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$1 Buyout vs FMV vs Fixed Buyout: How to Choose

A Canada-specific guide to choosing a lease buyout: $1 buyout vs FMV vs fixed %, with checklist, red flags, tax gotchas, and examples.

Written by
Alec Whitten
Published on
January 16, 2026

How to Choose a Buyout: $1 Buyout vs FMV vs Fixed Buyout

If you’re picking between a $1 buyout, FMV (fair market value), and a fixed buyout (like 10% or 20%), here’s the practical rule:

  • Choose $1 buyout when you’re almost sure you’ll keep the equipment for a long time and you want the cleanest “ownership path.”
  • Choose FMV when you want lowest payment + flexibility to return/upgrade—especially if obsolescence, hours, or job mix are uncertain.
  • Choose a fixed buyout when you want a middle ground: clearer end cost than FMV, but lower payment than $1 buyout.

This guide shows you how to choose the right buyout like an underwriter would—based on cash flow, asset risk, resale reality, tax treatment, and end-of-term traps.

What “buyout” really means in an equipment lease

Key point: Your buyout is the “end-of-term plan,” and it changes your payment, your approval odds, and your real total cost.

A lease isn’t just “a payment.” It’s a contract with an end-of-term option—usually one of these:

  • $1 buyout (aka “token buyout”)
  • FMV buyout (buy for whatever the asset is worth at the end, or return it)
  • Fixed buyout (a pre-set amount, often a % of original cost)

Your lender prices the deal based on how much value they expect to recover if they ever have to take the equipment back (or if you return it). That’s the credit brain behind why buyouts matter.

(If you want broader context on who offers which structures, use: Top 7 Canadian equipment leasing companies (and what each is best for).)

Why the buyout changes approval and pricing

Key point: Buyouts shift “who holds the risk” at the end—your business or the lessor—and risk shows up as payment, fees, and conditions.

Underwriters think in a few simple building blocks (no math required):

  • Probability of default (PD): could the borrower miss payments?
  • Exposure (EAD): how much money is outstanding if things go wrong?
  • Loss severity (LGD): if they repossess, how much do they actually lose after resale costs?

Buyout choice affects LGD in a big way:

  • In an FMV lease, the lessor is betting on the residual value (what they can sell it for later), so they care deeply about asset type, resale market, and wear-and-tear.
  • In a $1 buyout lease, the deal behaves more like “you’re paying it down to (basically) zero,” so the lessor is relying more on your capacity to pay across the term.
  • In a fixed buyout, the risk is shared: the lessor is still exposed to some residual risk, but you’re committing to a known end amount.

This is why lenders often request the structure upfront—term, down payment, and residual/buyout—as part of the credit package.

$1 buyout: best when you’re keeping the asset

Key point: A $1 buyout is the “commit to ownership” structure—usually higher payments, fewer end-of-term surprises.

When $1 buyout is a strong fit

Choose $1 buyout when most of these are true:

  • You expect to keep the equipment beyond the lease term
  • It’s not highly sensitive to obsolescence (or you’re okay running older iron)
  • You’ll put heavy hours on it (returning it later would be unattractive anyway)
  • You want a straightforward “this ends with ownership” plan

Pros

  • Clear end-of-term outcome: you keep it
  • Easier to plan long-term operations (no FMV surprise)
  • Often works well for core production equipment that stays central to the business

Cons / tradeoffs

  • Higher monthly payments (because there’s little/no residual holding the payment down)
  • If your business might upgrade early, payout rules can be expensive (some lessors expect most of the remaining rentals)
  • You still need to plan for sales tax on the buyout (even if it’s “$1,” other fees or taxable elements may apply depending on the contract and province)

Canada-specific tax lens (don’t skip this)

In Canada, there are situations where a lease can be treated more like a financed purchase for income tax purposes if the lessee and lessor jointly elect under Income Tax Act section 16.1—which can affect whether you claim CCA and treat payments as blended principal/interest. (Department of Justice Canada)
That’s not “automatic,” and it’s not available for every type of leased property, but it’s a real lever to discuss with your accountant when ownership is the goal. (Canada)

(For the deeper tax breakdown: Capital lease tax treatment in Canada: CCA vs lease deductions.)

FMV buyout: best when flexibility matters

Key point: FMV is usually the lowest-payment structure because you’re not paying the whole asset down—you’re paying for use, and the lessor is holding residual risk.

FMV (fair market value purchase option) typically gives you three paths at the end: return, buy at FMV, or renew/extend.

When FMV is a strong fit

FMV is often right when:

  • You might upgrade in 3–5 years
  • The equipment is exposed to tech change (IT, CNC controls, medical tech, specialty production)
  • Your utilization is uncertain (seasonal business, contract-based work)
  • You care most about cash flow today and want options later

Pros

  • Often the lowest monthly payment
  • Built-in flexibility: keep, return, or renew
  • Helps protect you from being “stuck” owning an asset that doesn’t fit in 4 years

Cons / red flags

  • The end cost is not known until the end (FMV can surprise you)
  • Returning the asset can come with return conditions (wear, damage, missing components, transport, inspection)
  • FMV disputes happen when “market value” isn’t clearly defined or appraised

The most common FMV trap

People pick FMV for the low payment but emotionally assume they’ll buy it later “for cheap.”

