Launching a mobile business? Learn how to finance food trucks, trailers, or mobile clinics - vehicle, build-out, gear, and tips included.
A “mobile unit” is any vehicle/trailer built to deliver a service on-site. Food trucks are the most common, but lenders group them with other mobile units because the same risks show up:
Why this matters: A lender isn’t just financing a chassis—they’re financing a business that depends on:
Most approvals map to the 5Cs of credit:
Your payment history, stability, and how “straight” your file is (no surprise liens, consistent identity, clean paperwork).
Can your business reliably make the payment? For food trucks, lenders focus on cash flow consistency, not just average revenue:
How much skin you have in the deal (down payment), and whether you have a buffer for repairs and slow weeks.
How financeable the unit is:
Industry and operating conditions:
If you’re building your file from scratch, the doc expectations in a typical approval are very similar to the ones outlined in this practical checklist: BC private lender equipment lease checklist.
Food trucks are almost always funded using lease-style structures (even when people casually call it “a loan”). Here’s how the choices typically break down:
Key point: You’re building toward ownership. You’ll usually have a predictable end-of-term buyout, which is helpful for planning.
Best for:
Key point: Lower monthly payment, but more uncertainty at the end.
Best for:
Key point: Sometimes the best approval comes from separating the chassis from the kitchen build or major equipment.
Best for:
Key point: If you already own a truck (or you’re close to paying it off), you can sometimes unlock cash to fund growth, repairs, or a second unit.
Start here if that’s your situation:
Lenders typically want:
If your truck uses propane or fuel-fired cooking, the safety framework matters. Ontario’s Technical Standards & Safety Authority (TSSA) publishes requirements and guidance for mobile food service equipment (food trucks) and highlights the specific hazards created by movement/vibration and ignition sources. TSSA+1
Even outside Ontario, lenders and insurers often look for recognized codes/inspection discipline as a proxy for safety and risk control.
Rules are local, but the principle is consistent: you need an inspection pathway that matches your operating area. For example, Toronto Public Health outlines its inspection process for mobile food premises and indicates they follow up to schedule inspections after receiving required notification. City of Toronto
Underwriter logic: If you can’t legally operate, you can’t generate revenue, and the deal is higher risk—so approvals tighten.
For newer operators, lenders often underwrite using:
If your deposits are lumpy (festival-heavy), lenders will want to see that you can survive:
Brand-new operators can still be financeable, but the structure changes:
If credit is a challenge, the “terms you can realistically expect” logic is similar to other equipment categories—this guide helps set expectations: Montreal equipment financing with weak credit: realistic terms.
If you need both a unit and operating cash, it can be better to fund the truck cleanly, then look at alternatives for working capital (without messing up your equipment approval). A good overview: Alternatives to bank loans for equipment in Canada.
Two practical points many mobile operators miss:
CRA explains that to know which GST/HST rate applies, you need to know what type of supply you’re making and where it’s made (place of supply). Canada
This matters if you operate across provinces or do events outside your home base.
CRA’s guidance on eating establishments explains how supplies that are usually zero-rated can become subject to GST/HST when sold in an eating establishment context. Canada
Food trucks often fall into the practical reality of “prepared food for immediate consumption,” so you want your bookkeeping and POS tax settings correct.
And for operators registering and filing: CRA’s general GST/HST registrants guide is a good baseline reference for responsibilities and ITCs. Canada
(Not tax advice—confirm your setup with your accountant. The goal here is to avoid unpleasant surprises that can strain cash flow and hurt approvals.)
If your unit uses propane or fuel-fired equipment, you’re carrying higher operational risk. Lenders and insurers often want to see evidence that the build follows recognized safety practices.
Deal takeaway: If you’re buying used, don’t treat “it’s currently operating” as proof it’s financeable. Financeability is about documented, insurable, verifiable collateral.
Most “approved but not funded” situations happen because of missing conditions precedent. You can usually avoid that by assembling a clean package:
If you’re buying used from a private seller, follow the private sale playbook first:
And if you want the broader “approval hygiene” checklist (names, docs, and common delays), this one is useful:
Pros:
Cons:
Pros:
Cons:
Underwriter rule of thumb: The more “custom” the unit, the more the lender cares about resale. A custom interior that only works for one cuisine can be a resale headache.
Most terms are driven by:
If you want a realistic expectation-setting guide, use: How long can I finance equipment in Canada?
If you want to improve approval odds without overpaying:
If your operation is essentially a mobile kitchen build (and you’re also upgrading refrigeration/food equipment elsewhere), these related guides can help with pricing and documentation expectations:
Are you looking for a truck? Look at our used inventory (https://www.mehmigroup.com/inventory).
Scenario: An operator wanted a used step van converted into a taco concept unit. They had strong summer festival prospects but uneven deposits in the off-season.
What the initial quote got wrong:
The offer looked cheap monthly, but it relied on a high residual and assumed consistent year-round sales. It also didn’t account for the time needed to finalize inspection readiness and insurance.
How we structured it (Mehmi approach):
Outcome:
The operator launched with fewer “surprise” costs, avoided a funding delay caused by missing documentation, and had a predictable plan for ownership at maturity—so the unit didn’t become a long-term cash flow trap.
If you’re comparing offers or you’ve been told “approved pending documents,” Mehmi Financial Group can help you translate the quote language into total cost, end-of-term obligation, and approval certainty—and structure the deal so it matches your seasonality and operating plan.
Yes, but it usually requires extra diligence: lien checks, clean bill of sale, VIN verification, and sometimes more down payment because collateral risk is higher.
Often, but the more custom it is, the more lenders care about build quality, documentation, and resale. A standard layout is usually easier to fund.
Consistency and survivability: deposits, NSFs/overdraft patterns, CRA arrears signals, and whether you have enough buffer to handle repairs and slow weeks.
It depends on what you sell and where you sell it. CRA’s place-of-supply rules determine which rate applies, and “eating establishment” guidance can affect what’s taxable. Canada+1
Because they materially affect safety, insurability, and operational risk. Guidance for mobile food service equipment highlights propane-related risks in mobile environments. TSSA+1
Term depends on the unit’s age, mileage, and your file strength. Newer units and stronger cash flow generally support longer terms; older units usually need shorter terms.