A Canadian step-by-step equipment financing checklist from quote to funding—documents, conditions, timelines, and the underwriter logic behind approvals.
Getting equipment financed in Canada isn’t just “apply and wait.” The fastest, cleanest approvals happen when you treat your deal like a project: you start with a fundable quote, package the right documents for the right deal type, clear conditions precedent, and avoid the common “funding stall” that happens after approval.
This guide walks you through the full path—quote → application → underwriting → approval → funding—with a practical checklist you can copy/paste. It’s written with an underwriter’s brain in mind (the 5Cs, plus what actually triggers delays), so you don’t lose a week to avoidable back-and-forth.
Internal link: If you’re deciding who to use, see When a Broker Beats a Bank for Equipment Financing (Decision Guide).
Key point: “Approved” is not the same as “funded”—funding only happens when the lender has everything required to release money and register security.
In equipment leasing, approvals often come with conditions precedent—items that must be satisfied before money moves (think: signed lease docs, IDs, void cheque/PAD, invoice, insurance, and sometimes proof of down payment). A standard vendor funding package typically includes signed lease documents, IDs, the client’s void cheque or stamped PAD, vendor invoice, proof of initial payment (if applicable), broker invoice, and an insurance certificate, among other items.
Internal link: If you’re buying on a deadline, read Equipment financing when the vendor needs payment fast.
Key point: Underwriters approve risk; funding teams verify facts. Your checklist reduces “unknowns,” which reduces delays.
Most lenders still evaluate deals using the 5Cs—character, capacity, capital, collateral, conditions. In plain terms:
Behind the scenes, the risk math often gets summarized into three ideas: PD (probability of default), LGD (loss given default), and EAD (exposure at default). You don’t need to do the math—but your file should help the lender feel confident these are controlled.
Internal link: For the “why banks say no” version of this, see Why Banks Say “No” to Equipment Deals (And What Gets a “Yes” Instead).
Key point: A vague quote creates underwriting questions—and questions create delays.
Before you apply, make sure your quote (or equipment annex) is complete. Lenders commonly expect full specs (make/model/year/hours or km, new/used) and a clear vendor legal name.
Internal link: If you’re trying to finance with little cash up front, see Equipment loan without down payment in Canada.
Key point: Pre-screening prevents the most common mistake: applying with the wrong story and the wrong structure.
A strong pre-screen answers three questions:
From an internal credit perspective, lenders often want a brief summary: sector, years in business, reason for financing, and proposed structure (term, down payment, residual).
Internal link: If a bank already passed, start here: Bank Declined Your Equipment Loan? Here’s Your Best Next Move.
Key point: A “clean file” is faster than a “good story.” Give underwriting what they need in one shot.
Here’s what shows up again and again across Canadian equipment deals, especially under $100K:
For some industries or profiles, lenders may ask for the last 3 months of bank statements, submitted as a single PDF (not scattered photos).
Internal link: Want the speed/cost tradeoffs? Broker vs Bank Financing: Total Cost, Speed, Flexibility (Side-by-Side).
Key point: Larger tickets and riskier files don’t need fluff—they need proof.
When amounts increase, lenders often require deeper documentation. For example, for larger deals (e.g., 250K+), credit guidelines may require accountant-prepared financials plus a recent interim.
Banks often think similarly: they typically review financial statements, can request interim statements, and may require projections depending on the transaction.
Startup reminder: guidelines often require a summary of prior sector experience for startups (0–2 years).
Internal link: If you’re choosing a path, read Bank vs Broker vs Private Lender: Which Gets Equipment Deals Approved Faster?.
Key point: Most funding delays come from using the wrong checklist for the transaction type.
There are three common “document paths”:
Internal link: For the “approval differences” perspective, see Broker vs Bank: The Real Approval Differences (What They Don’t Tell You).
Key point: Funding is operational—if an item is missing, the money doesn’t move.
A standard vendor funding package commonly includes: signed lease documents (all pages signed), IDs (PGs/co-lessees and sometimes signors), client void cheque or stamped PAD (direct deposit forms not accepted), vendor invoice, vendor void cheque, proof of initial payment (if applicable), broker invoice, and an insurance certificate.
Operational “gotchas” that stall funding:
Internal link: If you’re restructuring or refinancing equipment, see Restructure equipment financing in Canada: what lenders look for.
