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Working Capital: Refinance vs Sale-Leaseback

Need working capital? Compare refinance vs sale-leaseback in Canada—cash-out limits, payments, tax timing, docs, and a decision checklist.

Written by
Alec Whitten
Published on
January 16, 2026

Need Working Capital? Refinance vs Sale-Leaseback in Canada

If you need working capital, the best choice usually comes down to one simple question: are you trying to lower/reshape an existing payment, or are you trying to convert owned equity into cash today? Refinance is typically about re-pricing or re-amortizing; sale-leaseback is about unlocking equity while the asset stays in service.

Below is a practical, underwriter-style guide (Canadian context) to help you choose without accidentally trading a short-term cash win for a long-term squeeze.

The “don’t overthink it” decision rule

Key point: Pick the option that matches what you actually own and what you actually need.

  • Choose a refinance when you already have a financed asset (or a lease payout) and you need lower payments, term reset, or consolidation—and you might pull some cash out, but payment relief is the main goal.
  • Choose a sale-leaseback when you own equipment free and clear (or nearly) and you want cash now for payroll, inventory, tax arrears, a slow-pay customer cycle, or a growth ramp—without taking the machine offline.

If you want a deeper explainer on how sale-leaseback proceeds are estimated, use Mehmi’s step-by-step guide: Calculate an Equipment Sale-Leaseback.

If you’re specifically chasing payment relief, start here: Equipment Refinance in Canada: When It Lowers Your Payment.

First: name your working-capital problem (because structure follows cause)

Key point: Underwriters don’t just ask “how much?” They ask “why now—and what changes next month?”

Here are the most common working-capital “types,” and what usually fits best:

1) A timing gap (good business, slow cash conversion)

Examples: Net-30 became Net-60, seasonal inventory build, large customer concentration.

  • Usually best: a structure that matches timing (often working-capital products), or a sale-leaseback on owned equipment to bridge the gap—if the business is otherwise healthy.
  • Underwriter note: you’ll need a clean explanation of the cycle and why it normalizes.

2) A margin squeeze (cost inflation or pricing lag)

Examples: wages up, input costs up, you can’t reprice contracts quickly.

  • Often best: fix pricing + reduce burn first; then use financing as a bridge.
  • Contrarian but fair take: if you’re structurally cash-flow negative, cash-out refis and sale-leasebacks can become “expensive oxygen.” They keep you alive but can prevent the operational fix because payments rise.

3) A growth ramp (you’re investing ahead of revenue)

Examples: hiring before contracts start, opening a new bay, expanding territory.

  • Often best: sale-leaseback (if you have equity) or refinance (if you’re consolidating), paired with a clear growth plan and a conservative payment buffer.

BDC’s definitions are useful here: a line of credit is typically short-term, flexible borrowing for operating needs during a cash crunch. (BDC.ca)

If you want a “what bucket is this?” guide, see: Working Capital vs Equipment Financing (Canada) Guide.

The underwriter lens: how lenders decide “yes” on refinance vs sale-leaseback

Key point: Both deals are evaluated with the same credit brain—just with different emphasis.

The 5Cs (plain-language version)

  • Character: Do you pay as agreed? Any avoidable surprises?
  • Capacity: Can cash flow handle the payment after the transaction?
  • Capital: How much skin/equity is in the deal?
  • Collateral: If things go sideways, is the asset resellable and insurable?
  • Conditions: Industry risk, economic cycle, contracts, seasonality, concentration.

Risk components (the “credit math” without the math lecture)

  • Probability of default: does the story look stable?
  • Exposure at default: how big is the outstanding balance likely to be?
  • Loss given default: how much could the lender recover from the equipment?

This is why sale-leasebacks are often conservative on advance rates—lessors want cushion in case they must repossess and resell.

Option 1: Equipment refinance (what it is, and when it’s smarter)

Key point: Refinance is best when you can reduce risk (or at least make it look reduced) while improving cash flow.

What “refinance” can mean in the real world

In leasing-first Canada, “refinance” often shows up as one of these:

  • Payment reduction refi: lower rate, longer amortization, add residual, or adjust structure.
  • Term reset: stretch the term to free monthly cash flow (watch total cost).
  • Consolidation: bundle multiple units into one new schedule.
  • Cash-out refinance: value supports more than the payout, so you pull equity out.

If your main goal is to unlock cash (not just lower the payment), this Mehmi guide is the closest match: Equipment Refinance Canada: Cash-Out (Sale-Leaseback).

