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Secured Loan Using Equipment as Collateral (Canada)

Learn how equipment-secured loans work in Canada: what qualifies, advance rates, PPSA security, covenants, and a fast approval checklist.

Written by
Alec Whitten
Published on
December 25, 2025

Secured Loan Using Equipment as Collateral in Canada: How It Works, What Qualifies, and How to Get Approved

A secured loan using equipment as collateral can be one of the most practical ways for Canadian businesses to access capital—especially when cash flow is strong but liquidity is tight. Instead of being judged only on credit score or “perfect” financial statements, you’re also judged on the asset: what it is, how easy it is to resell, how well it’s documented, and how clean the lender’s security position is.

In this guide, you’ll learn:

  • what an equipment-secured loan is (and how it differs from leasing)
  • what equipment typically qualifies in Canada (and what doesn’t)
  • how lenders size the loan (advance rates, appraisals, and borrowing base logic)
  • the underwriter lens (5Cs + PD/EAD/LGD) behind approvals
  • the most common conditions precedent and covenants, and what lenders monitor after funding
  • a practical checklist, a realistic case study, and Canada-specific FAQs

What is a secured loan using equipment as collateral?

Key point: A secured loan is borrowing where the lender takes a legal interest in an asset (collateral) to reduce risk. In Canada, business secured lending can be structured as a line of credit, demand loan, or term loan—each typically secured by different asset types. BDC summarizes this clearly: lines of credit are often secured by receivables/inventory, while demand loans can be secured by vehicles and equipment. (BDC.ca)

With equipment as collateral, the lender is betting that:

  1. your business can repay from operations, and
  2. if something goes wrong, the lender can recover value by enforcing its security and selling the equipment.

That legal security is usually handled through provincial personal property security laws (commonly referred to as PPSA frameworks), such as Ontario’s Personal Property Security Act. (Ontario)

Equipment-secured loan vs equipment leasing (leasing-first perspective)

Key point: If your main goal is to preserve cash and reduce “down payment shock,” leasing is often the cleaner tool. If your goal is to unlock equity in equipment you already own (or finance a purchase while keeping ownership), an equipment-secured loan can make sense.

Here’s the practical difference:

  • Secured loan using equipment:
    You borrow money; the lender takes security in the equipment. You typically own the equipment (subject to the lender’s security interest). This is often used for refinancing, working capital, or purchases where a loan structure fits your accounting and cash flow.
  • Lease (FMV or buyout-style):
    The lessor owns the equipment during the term, and you pay for use. Leasing is often chosen to preserve working capital and align payments with usage.

Canada-specific tax nuance to know: CRA’s leasing costs guidance notes that, in certain situations, a lessee may be able to deduct the interest portion and also claim CCA if specific conditions are met (often depending on lease structure and fair market value thresholds). (Canada)
(This is exactly why you want your accountant involved when the structure is material.)

What equipment qualifies as collateral in Canada?

Key point: “Qualifies” usually means the asset is financeable, marketable, documented, insurable, and can be secured properly.

Equipment that often qualifies well

Lenders typically prefer equipment that has:

  • a broad resale market (easy liquidation)
  • stable values (or predictable depreciation)
  • clear serial numbers and ownership trail
  • a track record of demand (common brands/models)
  • insurability and acceptable condition

Examples often include:

  • construction equipment (excavators, skid steers, loaders)
  • transportation assets (trucks, trailers—depending on age and use case)
  • manufacturing equipment (CNC, packaging lines—case-by-case)
  • medical equipment (depending on type and resale market)
  • agriculture equipment (depending on condition and market)

BDC’s equipment financing overview notes that equipment is commonly used as collateral and that repayment is often aligned with the equipment’s lifespan. (BDC.ca)

Equipment that can be harder to qualify

Even if you own it, some equipment is difficult collateral because resale is uncertain or documentation is messy:

  • highly specialized, custom-built gear with few buyers
  • older/high-hour units nearing end-of-life
  • equipment with incomplete serial/VIN records
  • assets with title/ownership ambiguity (private sales without clean bill of sale trail)
  • equipment with liens you can’t discharge cleanly

Underwriter reality: If the lender believes resale value is uncertain, they either (a) lend less, (b) shorten the term, (c) require more “skin in the game,” or (d) decline.

How lenders decide “how much can I borrow?” (advance rates + valuations)

Key point: Lenders don’t lend on your purchase price—they lend on a value they believe they can recover from.

Most equipment-secured loans are sized using some combination of:

  • appraised value (fair market value, orderly liquidation value, etc.)
  • age/condition (hours, maintenance, rebuild history)
  • market liquidity (how fast it sells and at what discount)
  • concentration risk (too much exposure to one asset type/one borrower)
  • priority risk (how clean the security position is under PPSA)

Mini calculator: quick “back of napkin” loan sizing

Use this as a starting point:

Estimated maximum loan ≈ (Appraised value) × (Advance rate)

Example:

  • Appraised value: $200,000
  • Advance rate: 65%
  • Estimated max: $130,000

Advance rates vary by lender and asset, but the concept is stable: the lender is protecting against loss given default (LGD) by building a cushion.

