Yes, you can finance privately bought equipment in Canada. Learn lender requirements, lien checks, documents, timelines, and pitfalls.
Buying used equipment privately can save real money — until you realize most lenders treat private sales as higher-risk than dealer purchases.
Here’s the good news: private-sale equipment financing is absolutely doable in Canada, and it’s often structured as equipment leasing (not a traditional loan) so you can protect working capital, keep liquidity, and still secure the asset.
This guide walks you through:
If you’re optimizing cash and growth, this pairs well with our CFO-style take on why many operators choose to finance equipment without hurting cash flow in Canada.
A private sale is simple: the seller is not a recognized equipment dealer, and the transaction is typically between:
Key point: lenders don’t dislike private sales — they dislike unknowns. With a dealer, they get standardized invoices, known processes, and (often) established payee verification. With a private seller, underwriters have to be sure the deal is real, clean, and enforceable.
That’s why the same machine that gets funded easily at a dealership can get slowed down privately if:
Yes, you can finance privately purchased equipment in Canada. In practice, you’ll typically be approved faster and cleaner when you can provide evidence for three things:
If you want the “structure-first” view of how leasing is positioned vs other options, start with leasing vs financing equipment in Canada.
Here’s how credit teams often think about private-sale risk in plain English — using the 5Cs framework:
This is the big one for private sales:
If you like comparing approval pathways (and when a broker improves the odds), see why using an equipment financing broker can mean faster approvals and better structure.
Risk math, simplified (how lenders price it):
Private sales can increase LGD if the collateral can’t be recovered cleanly (bad title / liens / unclear ownership), so lenders respond with tighter conditions and sometimes higher pricing.
Here’s the practical difference:
If your priority is speed, it also helps to understand why “one application to multiple lenders” matters — it widens the appetite for private-sale collateral. Here’s the breakdown: one application, multiple lenders: why that matters.
Most delays happen because one of these is missing or inconsistent. Build your package like an underwriter would:
Important: if a deposit was paid, lenders often want proof the money came from the borrower’s account (fraud prevention).
Summary: If you buy equipment privately without a lien search, you can accidentally buy someone else’s collateral.
In Canada, liens on equipment are commonly registered under provincial PPSA/PPSR systems. For example, Ontario provides “Access Now” and PPSR enquiry tools for registering and searching security interests. Review Ontario’s guidance here: Register a security interest or search for a lien (Ontario) and the Ontario PPSR enquiry portal. (Ontario)
Practical rule: run searches based on what’s relevant to the asset:
If a lien shows up, you’ll typically need:
Summary: The fastest private-sale financings are the ones where the buyer sets the rules early: conditional offer, verified seller, clean paperwork.
Before you shake hands, bake in terms that keep you safe:
This isn’t being difficult — it’s being bankable.
Underwriters hate ambiguity. Provide:
If you’re unsure what details change approvals and pricing, use this quick guide: top equipment financing mistakes to avoid.
If the seller refuses:
…that’s a red flag. Not always fraud — but it often becomes unfundable.
If there’s an existing lender involved, you may need a direction to pay so the financing company can pay out the lienholder properly before title transfers.
Private sale usually means used equipment — so term and residual matter.
A leasing-first approach might look like:
If you want a simple planning tool, run scenarios with our equipment payment calculator.
Summary: If the equipment can’t “carry itself,” you’re financing a headache.
Estimate whether the payment is realistic using a conservative margin:
If your monthly payment is $2,100 and the equipment only generates $1,400 of reliable contribution — the issue isn’t “approval.” It’s ROI.
For deeper thinking on returns, see how to calculate ROI on financed equipment.
Summary: In private sales, funding is often gated by “conditions precedent” — items that must be satisfied before money moves — and followed by basic compliance expectations after funding.
In plain language:
This is normal risk control — especially when the collateral might be hard to recover if paperwork is messy.
Summary: GST/HST treatment can look different in a lease than in a private cash purchase.
In a private sale, the seller may or may not charge GST/HST depending on whether they’re a registrant and the nature of the transaction. But in a lease, GST/HST generally applies to the lease payments, and CRA guidance treats many leases (including motor vehicles over three months) as a series of separate supplies per lease interval. See CRA’s GST/HST guidance in RC4022 and place-of-supply rules. (Canada)
Practical takeaway: don’t compare “cash price” to “lease payments” without considering tax timing and cash flow.
Related: if you’re debating whether to pay cash or finance, this helps frame the real tradeoff: paying cash vs financing equipment — what’s smarter?
Summary: Sometimes the smartest move is to walk away — even if the price is great.
Private-sale financing is often a bad fit when:
In those cases, two alternatives often win:
Business: Small excavation and grading contractor (Ontario)
Goal: Buy a used skid steer with attachments from a retiring operator (private sale)
Purchase price: $78,000
Challenge: Seller wanted a quick close and refused “long paperwork”
We set expectations with a clean, simple process:
This is the core private-sale lesson: speed comes from readiness, not from skipping steps.
Mehmi typically helps make these files “fundable” by packaging the deal the way credit teams expect, so you don’t learn requirements one surprise at a time.
Yes, many do — but individual sellers usually trigger extra verification (ID, void cheque, bill of sale, lien search, and sometimes inspection).
Sometimes, yes — but expect a tighter structure (higher down payment, shorter term, stronger collateral requirements, or additional documents). Clean paperwork matters even more when credit is stretched.
Often, yes. That’s common in leasing-style transactions and helps reduce fraud risk. It also ensures the payee name and banking details match the seller verification documents.
You can still finance it, but the lien usually must be discharged as part of closing. A direction-to-pay process may be required so proceeds clear the old secured party properly.
Not always, but it’s common for older equipment, higher dollar amounts, or specialized assets. Think of inspection as “collateral proof” — it reduces uncertainty.
If your line of credit is needed for inventory and operations, leasing can preserve working capital. If you want a side-by-side comparison of options business owners actually use, see: equipment financing vs LOC vs credit card.
If you’re buying privately and want to move fast without taking lien/title risk, Mehmi can help you structure the offer, assemble the funding package, and place it with lenders that actually accept private-sale files.
(And if you’re wondering whether working with a broker is worth it at all, here’s a straight answer: is it worth using a loan broker?)