Buying used equipment from a private seller? Learn how financing works in Canada, required documents, lien checks, GST/HST issues, and approval tips.
Buying equipment from a private seller (Marketplace, Kijiji, retiree sale, farmer-to-farmer, owner-operator to owner-operator) can save real money—until one missing document turns your “great deal” into a funding delay, a lien problem, or equipment you can’t insure properly.
Here’s the key takeaway: private sale equipment financing is absolutely possible in Canada, but lenders treat it differently than dealer purchases because the risk isn’t just “credit.” It’s title, lien, fraud, and condition risk. The fastest approvals happen when you package the deal like an underwriter: clear ownership, clean documentation, verifiable equipment details, and a structure that survives your worst month.
This ultimate guide covers:
Key point: A private sale means you’re buying from a non-dealer seller, and that changes how a lender verifies ownership and pays out funds.
Private sale usually includes:
Because there’s no dealer invoice and dealer compliance process, lenders replace that with stricter verification.
If you want the high-level overview first (and then come back here for private-sale specifics), this companion guide is helpful: https://www.mehmigroup.com/blogs/equipment-leasing-in-canada-2026-guide
Key point: Lenders aren’t “picky”—they’re protecting themselves from the only two private-sale disasters: (1) a lien and (2) a fake or unprovable asset.
Private sales create underwriting friction for five reasons:
The equipment might still be collateral for someone else’s loan or lease. If a lien exists, the buyer can end up in a fight they never signed up for. Lenders often require a personal property security search (provincial PPSA/PPSR) to confirm whether a lien is registered—Ontario, for example, provides PPSR search tools for liens. (Ontario)
Private sales can include scams: fake listings, altered serial numbers, “deposit-only” traps, or sellers who won’t verify identity.
A dealer often reconditions equipment and provides documentation. Private sellers may not.
A lender can fund fast when the file is clean. A private sale becomes slow when there’s no proper bill of sale, missing serial/VIN, unclear specs, or no proof the seller has the right to sell.
Insurance providers want clear equipment details. If the equipment can’t be insured, it can’t be funded.
Key point: Even when people say “private equipment loan,” most private-sale approvals are structured as equipment leases because they’re collateral-driven and easier to control.
Common private-sale structures:
Loan-style financing exists, but in private sales it can add friction because the lender wants tighter control of payout, title verification, and security registration. Mehmi’s “leasing-first” approach is to build the approval around the equipment and cash flow so funding is practical—especially in used/private transactions.
If you’re deciding which structure gets approved more often, read: https://www.mehmigroup.com/blogs/equipment-loan-vs-lease-canada-which-approves-easier
Key point: A private sale file is approved when the lender is confident about the business and confident the equipment is real, owned, and clean.
Lenders typically evaluate using the 5Cs:
Do you manage obligations and provide straight answers? Private sale deals require trust because the lender is funding something they didn’t source.
Can your business carry the payment in a slow month? In private-sale deals, bank statements matter a lot because they show real cash movement.
If you don’t have perfect financial statements, you can still be fundable—this guide helps: https://www.mehmigroup.com/blogs/equipment-financing-with-limited-financial-statements-in-canada
How much cushion do you have? Private sales often need more upfront contribution because collateral risk is higher. If down payment is your concern, start here: https://www.mehmigroup.com/blogs/down-payment-requirements-for-equipment-financing-in-canada
Is the equipment financeable, verifiable, and easy to resell if things go sideways? This is why new vs used rules matter: https://www.mehmigroup.com/blogs/new-vs-used-equipment-financing-canada-rates-terms-2026
What must be true before funding? This is where “approved” deals become “stuck.” Private sale conditions usually include lien checks, seller verification, proof of ownership, photos, and controlled payout steps.
Underwriters are quietly managing:
Private sales increase LGD risk (harder recovery/resale if documentation is weak), so lenders respond with conditions, lower advance rates, or higher upfront.
Key point: If you provide the right documents upfront, private-sale funding can move quickly. If you don’t, it becomes a slow-motion negotiation.
Here’s the lender-grade list most private-sale deals need:
A strong bill of sale includes:
Lien searches are typically provincial. Ontario’s PPSR system allows lien searches and registrations. (Ontario)
Alberta also provides a personal property registration search process, including serial-number searches for certain property types. (Alberta.ca)
Lenders often will not hand money to the buyer for a private sale. They’ll pay the seller directly (and if there’s a lien, they may pay the lienholder first), after conditions are met.
To reduce back-and-forth, use this approval checklist: https://www.mehmigroup.com/blogs/equipment-financing-in-canada-approval-requirements-and-documents-checklist
Key point: If the seller won’t provide ID, won’t show the serial/VIN, or won’t sign a real bill of sale—walk away, even if the price is great.
That’s not paranoia. It’s an underwriting reality:
Mehmi sees more deals saved by walking away early than by trying to “make it work” with a seller who refuses basic verification.
