A practical Canadian guide to financing pet store inventory, grooming buildouts, and expansion—what lenders check, structures, and safer options.
Pet stores are “simple” businesses that can become cash-flow complicated fast: inventory is heavy and frequent, grooming is equipment- and buildout-driven, and expansion usually hits before your retained earnings catch up.
This guide explains how pet store financing works in Canada, with a lender’s lens:
We’ll also translate what underwriters actually care about (the 5Cs), and give you a few practical tools (mini calculators + checklists) so you can make a decision without “searching again.”
Key point: The business can be profitable on paper but still short on cash because inventory, rent, and staffing don’t wait.
Three common cash pressure points in Canadian pet retail:
Canada’s pet market backdrop matters here. Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada reported $6.7B in 2024 retail pet food sales in Canada. Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada That spend is real—but you only benefit if you can keep shelves stocked without breaking working capital.
Key point: Match the funding structure to what you’re paying for—inventory, buildout, or growth runway.
Inventory is a repeating need. The best funding is usually revolving (you pay it down and re-borrow):
Start here for a plain-language working capital overview: https://www.mehmigroup.com/services/business-loans/working-capital-loan
Buildouts are one-time(ish), and grooming equipment has a useful life. That’s where leasing-first usually wins:
If you’re financing equipment, don’t default to short-term cash products—compare leasing structures: https://www.mehmigroup.com/blogs/equipment-leasing-canada
Expansion needs runway: extra inventory, staff, and marketing before revenues stabilize. Common structures:
A good starting point for ABL (when it fits): https://www.mehmigroup.com/blogs/asset-based-lending-in-canada-what-it-is-who-its-for-and-how-it-works
And for unlocking cash from owned assets: https://www.mehmigroup.com/blogs/sale-leaseback-on-equipment-in-canada
Key point: Approval is less about your passion for pets and more about whether your cash flow can absorb risk.
A classic underwriting framework is the 5Cs of credit:
In plain terms, a lender is asking:
Even non-bank lenders think like this:
Your job in a financing request is to reduce uncertainty with clean statements and a believable plan.
Key point: The trap is funding long-term problems with short-term money.
Inventory funding goes wrong when:
Use this before you accept any facility.
Inventory runway (months) = Cash available for inventory ÷ Average monthly inventory spend
Now stress-test it:
If you don’t have a forecast, build a basic one first: https://www.mehmigroup.com/blogs/cash-flow-forecast-canada-free-calculator
Factoring primer: https://www.mehmigroup.com/blogs/how-invoice-factoring-works
Key point: A grooming room is a mini-production line—design it and finance it like one.
Typical grooming buildout categories:
Leasehold improvements often get treated differently for tax depreciation (CCA). CRA lists Class 13 as “leasehold interest” and notes CCA rules depend on lease terms. Canada
You don’t need to memorize tax classes—but you do want your financing structure to reflect reality:
If you’re deciding between buying vs. leasing equipment, start with the leasing-first guide: https://www.mehmigroup.com/blogs/rent-vs-finance-equipment
Key point: Expansion is underwritten like a “new business inside your existing business.”
Underwriters typically want clarity on:
Even great operators get surprised by:
Your financing request should explicitly budget the ramp.
You don’t need perfect numbers. You need numbers that are defensible and don’t assume instant perfection.
For a broader “how to package a financing request” guide: https://www.mehmigroup.com/blogs/complete-guide-to-requesting-a-business-loan-in-canada
Key point: Many owners focus on rate, but lenders also care about conditions, covenants, and monitoring.
Banks and lenders often include:
In a retail context, “monitoring” can look like:
This isn’t meant to punish you—it’s how lenders reduce risk and keep facilities stable.
Key point: If a product is “easy,” it’s often expensive—and pet retail margins don’t always tolerate expensive money.
If you’re tempted by very fast funding, pause and run the inventory runway calculator above. Fast money is sometimes useful, but it becomes a problem when it turns into:
If you’re already being declined by banks, don’t assume “no” means “no options.” Start here: https://www.mehmigroup.com/blogs/private-lending-in-canada-a-guide-for-business-owners
Key point: A clean file can be the difference between “approved” and “approved quickly on better terms.”
A strong pet-store financing package usually includes:
Document checklist: https://www.mehmigroup.com/blogs/business-loan-documents-checklist
If you’ve been declined before, this is worth reading: https://www.mehmigroup.com/blogs/why-business-loans-get-rejected
Business: Independent pet store in Ontario adding grooming (no identifying details)
Situation: Strong retail traffic, but grooming required plumbing upgrades, equipment, and staffing ramp.
Pain point: Owner didn’t want to drain cash reserves and then be unable to restock core food SKUs.
What the owner initially considered: A single lump-sum facility to cover everything.
What we structured instead (the “right shape” of money):
Why this worked (underwriter logic):
Outcome: The grooming room hit break-even after the initial ramp, retail stayed stocked, and the owner avoided “growth by cash crunch.”
If you’re building your own plan, start with: https://www.mehmigroup.com/blogs/working-capital-loans-2025-practical-guide-for-smes
Mehmi typically helps pet retailers by structuring the deal, not just finding “a loan”—so inventory, buildouts, and expansion each get the right kind of financing. If you want a second set of eyes, bring your last 6 months of bank statements, your lease details, and any buildout/equipment quotes, and we’ll map the best-fit options (working capital + leasing-first where appropriate).
Often, yes—depending on bank statements, margins, and structure. Revolving working capital facilities and certain ABL structures can fit without real estate, but documentation quality matters.
Statistics Canada’s NAICS code 453910 (Pet and pet supplies stores) includes establishments retailing pets, pet food/supplies, and it may also include grooming services. Statistics Canada
Usually a blend: lease the grooming equipment (so it pays over time), and fund leasehold improvements with a structured facility aligned to the lease term. CRA’s CCA guidance includes Class 13 leasehold interest, which is a useful reminder that buildouts are tied to lease terms. Canada
Most business borrowing prices are influenced by the Bank of Canada policy rate. As of December 10, 2025, the Bank of Canada’s target for the overnight rate was 2.25%. Bank of Canada+1
Most operators underestimate the ramp. Plan for overlapping rent, opening inventory, early hiring, and 3–6 months of “less-than-target” sales in the new location.
Bank statements, sales breakdown (retail vs grooming), margin by category, lease + landlord permissions, equipment quotes, and a simple cash flow forecast. Use this checklist: https://www.mehmigroup.com/blogs/business-loan-documents-checklist