Cash-out refinance equipment in Canada: how it works, how much you can pull, lender rules, documents, taxes, fees, and a step-by-step approval playbook.
If you own equipment that’s paid off—or worth more than what you owe—equipment refinancing (cash-out) lets you convert that “metal equity” into working capital without stopping operations. In most Canadian small-business cases, the cleanest version is sale-leaseback: you sell the equipment to a financing partner and lease it back immediately, keeping it on the job while you receive cash. Mehmi Financial Group+1
This guide covers:
Key point: A cash-out equipment refinance is when you refinance an owned asset (or an asset with low remaining balance) and receive money back—not just a lower payment.
There are four common refinance paths lenders use in Canada:
If you want the “structure basics” on sale-leaseback first, Mehmi’s overview is a good primer: Sale-leaseback on equipment in Canada. Mehmi Financial Group
Key point: Cash-out makes sense when the cash you unlock earns a higher return (or prevents a costly problem) than the financing cost.
Common smart uses:
One simple framework: if refinancing prevents you from missing payroll, losing key customers, or turning down profitable work, it’s usually worth exploring. This is also why refinancing shows up in many recession playbooks: liquidity buys time and options. See: Recession-proofing with equipment financing. Mehmi Financial Group
When it doesn’t make sense:
Key point: Lenders don’t lend on what you paid—they lend on what they believe they can recover if things go wrong.
Underwriters translate this into loan-to-value (LTV) thinking and “cushion.” Covenants often include LTV monitoring and can be triggered if collateral values drop.
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In practice, the amount you can cash out depends on:
Use this to sanity-check your expectations before you apply:
Estimated cash-out ≈ (Conservative value × LTV) − existing payout − fees
To compare offers apples-to-apples, use Mehmi’s guide: Equipment financing cost calculator (Canada). Mehmi Financial Group
Key point: “Cash-out” is not just a transaction—it’s a risk signal. Lenders assume you’re pulling cash because you need liquidity, which can increase perceived default risk.
A simple underwriting framework is the 5Cs: character, capacity, capital, collateral, conditions.
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Underwriters look at credit history and payment behaviour. Even when collateral is strong, weak character forces tighter structures (lower LTV, shorter term, more conditions).
With cash-out, capacity matters more than in a “new purchase” because there’s no new revenue asset entering the business. Your story must answer:
“What will this cash do that improves stability or profitability?”
Credit guidelines for refinance files commonly emphasize that the reason for refinancing is very important, and bank statements are often required depending on the file.
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Strong capital (retained earnings, liquidity, equity) reduces risk. Thin capital makes lenders tighten.
Equipment lessors care deeply about resale value; specialized assets can be harder to move and sell.
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Rates influence payment and lender appetite. The BoC also publishes a running history of policy rate decisions, which impacts borrowing costs over time. Bank of Canada
Key point: Refinance files stall for one reason: missing collateral proof.
Many lender checklists for refinancing include:
Key point: Approval is not funding. Funding happens when conditions precedent are satisfied.
Typical sale-leaseback funding packages include signed lease docs, IDs, void cheque/PAD, original purchase invoice and proof of payment, vendor invoice/bill of sale, COI, lien search satisfied, inspections (if required), and registration transfers to the funder at funding (unless approval says otherwise).
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This is where many “I need cash fast” deals slow down—because the equipment’s paper trail wasn’t built like a lender closing.
Want a simple explainer of the structure itself? Sale-leaseback tax implications (Canada). Mehmi Financial Group
Key point: The “rate” is only part of the cost. Fees + taxes + residual/buyout shape the true outcome.
Common fee buckets include documentation/admin fees, PPSA registration/discharge costs, and taxes on payments/fees depending on province. See: How to avoid hidden fees in equipment leases (Canada). Mehmi Financial Group
If you’re benchmarking pricing, Mehmi’s rate guide helps you compare offers without getting fooled by “rate factor” talk: Equipment lease rates in Canada (2025 guide). Mehmi Financial Group
Key point: The CRA cares about use of funds and traceability.
CRA guidance on interest deductibility focuses on borrowing for business purposes and meeting conditions like legal obligation to pay and reasonableness. Canada+1
Practical implication for cash-out:
CRA’s broader business expenses guidance also reiterates that interest can be deductible for business purposes, with limits. Canada
Even when GST/HST is recoverable via ITCs, timing matters: you still pay taxes on payments/fees and recover later (depending on filing frequency). That timing can strain liquidity if you don’t plan for it—especially on large sale-leasebacks.
(Not tax advice—confirm specifics with your accountant.)
Key point: After funding, lenders monitor “early warning signals” so they don’t first learn there’s a problem when a payment is missed.
Commercial lending frameworks define:
Examples of common monitoring expectations include providing annual accounts within a set timeframe and periodic management accounts; lenders may also monitor LTV and require updated valuations in some cases.
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What that means for you:
Key point: Speed comes from removing underwriter uncertainty.
Pick the structure that matches your goal:
For a broader “start here” hub, Mehmi’s general guide is useful: Equipment refinancing. Mehmi Financial Group
Answer:
Many refinance files require recent bank statements—treat this as normal, not a red flag.
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If you’re doing sale-leaseback, plan for the full funding package (IDs, PAD, COI, lien search satisfied, registration transfer, proof of original purchase/payment, etc.).
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Key point: Liquidity of the asset drives LTV, pricing, and speed.
Two examples of “often easier” refinance categories:
If your “cash-out” is really about funding your next upgrade, read: Equipment upgrade financing strategy (Canada). Mehmi Financial Group
Business: Western Canadian contractor (incorporated), multi-crew operations
Assets: Two paid-off pieces of heavy equipment with strong resale market
Problem: Profitable jobs on paper, but cash conversion was slow (progress billing + seasonal swings). Payroll and materials were pressuring the operating line.
Goal: Pull cash out without selling capacity.
What underwriters would worry about:
What we did (leasing-first structure):
Outcome:
Cash-out funded cleanly because the lender could see:
Payoff:
The company avoided taking on more expensive short-term products and stabilized cash flow through the slow season—without parking equipment.
If you’re considering a cash-out refinance, the fastest way to get a real answer is to start with the asset: make/model/year, hours/km, photos, registration, and any existing payout. Mehmi can quickly tell you whether your equipment looks fundable for cash-out, what structure fits (payout vs sale-leaseback), and what conditions will likely be required so you don’t lose a week to back-and-forth.
Often yes—sale-leaseback is a common cash-out structure when ownership and liens are clean and the asset is marketable. Mehmi Financial Group+1
Common requirements include full equipment specs, registration, buyout (if applicable), photos (4 sides + odometer), reason for refinancing, and often bank statements.
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Because cash-out can signal liquidity stress. Underwriters want a clear story for how the cash improves stability or supports profitable growth.
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Interest deductibility depends on business purpose and meeting CRA requirements, including traceability and reasonableness. Keep clean records for use of borrowed funds. Canada+1
Usually conditions precedent: proof of ownership, lien search satisfied, insurance certificate, signed docs, and (for sale-leaseback) registration transfers and proof of original purchase/payment.
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Often yes. Covenants and reporting requirements can be used to monitor performance after funds are advanced, and lenders prefer to spot warning signs before a missed payment.
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