Key point: This is the fastest, cleanest workflow lenders and brokers use to fund private sales without drama.
Before you commit, confirm:
If you’re unsure what equipment types typically qualify, start with the broader overview: https://www.mehmigroup.com/services/equipment-financing
Run the appropriate provincial lien search process (PPSA/PPSR). Ontario and Alberta both provide official pathways to search liens. (Ontario)
If a lien exists, you’ll need a clear payout plan (often paying the lienholder directly).
Make it specific, not generic. Include serial/VIN, price, date, and lien statement.
Keep it simple:
If you want a speed-focused package guide: https://www.mehmigroup.com/blogs/get-approved-for-equipment-financing-fast-canada
Most private-sale approvals become easier with:
Seasonal structures explained here: https://www.mehmigroup.com/blogs/seasonal-payment-structures-for-equipment-leasing-canada
The usual last-mile blockers:
Key point: Private-sale deals can be fast, but they’re rarely instant because verification steps are real.
Key point: GST/HST and ITCs aren’t just “tax topics”—they directly affect cash flow and documentation requirements in financing.
CRA’s ITC guidance emphasizes that you need sufficient documentary evidence to substantiate an ITC before claiming it. (Canada)
In private sales, this becomes important because a casual receipt might not meet what your accountant (or CRA) expects for ITC support.
CRA also notes you generally claim ITCs only for the portion of GST/HST that relates to consumption or use in your commercial activities. (Canada)
CRA has specific guidance about the treatment of used goods (including in HST contexts and situations involving registrants). (Canada)
Practical advice: if the seller is a registrant, GST/HST charging and invoicing expectations may differ than if they are not. Align your bill of sale/invoice documentation with how your accountant intends to record the purchase.
Mehmi practical note: Even when GST/HST is recoverable, it’s still a timing issue. Don’t structure a deal assuming “I’ll get it back instantly.” Build your cash flow plan around when you actually claim.
If you want a leasing-first breakdown of GST/HST on financed equipment: https://www.mehmigroup.com/blogs/gst-hst-input-tax-credits-on-financed-equipment-canada
Key point: The strict steps are not only for the lender—they reduce the chance you buy a problem.
Common lender safeguards:
This can feel annoying, but it’s the difference between:
Key point: Private sale equipment financing can look cheap monthly, then surprise you with fees, payout math, or residual stress.
Compare offers using:
Use this practical comparison guide: https://www.mehmigroup.com/blogs/equipment-financing-cost-calculator-canada-free-full-guide
And if you want a focused fees explainer: https://www.mehmigroup.com/blogs/equipment-financing-fees-in-canada-how-to-compare-offers
Key point: If you can produce the items below quickly, your private-sale deal becomes financeable much faster.
A Canadian contractor found a used piece of equipment through a private seller at a strong price. The contractor wanted to move quickly to secure the deal.
Initial problem: The seller provided only a basic text-message “receipt,” wouldn’t share clear serial number photos, and wanted a deposit immediately. No lender would fund that.
What changed:
Outcome: Funding moved forward because the file went from “high fraud/title uncertainty” to “verifiable collateral + survivable payment.” The real unlock wasn’t finding a “riskier lender”—it was making the transaction underwriteable.
Mehmi’s role in files like this is typically packaging and structuring: ensuring the lender sees a clean story, clean collateral, and clean conditions so approvals actually fund.
Key point: If the equipment is too old, too niche, or the seller won’t cooperate, financing is often the wrong battle.
Consider alternatives when:
If your real need is cash flow rather than this specific piece of equipment, you may be better served by a cash flow or asset-based facility (and then buying the equipment with cash). One option to understand is ABL: https://www.mehmigroup.com/services/equipment-financing/asset-based-lending
If you’re buying from a private seller and you want to know whether it’s financeable before you waste time, Mehmi Financial Group can review the equipment details, confirm what documents lenders will require, and recommend a structure that’s realistic for your cash flow.
The goal isn’t just approval—it’s a deal that funds and a payment you can carry in your worst month.
Yes. Many lenders will finance private sales, but they usually require stricter documentation: seller verification, a detailed bill of sale, lien searches, and serial/VIN confirmation.
Because the equipment could still be collateral for someone else’s debt. Lien search systems vary by province (PPSA/PPSR). Ontario and Alberta both provide official pathways to search liens. (Ontario)
Often, yes—because private sales carry higher title/condition risk. A larger upfront reduces lender exposure and can help approvals.
It depends on the transaction details and whether the seller is a registrant. If you’re claiming ITCs, CRA emphasizes that you need sufficient documentary evidence and ITCs are generally limited to the portion related to commercial use. (Canada)
At minimum: seller ID, bill of sale with serial/VIN, equipment photos, lien search comfort, bank statements, and insurance readiness.
Paying a deposit before verifying seller identity, serial/VIN, and lien status. If the seller won’t cooperate with basic verification, walk away