Sometimes that works. Sometimes the FMV is higher than expected (especially for equipment that holds value), and you end up either:

  • paying more at the end than you planned, or
  • refinancing the buyout under pressure

If you choose FMV, you should treat the buyout as a future decision and plan three scenarios now: return, buy, renew.

Fixed buyout: the middle ground most owners underestimate

Key point: Fixed buyouts (like 10% or 20%) can be the best “planning structure” when you want some flexibility without FMV uncertainty.

A fixed purchase option means you can buy at the end for a preset amount—commonly a percentage of original cost. The classic example is a 10% purchase option, which typically prices between FMV and $1 buyout on monthly payment.

When fixed buyout is a strong fit

  • You likely want to keep the asset, but you’re not 100% sure
  • You want to avoid FMV surprises
  • You want a lower payment than $1 buyout
  • The asset has a reasonable chance of retaining value (or you can live with the risk)

Pros

  • Known end amount (better planning)
  • Often a strong balance of monthly affordability + ownership option
  • Works well when you want to preserve flexibility for cash flow timing

Cons / pitfalls

  • If the asset depreciates harder than expected, you may be locked into a buyout that’s above market value
  • If you’re going to return it, fixed buyout doesn’t always guarantee easy returns—check the contract language

The buyout decision checklist (answer these 6 questions)

Key point: The fastest way to choose is to be brutally honest about your operating reality—not your best-case plan.

1) How long will you realistically keep the equipment?

  • 7+ years / “run it into the ground” → lean $1 buyout
  • 3–5 years / likely upgrade → lean FMV
  • unsure → lean fixed buyout

2) Is the equipment “core” or “project-based”?

  • Core production tool → $1 or fixed
  • Project-based / contract-driven → FMV is safer

3) What happens if the equipment is wrong in 24 months?

  • If a wrong fit would hurt badly → FMV offers a cleaner exit
  • If you can redeploy/resell easily → fixed or $1 can work

4) What’s your cash flow sensitivity?

  • Need lowest payment to stay safe → FMV (or longer term + fixed)
  • Can afford higher payment for certainty → $1 buyout

5) What’s the resale reality (not the “hope”)?

Underwriters care about resale because it drives loss severity. If resale is strong and stable, fixed/FMVs price differently than niche assets.

6) What’s your tax/accounting preference?

At a high level, leasing costs are generally deductible as leasing costs; and Canada has special rules (including the possibility of treating certain lease payments as blended principal/interest with a joint election in some cases). (Canada)
Also, GST/HST and ITCs matter for cash flow timing when you’re registered. (Canada)

Decision matrix: which buyout fits which situation?

Key point: This is the “underwriter-style” match: asset risk + your upgrade cycle + payment comfort.

How to compare quotes when buyouts differ

Key point: You can’t compare payments unless you compare the end-of-term obligation.

When you compare offers, calculate two totals:

  1. Total Cost to Own
  • (Monthly payment × term) + upfront fees + buyout amount + end fees
  1. Total Cost to Use
  • (Monthly payment × term) + upfront fees + return costs + end fees

Then ask one simple question:
“Am I buying low payment now with a big decision later?”

If you want a full offer checklist (fees, payout rules, hidden traps), use:
Equipment lease rates in Canada and Deferred payment equipment financing: how it works (both help you sanity-check structure vs affordability).

Red flags (what to watch before you sign)

Key point: Most “buyout problems” are actually contract language problems.

Red flag 1: FMV is not defined clearly

If the agreement doesn’t explain how FMV is determined (appraisal? market listings? lessor discretion?), treat that as a risk.

Red flag 2: “It’s basically $1 buyout” (but it isn’t)

Sometimes a rep says “you’ll own it at the end,” but the paper says FMV or fixed. Only the contract matters.

Red flag 3: Automatic renewals / rollover language

FMV leases often allow renewals. Make sure you know what happens if you do nothing.

Red flag 4: “PUT” / mandatory purchase language

Some end-of-term structures are effectively “purchase upon termination” (no real option). That is a different risk than a true FMV choice.

Red flag 5: Early payout penalties that kill upgrade plans

If you might upgrade mid-term, ask for payout rules in writing. A lease is priced on a money factor; some lessors expect remaining rentals (or equivalent) if you exit early.

Canada-specific tax gotchas you should plan for

Key point: Sales tax and ITCs can change cash flow—and buyouts often trigger tax again.

