval was possible—but with 30% down and tight conditions.
What we changed (the “stacking” approach):
Outcome:
The deal moved to a structure that effectively reduced the upfront burden to a much more manageable upfront amount (first payment + fees + a smaller cash contribution), while keeping the monthly payment inside the business’s “average month” capacity.
Why it worked:
The lender got comfort on collateral + capacity, and the borrower kept enough liquidity to operate normally after delivery.
Key point: Most “money down” spikes are caused by avoidable uncertainty.
If you’re trying to minimize upfront cash, the fastest path is: (1) get a clean quote, (2) decide what cash you can truly contribute without stress, (3) package the file like an underwriter.
Mehmi can help you compare structures (not just rates), reduce funding surprises, and keep your upfront cost realistic for your cash cycle.
If you want a quick refresher on the language lenders use, skim: Equipment Financing Glossary: 20+ Key Terms Explained.
And if you want to reduce approval friction before you apply, use: Pre-Approved Equipment Financing Canada: How-To (2026).
Sometimes—usually on strong files with highly fundable equipment. More commonly, “0 down” means no classic cash down, but you still pay first payment + fees at signing.
Expect more upfront unless you have strong operator experience and clean bank statements. Many lenders treat 0–2 years as startup risk and ask for additional comfort.
For leases, GST/HST generally applies to lease payments, and CRA notes leases often include GST/HST (or PST where applicable) in the lease amount. (Canada)
(Exact treatment depends on the asset, province, and your tax registration—confirm with your accountant.)
It can, but it may weaken the file—because it increases monthly obligations and reduces “capital” strength. Underwriters prefer down payments from real liquidity, not new debt.
It can be treated similarly, but lenders often require proof of payment and may require it to match the lessee’s funding account (void cheque/PAD).
Not always. A bigger down payment reduces risk and can improve pricing, but draining cash can create operational stress. Often the smartest move is a balanced down payment plus a structure that fits your slow months.