All posts

Finance imaging & surgical equipment upgrades

How Canadian clinics and hospitals can finance imaging and surgical equipment upgrades using leases, refinancing, and smart working capital.

Written by
Alec Whitten
Published on
November 23, 2025

How Canadian healthcare providers can finance imaging and surgical equipment upgrades

Short answer: Most Canadian clinics, imaging centres, and surgical facilities are better off leasing big-ticket equipment like MRI scanners, CTs, C-arms, and OR towers, while using separate term and working-capital facilities for build-outs, software, and ramp-up costs. The winning strategy is to match the life of the technology and your patient volumes with the right mix of equipment leases, asset-based lending, and sale-leaseback — not to drain cash or rely on short-term, high-cost credit just to keep up with medical innovation.

Why upgrading imaging and surgical equipment is a financing problem, not just a clinical one

Upgrading imaging and surgical tech isn’t optional anymore — it’s how you stay relevant and keep patients in your system — but the price tags are large and the ROI timeline is long.

Canada’s health spending is projected around $344 billion in 2023, roughly 12.1% of GDP, and capital needs in hospitals and clinics remain high as technology evolves.  The medical devices market (excluding diagnostics) is estimated at about US$10 billion and growing at roughly 5% annually.

At the facility level, that translates into serious numbers:

  • Modern MRI or CT systems often run into high six or seven figures once you add shielding, construction, and software.
  • Surgical towers, scopes, and robotic systems can easily reach hundreds of thousands per OR.
  • Even if you’re not buying an MRI, replacing ultrasound fleets, C-arms, or endoscopy stacks adds up quickly.

Meanwhile, the revenue side has its own constraints. In 2022–23, the average cost per MRI exam was about $762, and $310 for CT in Canadian private imaging facilities.  Those fees need to cover staffing, rent, utilities, IT, and the capital cost of the equipment itself.

In that environment, tying up $500,000–$2,000,000 in upfront cash is rarely a smart move — especially for private clinics, diagnostic centres, surgical hubs, and physician partnerships. Providers across Canada are turning to leasing and structured financing to lower upfront strain, preserve cash, and stay current with rapidly evolving imaging and surgical tech.

The rest of this guide walks through how to do that thoughtfully, from a Canadian credit perspective.

Core principle: match long-life medical technology with long-term, asset-backed financing

The simplest way to think about this: don’t fund a 10-year asset with a 10-month product.

Big imaging and surgical assets are:

  • Capital-intensive
  • Highly specialized
  • Crucial to patient care and referral patterns
  • Often clinically useful for 7–12+ years (with upgrades and service)

Those characteristics point toward long-term, asset-backed structures, not credit cards, merchant cash advances, or short-term online loans.

For most healthcare providers, that means:

From a lender’s chair, that makes sense: the more your payments are backed by real equipment and predictable exam or procedure volumes, the happier everyone — including your future self — will be.

Leasing imaging and surgical equipment: why it fits healthcare so well

Key point: Leasing spreads the cost of high-tech equipment over its useful life, keeps your cash and bank lines available, and gives you flexibility when technology changes.

What types of healthcare equipment can be leased?

As a rule, if it has a serial number and a clear clinical and resale value, it probably fits inside Mehmi’s eligible equipment criteria. In imaging and surgery, that can include:

  • MRI, CT, PET-CT, SPECT, and ultrasound systems
  • X-ray rooms, DR panels, and C-arms
  • Cath lab systems and hybrid OR imaging
  • Endoscopy towers, scopes, and processor units
  • Surgical lights, tables, booms, and electrosurgical generators
  • Anaesthesia machines, monitors, infusion pumps
  • Dental and aesthetics imaging (CBCT, OPG, laser platforms)

A Mehmi equipment lease typically allows you to:

  • Finance new or refurbished systems from approved vendors or distributors
  • Roll in freight, installation, and some construction-related costs
  • Structure terms in the 5–10-year range, matching the expected clinical life
  • Leave your bank operating line available for payroll, supplies, and rent

In other words, the Siemens, GE, Philips, Canon, Hologic, Stryker, or Karl Storz logos on the side of your machine do a lot of heavy lifting in the credit decision — as long as the numbers and structure make sense.

Equipment line of credit for multi-phase upgrades

If you’re planning a staged upgrade — say, replacing ultrasound systems this year, a CT in two years, and endoscopy towers after that — an equipment line of credit can make life easier:

  • You’re pre-approved to a limit based on your financials and practice profile.
  • Each purchase becomes a draw on that facility with its own lease schedule.
  • You avoid “starting from zero” with underwriters every time you add a room or device.

For groups rolling out multiple imaging centres or expanding an ambulatory surgery brand, this kind of structure creates predictability for both the medical team and the finance team.