GST/HST rates and where tax applies

GST/HST rates depend on place-of-supply rules, and participating provinces have different HST rates (including Nova Scotia’s change to 14% as of April 1, 2025). (Canada)

ITCs (if you’re registered)

If you’re a GST/HST registrant using the equipment in commercial activities, you may be eligible to claim input tax credits (ITCs), subject to your situation and method (quick method has special rules). (Canada)

Quebec (GST + QST on purchase option)

In Quebec, Revenu Québec notes that for long-term leases, GST and QST are collected on lease payments—and the lessor must also collect GST and QST if the lessee exercises the purchase option. (Revenu Québec)

The “treat the lease like a purchase” option (sometimes)

CRA explains that for certain lease agreements you can choose to treat payments as blended principal/interest with the lessor’s agreement (and there’s a statutory framework via ITA s.16.1 elections). (Canada)
This is not a DIY move—talk to your accountant—but it’s a major reason buyout structure isn’t just “preference,” it’s strategy.

Underwriter reality: which buyouts are easier to approve?

Key point: Approval isn’t just credit score—it’s structure fit + documentation completeness.

Lenders want the structure clearly stated (term, down, residual) and the file packaged properly. In practice, many lender checklists explicitly call out structure (months, down payment, residual/buyout) in the required docs.

General pattern you’ll see:

  • Strong credit + strong financials: any structure can work; buyout becomes a business decision.
  • Tighter capacity / newer business: FMV can help payment affordability, but lenders may lean conservative on asset type and condition.
  • Used/older assets: lenders scrutinize condition and marketability; structure must match collateral reality.

And regardless of buyout, funding speed often depends on clearing conditions precedent (IDs, PAD/void cheque, insurance certificate, delivery & acceptance, etc.).

Fast “fundable file” checklist (so the buyout you chose actually closes)

Key point: A good structure doesn’t help if you can’t clear funding conditions quickly.

Most equipment funding packages commonly require:

  • Signed lease documents
  • IDs for required signers/PGs
  • Client void cheque or stamped PAD form
  • Vendor invoice/bill of sale + vendor void cheque
  • Insurance certificate

If you want the broader “get approved” context, read:
Can you be denied a secured business loan? (many of the same approval blockers apply in equipment deals).

Anonymous case study: choosing buyout the “safe” way

Key point: The best buyout is the one that fits the business’s upgrade reality—not just today’s payment.

Business: Alberta-based contracting company (5 years operating)
Asset: $140,000 excavator (used, mainstream brand)
Reality: Strong seasonal cash flow, uncertain job mix in 3 years

They were choosing between:

  • FMV (lowest payment)
  • 10% fixed buyout (middle payment, known end amount)
  • $1 buyout (highest payment, “own it for sure”)

What we pressure-tested:

  • Would they truly keep the excavator beyond 5 years, or likely rotate into a different size?
  • What happens if utilization drops and they need an exit?
  • Could they tolerate an FMV buyout surprise?

Decision: 10% fixed buyout.
Why: it preserved cash flow vs $1 buyout, avoided FMV uncertainty, and matched their “maybe keep, maybe rotate” reality. They also planned for end-of-term tax and ensured the funding package was complete early (IDs, PAD form, insurance, clean invoice trail).

Practical next steps

Key point: Pick buyout by operating intent first, then refine with cost and tax.

  1. Use the 6-question checklist and pick a preliminary buyout.
  2. Compare offers using Total Cost to Own and Total Cost to Use.
  3. Ask for buyout language in writing (especially FMV definition and return conditions).
  4. Build a fundable package early to avoid delays.

If you want help pressure-testing two lease quotes (same equipment, different buyouts), Mehmi can walk you through the underwriter lens and structure tradeoffs so you don’t buy a “cheap payment” that becomes an expensive end-of-term problem.

Related reads:

FAQ (Canada-specific)

1) Is a $1 buyout always better if I want to own the equipment?

Not always. It’s best when you’re truly keeping the asset long-term and can support the higher payment. If you might upgrade, fixed or FMV can reduce “exit pain.”

2) Why is FMV usually cheaper per month?

Because you’re not paying the asset down to near-zero. The lessor is holding a residual expectation and you’re paying for use; FMV typically offers return/buy/renew paths.

3) What’s a “fixed buyout” in plain English?

A pre-set purchase option (often a percentage of original cost). It’s commonly priced between FMV and $1 buyout on monthly payment.

4) Do I pay GST/HST on the buyout?

Often yes—sales tax applies to taxable supplies, and provincial rules matter. In Quebec, Revenu Québec explicitly notes GST and QST are collected if the purchase option is exercised on a long-term lease. (Revenu Québec)

5) Can a lease be treated like a financed purchase for tax purposes in Canada?

In some cases, yes—Canada has rules (including ITA s.16.1) and CRA guidance that can allow lease payments to be treated as blended principal/interest with a joint election. (Department of Justice Canada)

6) What’s the biggest buyout-related “gotcha” that delays funding?

Missing funding conditions (IDs, PAD/void cheque, insurance certificate, clean vendor invoice trail). It’s common to be “approved” but not fundable until the package is complete.

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