When refinance usually wins

  • You have a high-cost or badly structured existing obligation (rate/term mismatch).
  • The asset is still strong collateral, but you need a more realistic payment.
  • You want to protect (or avoid pressuring) your bank operating line by moving debt to equipment.

If you’re actively weighing an operating line vs equipment-backed liquidity, this is a helpful internal comparison: Equipment Refinance vs Line of Credit (Canada).

Refinance red flags (when it quietly backfires)

  • You extend the term beyond the equipment’s real remaining useful life. Underwriters hate “papering over” old assets.
  • Your payment drops but your total cost jumps (especially if fees + term stretch are large).
  • You refinance without a story. Lenders often ask for the “reason for refinancing”—because the reason tells them whether risk is going down or up.

Option 2: Sale-leaseback (what it is, and when it’s smarter)

Key point: Sale-leaseback is best when you have real equity and you need cash quickly—and you can document ownership cleanly.

In a sale-leaseback, the business sells equipment to the funder (paper sale), receives cash proceeds, and immediately leases the equipment back so operations continue.

If you want a simple overview before you go deep, start here: Sale-Leaseback in Canada: Unlock Cash Fast.

When sale-leaseback usually wins

  • You own equipment free and clear (or close to it).
  • You’re facing a short-term squeeze (inventory buy, tax payment, payroll bridge).
  • You need speed and don’t want to interrupt production.

The honest downsides (read this before you do it)

  • It can be more expensive than you expect if you’re “selling” a weak collateral story.
  • It adds fixed payments—so if your cash problem is structural, the deal can tighten the noose.

Mehmi has a dedicated breakdown worth reading: Sale-Leaseback Disadvantages.

The cash math: a simple estimator you can do in 3 minutes

Key point: Don’t guess. Model net proceeds and the new monthly obligation side by side.

Net cash you can unlock (quick estimator)

Use this rough sequence (lenders do something similar):

  1. Estimate financeable value (FMV or supported value)
  2. Multiply by advance rate (LTV)
  3. Subtract payouts/lien discharges (if any)
  4. Subtract fees (documentation, registration/PPSA, appraisal/inspection if required)

Mini “calculator” (fill in your numbers):

  • Estimated FMV: $____
  • Advance rate: ____%
  • Existing payout/liens: $____
  • Fees/closing costs: $____
  • Estimated net cash ≈ (FMV × advance rate) − payout − fees

Want a walk-through with leasing terminology (rate factors, residual impact)? Use: How to Calculate Lease Rate Percentage.

Rate environment reminder (Canada)

Your exact pricing depends on credit, collateral, and term—but base rates matter. As of December 10, 2025, the Bank of Canada’s target for the overnight rate was 2.25%. (Bank of Canada)

Canadian tax + GST/HST “gotchas” that change the real cost

Key point: The best “deal” on paper can still be a cash-flow problem if tax timing is misunderstood.

CCA vs lease deductibility

  • In general, CCA classes determine depreciation rates for owned depreciable property (and the class depends on the asset type). (Canada)
  • Lease vs ownership tax treatment can differ, and elections can matter—especially for “capital lease” style structures.

If you want the deeper tax framing (in plain language), see: Capital Lease Tax Treatment Canada: CCA vs Lease Deductions.

GST/HST on lease payments (cash-flow planning)

GST/HST generally follows place-of-supply rules for a sale, lease, or other taxable supply. (Canada)
Practically, that means each lease payment can carry GST/HST, which affects monthly cash flow even if input tax credits offset it later.

For the practical version (how operators actually budget this), see: HST/GST on Equipment Leases in Canada.

(Always confirm specifics with your accountant—especially if you’re dealing with mixed-use, cross-province operations, or unusual asset categories.)

What lenders will ask you for (and why missing one item stalls funding)

Key point: Most “slow deals” aren’t credit problems—they’re paperwork problems.

Refinance document expectations (typical)

From a credit guideline standpoint, refinance packages often emphasize:

  • Full equipment specs
  • Registration
  • Photos (all sides + odometer where applicable)
  • A clear reason for refinancing
  • Bank statements (often requested depending on profile)

Sale-leaseback funding package basics (typical)

Sale-leaseback packages often require:

  • Signed lease documents
  • IDs for guarantors/signors
  • Void cheque / PAD form
  • Invoice / bill of sale (lessee as seller)
  • Original purchase invoice + original proof of payment
  • Lien search satisfaction
  • Registration transfers to the funder’s name

A small but common “Canadian reality”: direct deposit forms may be rejected in favour of a void cheque or properly stamped PAD form.

