Decide whether to lease or buy equipment in Canada. Compare cash flow, taxes (CCA vs lease), GST/HST timing, and lender rules.
If you’re deciding whether to lease or buy equipment in Canada, don’t start with the monthly payment. Start with this: what’s the fastest way to get the equipment working without starving the business of cash in a slow month?
For most Canadian owner-operators, “buying” feels like the responsible choice—ownership, no payments “forever,” and an asset on the books. But in real underwriting and real cash flow, leasing often wins when you want to protect liquidity, scale faster, or keep options open.
This guide walks you through:
Note: This is business guidance, not tax or legal advice. Confirm your specifics with your accountant and lawyer.
Key point: Lease when cash flow protection and flexibility matter. Buy when the asset will be used hard, kept long, and you’re not cash-constrained.
BDC summarizes a similar baseline: buying is often cheaper over the life of the asset, while leasing usually requires less cash upfront and protects cash flow. (BDC.ca)
Key point: Most lease vs buy confusion comes from mixing legal ownership with economic reality.
Key point: The best “deal” is the one that keeps you current through worst-month reality—not the one that looks cheapest on paper.
A common mistake: comparing a lease payment to a “purchase price,” without asking what the business gives up by paying cash.
Use this simple “three-bucket” view:
Leasing tends to protect bucket #1 and #2. Buying tends to reduce ongoing payments but can drain bucket #1 at exactly the wrong time.
Contrarian but fair take: Many businesses “save money” by buying, then lose far more by missing a growth opportunity or getting squeezed during a slow quarter. The cheapest option is not always the safest option.
Key point: Leases often get approved faster when the asset is easy to value and the payment fits deposits—even if your financial statements aren’t perfect.
Underwriters think in the 5Cs:
Payment history, stability, and how you handle obligations. Fast approvals happen when the story is consistent with the bank statements.
Can the business carry the payment in a slow month? Underwriters effectively stress-test your cash flow (even informally).
Down payment, cash buffer, and overall liquidity. More “skin in the game” reduces risk and can improve terms.
How liquid is the equipment if something goes wrong? Standard assets (common trucks, forklifts, skid steers, CNC brands) underwrite faster than niche equipment.
Industry outlook and timing. Seasonal industries can still qualify—if the structure matches seasonality.
Behind the scenes, lenders simplify risk into:
Leasing can reduce loss given default because the collateral path is clearer—but only when the asset and seller are verifiable.
Key point: Leasing is usually simpler for tax timing; buying relies on CCA and can create slower deductions depending on class and rules.
CRA guidance states you can generally deduct lease payments incurred in the year for property used in your business (subject to rules and limitations). (Canada)
This is why leases are often attractive for cash flow: deductions track the payment schedule.
If you buy, you typically claim capital cost allowance (CCA) over time based on the asset’s class. CRA publishes the CCA rates by class (for example, Class 8 is 20%, Class 10 is 30%, etc.). (Canada)
(Your accountant determines the correct class and treatment.)
If your “equipment” is a passenger vehicle (or you’re leasing SUVs for the business), deduction limits matter. Finance Canada announced that for new leases entered into on or after January 1, 2025, the deductible leasing cost limit increased to $1,100 per month before tax. (Canada)
This cap can flip the math, especially for higher-end vehicles.
Key point: Even if you can recover GST/HST via ITCs, the timing of cash out matters.
CRA explains that eligible businesses can generally claim input tax credits (ITCs) for GST/HST paid/payable to the extent purchases/expenses relate to commercial activities, subject to eligibility and restrictions. (Canada)
If you file GST/HST annually or have tight liquidity, the timing difference can matter a lot.
Key point: Answer three questions and you’ll usually get the correct direction—then fine-tune the structure.
Key point: Most businesses aren’t choosing “cheapest”; they’re choosing “most survivable.”
Key point: Monthly payment is easy to manipulate. Total obligations are what matter.
When comparing lease vs buy, capture these inputs in one place:
Key point: You’re solving for “what’s the premium I’m paying for liquidity?”
Write down:
Now ask: What does that difference buy me?
If the liquidity benefit is real, the “premium” can be worth it. If it’s not, you’re overpaying.
Key point: Funding delays usually come from missing conditions precedent, not from the decision itself.
Common conditions precedent (before funds are released):
Common post-funding controls (informal “monitoring”):
This is where Mehmi’s “credit brain” shows up: a clean file with clear collateral details is faster and cheaper than a messy file with surprises.
Key point: Rates set the floor, but your file quality sets the ceiling.
As of December 10, 2025, the Bank of Canada held the policy rate at 2.25%. (Bank of Canada)
That influences lender cost of funds and can affect pricing—especially in variable-rate structures. But your pricing is still heavily driven by:
Key point: Leasing is not niche in Canada—it’s a mainstream tool used across industries.
Statistics Canada reported that the commercial and industrial machinery and equipment rental and leasing industry generated $18.1B in operating revenue in 2024, up from 2023, with Alberta and Ontario as the largest provincial contributors. (Statistics Canada)
This doesn’t prove leasing is always better—but it reinforces that leasing is a normal, widely used path for businesses that care about cash flow and flexibility.
A Canadian contractor planned to buy a used machine outright because they “hate payments.” They had enough cash to do it—barely. The issue wasn’t the purchase price; it was what the business would lose afterward: their cash buffer.
What we saw in the file (underwriter lens):
What we recommended instead (leasing-first structure):
Outcome: They avoided the “I own it, but I’m broke” trap. Three months later, a repair hit that would have forced them onto expensive short-term credit if they’d paid cash.
This is the practical point: the best decision is the one that keeps you liquid enough to stay in control.
If you’re stuck on lease vs buy, Mehmi Financial Group can help you pressure-test the decision against your worst-month cash flow, your true holding period, and the Canada-specific tax timing (CCA vs lease deductions, GST/HST). You don’t need a perfect file—just a clear story, a clean equipment quote, and realistic numbers.
Internal link placeholders (add from your approved list):
CRA guidance indicates you can generally deduct lease payments incurred in the year for property used in your business, subject to specific rules. (Canada)
Buying typically relies on CCA deductions over time based on the asset class and CCA rates published by CRA. (Canada)
Your accountant should confirm classification and treatment.
Often, leasing can cost more over the full life of the asset, but it may protect working capital and reduce cash flow risk. BDC notes buying is usually cheaper over the life of the asset, while leasing reduces upfront cash strain. (BDC.ca)
With eligible business expenses, ITCs may be available for GST/HST paid/payable to the extent the expense relates to commercial activities, but the timing differs: buying often creates a larger upfront tax cash out; leasing spreads GST/HST across payments. (Canada)
For new leases entered into on or after January 1, 2025, Finance Canada increased the deductible leasing cost limit to $1,100/month before tax. (Canada)
This can limit deductions on higher-priced vehicles.
Yes, indirectly. As of December 10, 2025, the policy rate was 2.25%, influencing lender cost of funds and market pricing, but your structure and risk profile still drive your final terms. (Bank of Canada)