Private sale packages add seller verification and lien risk controls. Requirements can include: vendor/seller ID (mandatory even if the vendor is a corporation), lien search satisfied (with waivers and email trail), inspection satisfied (if applicable), and proof of payment / proof seller owns the equipment (if no registration).
Internal link: If you’re doing a private transaction, see Private sale equipment financing requirements in Canada.
Sale-leaseback packages often require the original purchase invoice and original proof of payment, plus lien search satisfied and registration transfers to the funder at funding (unless approval states otherwise).
Internal link: If you’re unlocking working capital, read Sale-leaseback equipment financing in Canada: how it works.
Key point: Conditions precedent are not “busywork”—they’re how the lender reduces loss if something goes wrong.
Think of conditions precedent as the lender’s way to tighten LGD (recoverability) and EAD (what they’re exposed to).
Pro tip: Ask for the lender’s “funding checklist” on day one, not after approval. It’s easier to build your file around reality than to scramble later.
Internal link: For a broader cost/speed playbook, see Alternative to bank equipment financing in Canada.
Key point: You can’t rush missing documents. Fast funding is usually a documentation strategy, not a lender miracle.
Give yourself 1 point each:
Score interpretation:
Internal link: If you’re comparing sources of capital, see Fast small business loans vs equipment leasing: what’s actually cheaper.
Key point: Tax isn’t just “deductible vs not”—timing and documentation affect cash.
CRA explains that you can generally claim an input tax credit to recover GST/HST paid or payable on eligible purchases/expenses to the extent they’re used in commercial activities. (Canada)
That matters for equipment deals because GST/HST may be handled differently depending on the structure (e.g., how payments and invoices are issued).
If you own depreciable property, CRA’s CCA class system applies (class depends on the asset). (Canada)
Canada-specific gotcha: If you’re in a cash crunch, spreading cash out matters. Lease payments often align cash outflow with revenue generation; ownership may accelerate cash outflow up front. (Confirm exact treatment with your accountant.)
Key point: Funding isn’t the end; lenders still monitor risk signals, and registrations must be completed properly.
Many funders require registration in their name post-funding, and sometimes hold a fee until it’s provided. In Canada, security interests are commonly registered under provincial PPSA systems (rules vary by province). For Ontario, ServiceOntario provides registry help and notes that registrations can be renewed for different periods depending on the type. (personalproperty.gov.on.ca)
This is why clean documentation and predictable payment behaviour keep you “quiet” in a good way.
Internal link: If you want a plain-English contract review checklist, see The 10 Questions to Ask Before You Sign an Equipment Lease or Loan.
Business: Quebec-based contractor (8 employees)
Equipment: $142,000 package (primary unit + attachments)
Timeline: vendor allocation required payment within 5 business days
Complication: deposit paid from a different account than the payer PAD + insurance broker delay
The deal likely would have been “approved” but stalled at funding because:
Using the quote-to-funding checklist:
Result: funding released on time because conditions precedent were cleared in one pass, not in three rounds of follow-ups. (Exact terms vary by lender, asset, and credit.)
If you have a quote in hand and a delivery timeline, Mehmi Financial Group can tell you quickly what checklist path you’re on (standard vendor vs private sale vs sale-leaseback) and what documents will actually be required to fund—so you can plan the purchase like an operator, not like a gambler.
Internal link: If you’re trying to fix a decline, see Equipment financing denied: what now?.
Missing funding documents—especially insurance certificates, PAD/void cheque issues, and invoice mismatches. Standard packages explicitly require these items.
Often yes, because they add seller ID verification, lien search satisfaction, and sometimes inspections.
Original purchase invoice, original proof of payment, lien search satisfied, and registration transfers to the funder at funding (unless approval says otherwise).
Sometimes—especially for certain industries or profiles. Guidelines note lenders may need the last 3 months of bank statements (in one PDF).
If you’re a GST/HST registrant, you can generally claim ITCs to recover GST/HST paid or payable on eligible purchases/expenses to the extent used in commercial activities (subject to CRA rules). (Canada)
PPSA is the provincial framework for registering security interests in personal property; registrations help establish priority and lender rights. Ontario’s registry help explains operational aspects like renewal periods. (personalproperty.gov.on.ca)