Private sale nuance (if your “equity” story involves a private transaction)

If the equipment came through a private sale, lenders can require extra proofs (vendor ID, proof of payment trail, lien search satisfied, etc.).

The fastest decision checklist (print this, use it)

Key point: If you can answer these 10 questions cleanly, you’ll usually pick the right structure—and get approved faster.

A. Fit check

  • Is the cash need temporary timing or ongoing shortfall?
  • Do you have owned equipment equity that’s documentable?
  • Will the new payment still leave a monthly buffer?

B. Collateral check

  • Is the asset easy to resell (mainstream make/model, clean condition)?
  • Can you provide registration, serial/VIN, photos, insurance?

C. Approval story (what underwriters listen for)

  • What changed that makes the deal safer after closing?
  • What’s the use of funds—specific and measurable?
  • What’s the “plan B” if the next 60 days are soft?

Realistic case study (anonymous): choosing refinance vs sale-leaseback

Key point: The “best” option was the one that protected monthly breathing room and kept the operating line from getting squeezed.

Business: Canadian metal fabrication shop (15 employees)
Problem: A large customer stretched terms from Net-30 to Net-75. Payroll and steel suppliers couldn’t wait. The business needed ~$220K of working capital for 90 days.

Assets on hand:

  • CNC machine (owned free and clear, strong resale market)
  • Forklift (small remaining lien)
  • Service truck (older; less attractive collateral)

Two paths modeled:

Path 1 — Refinance only

  • Refinance the forklift to reduce payments and attempt small cash-out.
  • Result: modest cash unlocked (payout ate most of the value), payment improved slightly, but it didn’t solve the immediate liquidity hole.

Path 2 — Targeted sale-leaseback on the CNC (plus keep forklift as-is)

  • Sale-leaseback on the CNC at a conservative advance rate.
  • Net proceeds covered the 90-day gap after fees and lien checks.
  • Payments were structured with a realistic term and buyout option—so the shop didn’t “win today and lose next quarter.”

Why it approved quickly (underwriter lens):

  • Character: clean repayment history
  • Capacity: the new payment fit inside realistic cash flow even under a conservative month
  • Collateral: the CNC’s resale liquidity made lenders comfortable
  • Conditions: the customer contract was real; the issue was timing, not demand collapse

Outcome: The shop bridged the receivables gap, avoided maxing the operating line, and returned to normal cash conversion within two billing cycles.

A calm next step (no pressure)

Key point: You don’t need a perfect spreadsheet—you need a clean story, clean documents, and a structure that leaves a buffer.

If you want a quick second opinion, Mehmi can sanity-check your asset list (what’s financeable vs not), estimate realistic net proceeds, and structure payments so the deal still works if you have a weaker month.

If you want the broader foundation first, read: What Is Equipment Financing? Canada Guide for 2026.

FAQ (Canada-specific)

1) Which is faster in Canada: refinance or sale-leaseback?

Often sale-leaseback can be faster if ownership proof and lien/registration are clean. Refi speed depends on payout statements, asset verification, and whether the lender needs bank statements or updated financials. (Packaging completeness is usually the real driver.)

2) How much cash can I pull out?

It’s usually bounded by value × advance rate − payouts − fees. Sale-leasebacks often use conservative LTV cushions because the file starts with a working-capital need.

3) Will this affect my bank operating line of credit?

It can. Sometimes equipment-backed liquidity reduces pressure on the bank line; other times, added fixed payments can tighten covenants or borrowing base comfort. BDC describes a line of credit as flexible short-term borrowing for daily operating costs during a cash crunch—so lenders watch it closely. (BDC.ca)

4) Do I pay GST/HST on lease payments?

Often, yes—lease payments can be treated as taxable supplies, and place-of-supply rules determine the applicable rate. (Canada) (Confirm specifics with your accountant for your province and deal structure.)

5) What documentation mistake delays funding most often?

Missing proof of ownership / original purchase invoice, incomplete lien discharge evidence, or void cheque/PAD mismatches are common stall points (especially on sale-leaseback and private sale files).

6) What’s the biggest mistake owners make when they’re stressed for cash?

They optimize for maximum cash-out instead of survivable monthly payment. A deal that “solves today” but eliminates buffer is exactly what underwriters fear—because it increases default probability and forces the lender to rely on collateral recovery.

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