Vendor programs and bundled solutions

Most major OEMs and specialty distributors in healthcare have their own financing programs — but those don’t always give you the flexibility you want for term, covenants, or cross-collateralization with other assets.

A vendor program via Mehmi lets you:

  • Keep your preferred vendors (for PACS, RIS, imaging hardware, OR equipment),
  • Get them paid in full and on time, and
  • Still coordinate your funding under a single independent advisor who can also handle your other equipment financing and business-loan needs.

Using asset-based lending and sale-leaseback to pay for the next generation of equipment

Key point: If your clinic or hospital already owns good equipment, you may be sitting on the collateral you need to pay for the next wave of technology.

Asset-based lending on your equipment portfolio

In asset based lending (ABL), the lender advances a percentage of the orderly liquidation value of your equipment fleet, not just what happens to be on a bank’s general security agreement.

For a multi-site group with:

  • Legacy ultrasound, X-ray, or C-arm fleets
  • OR tables, lights, scopes, and towers
  • Sterilization and central supply equipment

…ABL can unlock a significant pool of capital you can use to:

  • Fund a flagship MRI or hybrid OR,
  • Consolidate older high-rate loans, or
  • Move from patchwork financing into a cohesive capital plan.

With medical devices, the underlying market is sizable and relatively liquid; Canada’s medical devices market is estimated at US$10+ billion and growing.  That supports the case for asset-backed facilities when structured properly.

Refinancing and sale-leaseback of existing machines

If you’ve paid cash for certain systems, or your previous financing is nearly done, a refinancing or sales leaseback can be a smart way to “recycle” capital:

  • Mehmi arranges for a funder to buy specific equipment (e.g., an older CT, a suite of scopes, DR panels) at an agreed value.
  • You lease the equipment back over a new term, continuing to use it in patient care.
  • The lump sum proceeds are used to pay for new imaging or surgical assets, renovation, or to clear expensive short-term debt.

This is especially powerful when you’re moving from, say, a 16-slice to a 128-slice CT, or from a conventional C-arm to a biplane system. The older device might still be clinically useful — and therefore financeable — even if it’s no longer your “flagship” machine.

Pairing equipment financing with working capital and project costs

Key point: Imaging or surgical upgrades are never just about the machine. You also need money for construction, software, training, and ramp-up — and those should sit on different facilities than the equipment itself.

When you plan an upgrade, factor in:

  • Construction and fit-out: shielding, HVAC, flooring, wall reinforcement, electrical/plumbing changes.
  • IT and integration: PACS/RIS upgrades, EMR integration, storage and networking.
  • Training and change management: staff training, vendor applications support.
  • Ramp-up: marketing to referrers, temporary capacity dips during installation, recruitment of additional providers.

Putting all of that onto one long-term equipment lease tends to muddle the picture. Instead, consider:

One strong opinion: avoid funding permanent assets (like a CT gantry or OR tower) with ultra-short-term products such as merchant cash advances. Those tools may have a place for very short-term gaps, but they are a poor match for multi-year clinical technology investments.

Tax and accounting angles: CCA, leases, and medical offices

Key point: The way you structure the deal affects not just cash flow but also tax and the optics of your balance sheet — which matters to partners and lenders.

On the tax side, the Canada Revenue Agency’s Capital Cost Allowance (CCA) system governs how you depreciate purchased medical equipment:

  • Smaller tools and medical instruments under $500 often fall into Class 12, which may be 100% deductible in the year of purchase.
  • Larger diagnostic and surgical equipment in medical offices often lands in Class 8, with a 20% declining-balance rate.
  • Leasehold improvements (e.g., building out an MRI suite or OR) are generally handled under leasehold CCA rules, with the rate depending on lease terms.

If you buy equipment outright or with a traditional loan, you claim CCA over time and deduct interest. If you lease equipment, the lease payments themselves are usually deductible as an operating expense, while the equipment doesn’t sit on your balance sheet in the same way (subject to accounting standards and lease type).

There’s no one “right” answer — it depends on your corporate structure, income profile, and long-term plans — but it’s almost always worth having your accountant weigh in before you finalize a large imaging or surgical financing package. Mehmi’s calculator can help you model payments, while your accountant helps you understand the after-tax impact.

What lenders look for in healthcare equipment files

Key point: A good healthcare equipment deal is about three things: the quality of the asset, the predictability of the revenue behind it, and the professionalism of the operator. The credit score is only one chapter.

When underwriting imaging or surgical equipment, lenders typically focus on:

1. The asset

  • Brand, model, and configuration (e.g., 1.5T vs 3T MRI, 64-slice vs 128-slice CT).
  • New vs refurbished, and vendor support.
  • Expected clinical life and resale value.

