How to finance equipment from a private seller in Canada: lien searches, bill of sale, inspections, tax/registration gotchas, and deal structures that fund.
Buying used equipment from a private seller can save real money—but private sale paperwork is where good deals go to die. The fastest path is treating your private purchase like a lender closing: prove who owns it, prove it’s lien-free, prove what it’s worth, and keep the payment trail clean.
Here’s what you’ll be able to do after reading:
Who this is for: Canadian business owners buying used equipment (trucks/trailers, construction, forklifts, shop gear, manufacturing, etc.) from a private seller—Kijiji/Marketplace, industry contacts, retirements, or off-farm/off-fleet sales.
How we wrote it: From an underwriting lens using real private-sale funding package requirements and Canadian compliance/tax realities.
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A private sale is any equipment purchase not supported by a standard dealer invoice and dealer process—often a sale from an individual, a small corporation, or a business liquidating assets.
Why lenders get stricter: a dealer sale usually comes with predictable paper trails (invoice format, business identity, wiring instructions, warranty norms). A private seller sale can have:
That’s why private sales often carry more funding conditions than standard vendor purchases (even when your credit is strong).
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Internal read if you want the quick comparison view: Private sale vs dealer equipment: how to finance either (Mehmi). Mehmi Financial Group
Yes—private sale financing is common. The key is understanding that “equipment loans” in casual conversation often end up as lease-to-own or structured equipment financing because it’s cleaner for collateral control.
In practice, lenders fund private sales when three things are clean:
If you want a checklist-style companion, Mehmi’s Toronto equipment lease approval checklist includes private-sale notes you can adapt anywhere in Canada. Mehmi Financial Group
Private sale approvals aren’t just about your credit score. Lenders think in risk components—probability of default (PD), exposure at default (EAD), and loss given default (LGD)—even if they never say those words out loud. Private sales mainly increase LGD and fraud risk: if the asset can’t be repossessed/resold cleanly, losses rise.
Use the 5Cs framework to predict lender behaviour:
Do you pay obligations as agreed? Private sale adds a second “character” check: is the seller legitimate?
Can cash flow carry the payment? If the deal is thin, lenders may ask for bank statements or a stronger write-up—especially as deal size increases.
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Down payment (or equity) matters more on private sales, because it reduces lender exposure if something goes sideways.
This is the big one. Underwriters want:
Anything that makes legal operation uncertain slows approvals (commercial vehicle compliance, registration, insurance timing).
Contrarian (but true) take: If a private seller resists basic proof—ID, lien search, a clean bill of sale—treat that as deal risk, not “the lender being picky.” Mehmi Financial Group
If you’re asking for “private sale equipment loans,” you’ll usually see one of these structures:
Often the cleanest for private sales because:
Works when you want lower payments and optionality at end-of-term, but private-sale value disputes can create friction unless the asset is easy to price.
Vehicle-focused structures can match real-world resale behaviour, but still require clean registration, lien search, and compliance story.
If you’re comparing lenders and structures, these two Mehmi reads help:
A private sale can be “cheap” because the seller is offloading a problem—sometimes unknowingly, sometimes not.
In Ontario, the government’s PPSR system lets you search liens and register security interests (and it’s exactly what lenders want to see comfort on). Ontario+1
Practical rule: run the lien search as soon as you have the serial/VIN, before you negotiate too far. If the seller won’t provide serial/VIN or legal name, treat it as a hard stop.
Also remember: other financing products (like certain working-capital arrangements) can register security interests that complicate equipment financing until discharged. Mehmi Financial Group+1
Private-sale valuation is where lenders protect their downside (LGD again).
Expect more scrutiny when:
Some approvals require third-party inspections; your funding package needs to match that condition.
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Tip that speeds approvals: Provide photos like an inspector would:
This is the most common private-sale “surprise.”
If the private sale involves paying out an existing lender, many funders require:
Translation: you can still buy it—but the payout must be structured so the old lien is actually cleared and provable.
Taxes can change the cash you need at closing—even if the seller “isn’t charging tax.”
If you’re buying from a seller who is a GST/HST registrant (or required to register), they generally must charge GST/HST on taxable supplies from their effective registration date. Canada+1
If you’re registered, you may be able to claim input tax credits (ITCs) for GST/HST paid on eligible business inputs, subject to the rules. Canada
Ontario’s guidance for used vehicles notes that buyers generally don’t pay tax to the seller; instead, Ontario charges retail sales tax at registration (commonly 13%), based on purchase price or wholesale value rules. Ontario+1
For the practical truck version of this (buy vs lease tax timing), see Mehmi’s HST/GST on trucks in Ontario: buy vs lease. Mehmi Financial Group
CRA’s business expense guidance explains deducting lease payments for property used in your business (with rules/exceptions depending on the asset and lease treatment). Canada
For broader context: HST/GST on equipment leases in Canada (Mehmi). Mehmi Financial Group
Private sales aren’t “better.” They’re a trade: price advantage vs documentation/condition risk.
If you’re a seller/dealer and want to make used/private-sale deals easier to finance for customers, Mehmi’s How to offer financing to your equipment customers in Canada explains how lenders view private sales and what changes outcomes. Mehmi Financial Group
If you want “fundable,” run this exact order:
If you’re planning multiple purchases over a year, an equipment line of credit can reduce repeat paperwork and speed repeat draws: Equipment line of credit (Canada) (Mehmi). Mehmi Financial Group
Commercial vehicles add compliance layers (registration, safety standards, operating authority depending on use). That’s why private sale truck paperwork breaks deals more often than it should. Mehmi Financial Group
Are you looking for a truck? Look at our used inventory (https://www.mehmigroup.com/inventory).
If you’re going the lease-to-own route on a truck, Mehmi’s Lease-to-own truck programs in Canada: are they worth it? is a useful structure primer. Mehmi Financial Group
Business: 4-year Ontario excavation subcontractor
Need: Used skid steer + attachments to take on a municipal site package
Deal: $92,000 private sale (seller was downsizing)
Problem: Seller had a clean story—but the file wasn’t fundable on day one.
What nearly killed it:
What we changed (lender logic):
Outcome:
Lesson: Private sales aren’t “hard to fund.” They’re hard to fund when the asset can’t be proven clean.
Sometimes the best financing decision is not funding the cheapest unit.
Walk away (or renegotiate) if:
If you already own equipment and need cash for growth, a sale-leaseback can unlock capital while the asset stays working (often cleaner than a risky private purchase): Mining equipment sale-leaseback Canada (Mehmi). Mehmi Financial Group
If you’ve found a private-sale unit and want to know if it’s financeable before you put down a deposit, Mehmi can sanity-check the deal the way lenders do: lien/title comfort, valuation/condition comfort, and a structure that actually funds. Bring the serial/VIN, seller details, and the draft bill of sale—you’ll get clarity fast.
Yes, if you can provide a lender-grade paper trail: seller identity, bill of sale, lien search satisfied, and condition evidence.
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Common requirements include vendor bill of sale/invoice, vendor ID and void cheque, lien search satisfied, insurance certificate, and inspection/registration where applicable.
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If you want to avoid buying someone else’s debt, yes. In Ontario, the PPSR system supports lien searches and registrations. Ontario+1
Often yes—but you’ll typically need a valid buyout and a Direction to Pay signed by the seller so the prior lien can be cleared properly.
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It depends on whether the seller is a GST/HST registrant (or required to register) and whether the sale is a taxable supply. CRA explains when businesses must register and start charging GST/HST. Canada+1
Ontario notes buyers generally don’t pay tax to the seller, but pay provincial retail sales tax at registration (commonly 13%) under specified vehicle rules. Ontario+1