High-quality, mainstream platforms with strong manufacturer support are much easier to finance competitively than niche or end-of-life models.

2. The practice or facility

  • How long you’ve been operating and in what specialties.
  • Payor mix: public vs private, insurer contracts, corporate payors.
  • Referral patterns: do you have solid relationships that will actually fill the new capacity?

CIHI and the Canadian Association of Radiologists have both highlighted the importance of targeted investment in imaging capacity to meet demand and reduce wait times — but that investment has to be grounded in realistic volume projections, not wishful thinking.

3. Financial performance and cash flow

  • Past and projected revenue, margins, and cash buffers.
  • Existing debt: other equipment, real estate, lines of credit.
  • Ability to handle the new payment even if volumes ramp slower than planned.

For larger tickets, lenders may also want to see your assumptions for exam volumes, procedure mix, and staffing costs around the new equipment.

4. Security and structure

  • What collateral is being pledged (equipment, broader assets, guarantees).
  • How the new facility interacts with your bank’s security.
  • Whether it sits alongside or instead of other obligations.

Part of Mehmi’s role is to make sure your equipment financing and business-loan facilities line up properly instead of tripping over each other.

A step-by-step financing game plan for your next imaging or surgical upgrade

Key point: Treat your next upgrade like a capital project with a financing strategy — not like a large one-off purchase you scramble to fund.

Here’s a practical roadmap you can use whether you run a diagnostic imaging centre, a surgical clinic, or a multi-site medical group.

Step 1: Clarify the clinical and business goals

Before you talk brands and models, answer:

  • What gaps in access or capability are you trying to close? (e.g., add cardiac CT, shorten wait times for MRI, increase endoscopy capacity.)
  • How many more exams or procedures per month do you realistically expect to perform with the new equipment?
  • Are you replacing existing systems, expanding capacity, or both?

Your equipment should fit a clear service plan, not the other way around.

Step 2: Build a full project budget

Include:

  • Equipment quotes (hardware, software, accessories, service options).
  • Construction and fit-out for rooms and adjacent areas.
  • IT and integration work.
  • Training, applications support, and possible staffing changes.
  • Pre-opening and ramp-up costs.

This is where clinics often under-budget. If necessary, tap into Mehmi’s FAQ or blog resources or talk directly with vendors to make sure nothing obvious is missing.

Step 3: Decide what you want to lease vs fund with term loans

As a rough rule:

  • Lease / asset-backed: Main imaging systems, OR stacks, C-arms, major monitors and tables.
  • Term / working capital facilities: Construction, IT projects, training, marketing.

Your Mehmi advisor will help map this into equipment leases plus the right blend of working capital and secured support.

Step 4: Check affordability before you sign any vendor contract

Use the calculator to:

  • Explore payment ranges for different terms and structures.
  • Stress-test volumes: what if you run at 70% of your hoped-for capacity for the first year?
  • Understand what happens if rates move or your mix of payors shifts.

If the plan only works in a perfect scenario, it needs to be resized or re-sequenced.

Step 5: Get pre-approved and coordinate with your bank

Before you sign a lease or construction contract:

  • Share your plan with a Mehmi advisor via Contact Us.
  • Identify any conflicts with your bank’s security or covenants.
  • Seek conditional approvals on the equipment side and the working-capital side.

You don’t want to discover late in the game that your bank’s general security agreement is blocking a critical lease, or that a small covenant breach will derail everything.

Step 6: Execute, monitor, then consider future refinances strategically

Once your upgrade is live:

  • Track actual volumes, revenue, and downtime against projections.
  • Watch for opportunities to refinance older equipment or consolidate small facilities into a more efficient structure once your numbers stabilize.
  • Keep an eye on emerging technology and plan your next cycle early — not when the current system is already beyond end-of-life.

Mehmi’s role is to be a partner over those cycles, not just a one-time funding source.

Anonymous case study: imaging centre upgrades CT and ultrasound without draining cash

Profile (details changed for privacy)

  • Independent diagnostic imaging centre in a major Canadian city
  • Mix of publicly funded and private-pay exams (MRI, CT, ultrasound)
  • Existing fleet: aging 16-slice CT, multiple mid-life ultrasound units, X-ray and mammography

The challenge

The centre’s 16-slice CT was becoming a bottleneck with frequent downtime, and competitors were marketing higher-slice scanners with shorter exam times and better image quality. Ultrasound systems were also due for replacement.

The owners wanted to:

  • Install a new 128-slice CT scanner
  • Replace three ultrasound machines with modern platforms
  • Upgrade PACS storage and reporting tools

Total project cost approached $3 million once construction, IT, and training were included. The group had some cash and an existing bank line, but didn’t want to:

  • Drain reserves needed for payroll and rent, or
  • Take on a single large bank term loan secured by the physicians’ homes.

The financing strategy with Mehmi

Working with a Mehmi advisor, they built a layered structure:

  1. Equipment leases for CT and ultrasound
    • The new 128-slice CT and three ultrasound platforms were financed through a consolidated equipment lease package.
    • Term matched expected clinical life, with a reasonable residual.
  2. Sale-leaseback of existing ultrasound and X-ray
    • Two relatively recent ultrasound units and the X-ray room, which had been paid in cash, were put into a refinancing or sales leaseback.
    • The proceeds paid down a high-rate line of credit that had been used during COVID and covered part of the PACS upgrade.
  3. Working capital loan for IT and construction
    • PACS upgrades, storage servers, and minor room renovations were funded through a 3-year working capital loan.
  4. Line of credit for receivables volatility
    • A modest line of credit gave breathing room when insurer payments lagged.

Results 18 months later

  • CT throughput increased, reducing wait times and attracting new referrals.
  • The ultrasound refresh improved image quality and staff satisfaction.
  • Total monthly debt service was higher than before, but well within cash-flow capacity, and structured over the life of the assets rather than crammed into short terms.
  • The owners kept their personal real estate out of the security package and maintained healthy practice reserves.

The key wasn’t a single “magic” product; it was a deliberate mix of leases, sale-leaseback, and working-capital tools aligned with how the centre actually earns revenue.

FAQ: financing imaging and surgical equipment in Canada

1. Is it better to lease or buy imaging and surgical equipment?

For most Canadian clinics and surgical facilities, leasing is the better default for big-ticket equipment. A Mehmi equipment lease spreads costs over the useful life of the device, preserves cash for staff and supplies, and often gives more flexibility when technology changes. Buying outright may make sense if you’re cash-rich, very stable, and working closely with your tax advisor — but it’s usually not the starting point.

2. Can refurbished imaging or surgical equipment be financed?

Yes. As long as the equipment is from reputable vendors, properly refurbished, and supported, many funders will finance pre-owned MRI, CT, ultrasound, C-arms, and OR equipment. Mehmi can help you assess whether your list fits eligible equipment criteria and whether a lease, asset based lending, or a sale-leaseback structure makes the most sense.

3. How much down payment do we need for an imaging or surgical equipment lease?

It depends on your credit profile, equipment type, and overall structure. Some deals can be done at or near 100% financing, while others may require a modest deposit or first-and-last payments up front. A stronger practice balance sheet and solid projections can reduce the equity required. Using a calculator and talking with a Mehmi advisor early will give you realistic expectations before you sign vendor quotes.

4. Can we refinance existing medical equipment to pay for new equipment?

Often yes. If you own equipment outright or have low remaining balances, refinancing or sales leaseback can unlock capital while you continue using those assets. Combined with new equipment financing and a tailored working capital loan, this can fund significant upgrades without draining cash.

5. How do tax rules affect medical equipment financing in Canada?

Purchased equipment is usually depreciated through the CRA’s CCA system — often Class 8 at a 20% rate for larger medical office equipment, while small instruments under $500 can be fully written off under Class 12.  Lease payments are often deductible as operating expenses instead. The best approach depends on your structure and income; Mehmi can help with the financing side, and your accountant should advise on CCA and tax planning.

6. When should we talk to an advisor like Mehmi instead of just our bank?

Your primary bank is important for day-to-day banking and some credit facilities. But when you’re planning significant imaging or surgical upgrades — especially across multiple sites — a specialist like Mehmi offers:

If you’re facing a major capital decision in the next 6–18 months, it’s worth having Mehmi review your plan via Contact Us before you commit.

Internal links used

External citations used

  • Canadian Institute for Health Information (CIHI), National health expenditure trends, 2023 — Snapshot – total health spending and share of GDP.
  • Innovation, Science and Economic Development Canada, Medical devices industry profile – size and expected growth of Canada’s medical device market.
  • Canadian Medical Imaging Inventory (CADTH / Canadian Journal of Health Technologies), Imaging capacity 2022–2023 – national MRI/CT utilization and investment drivers.
  • CADTH, Use of MRI and CT in Private Imaging Facilities in Canada – average cost per MRI and CT exam in 2022–23.
  • CRA, Capital cost allowance (CCA) classes and rates – treatment of medical tools (Class 12) and equipment (Class 8) plus leasehold rules.
  • Priority Leasing, Grenke, Soluco & other Canadian lessors, Medical equipment leasing in Canada – trend of public and private providers using leasing to lower upfront costs and preserve cash flow.

Contact Us!
Read about our privacy policy.
Thank you! Your submission has been received!
Oops! Something went wrong while submitting the form.

Built for Business. Backed by Experience.