The credit brain behind approvals: 5Cs + PD/EAD/LGD (plain English)

Key point: Equipment collateral helps, but it doesn’t replace underwriting. Lenders still lend to businesses, not machines.

The 5Cs (what underwriters care about)

  • Character: payment history, tax compliance, NSFs, collections
  • Capacity: cash flow to service debt, seasonality, customer concentration
  • Capital: cash buffer, leverage, owner investment
  • Collateral: equipment value, liquidity, insurability, documentation
  • Conditions: industry cycle, rate environment, contracts/backlog

The risk lens (why conditions exist)

  • PD (Probability of Default): are you likely to miss payments?
  • EAD (Exposure at Default): how much is outstanding if you do?
  • LGD (Loss Given Default): how much would the lender lose after selling the equipment?

Collateral reduces LGD, sometimes EAD (if the loan is smaller), but PD is still driven by business health.

PPSA security in Canada (what borrowers should know)

Key point: The lender’s comfort depends heavily on security perfection and priority—usually through provincial PPSA registrations.

Ontario’s PPSA statute is an example of the legal framework for taking, perfecting, and enforcing a security interest in personal property like equipment. (Ontario)

From a borrower’s perspective, this shows up as:

  • the lender registering security against your business name (and sometimes serial-numbered goods)
  • requirements that your legal name is exact (corporate name matters)
  • a need to clear prior liens before new funding closes

Practical takeaway: Many “fast approvals” become “slow fundings” because security details (names, old liens, missing buyout statements) aren’t clean.

Conditions precedent and covenants: what must be true before funding, and what gets monitored after

Key point: A secured loan isn’t just a rate and payment. It’s a set of guardrails.

Common conditions precedent (before funding)

Expect some mix of:

  • proof of ownership (bill of sale, registration, serial/VIN)
  • valuation/appraisal or inspection (especially for used assets)
  • insurance certificate naming the lender’s interest
  • discharge or payout of existing liens (if refinancing)
  • banking documents (void cheque/PAD) and signing authority
  • financial statements or bank statements (depending on size/risk)

Common covenants (after funding)

These vary by lender and deal size, but often include:

  • maintain insurance
  • keep equipment in good repair and not sell without consent
  • provide periodic financial reporting
  • stay current on taxes and remittances
  • “no material adverse change” style language

What lenders monitor in reality (before a missed payment)

Underwriters don’t wait for default. Common early triggers:

  • repeated NSFs or unstable bank balances
  • sudden new debt stacking
  • lapsed insurance
  • tax arrears (especially payroll source deductions / HST issues)
  • declining revenues without explanation

Canada-specific tax gotcha: repairs vs “capital” work

Key point: If you’re borrowing to rebuild or upgrade equipment, the tax treatment of the spend can differ from routine repairs.

CRA explains that expenses that improve a property beyond its original condition are likely capital expenses, while costs that restore it to original condition are usually current expenses. (Canada)
CRA also notes that capital-in-nature repairs generally aren’t deducted as current repairs; they may be handled through CCA. (Canada)

Why this matters for your financing decision:
If you’re repeatedly doing major rebuilds, it may be time to consider leasing a replacement (to avoid “repair debt” cycles) rather than borrowing again against an aging asset.

When an equipment-secured loan makes sense (and when it doesn’t)

Key point: This tool is best when you have equity and need liquidity—without sacrificing operations.

Strong use cases

  • Working capital gap: you have contracts and receivables, but cash timing is tight
  • Refinancing owned equipment: unlock equity to fund growth or stabilize cash flow
  • Consolidating expensive short-term debt: replace high-cost obligations with structured payments
  • Seasonality smoothing: align repayments with predictable cycles (with the right structure)

Weak use cases (where it can backfire)

  • You’re using it to cover chronic operating losses (not timing)
  • The equipment is near end-of-life, high-hour, or hard to resell
  • You can’t provide clean documentation or you have unresolved lien issues
  • The repayment schedule will choke working capital

Contrarian but practical advice: If the loan payment forces you to delay maintenance, you’re borrowing in a way that increases your risk—and the lender’s risk. That’s when leasing or a different working-capital tool may be healthier.

Approval checklist: how to get a secured equipment loan funded faster

Key point: Speed comes from packaging. Here’s a lender-friendly checklist you can use today.

The “one-email funding package”

  • Legal business name + province of registration
  • Ownership structure (who signs)
  • Equipment list (make/model/year/serial/VIN, hours, location)
  • Proof of ownership (bill of sale, registration where applicable)
  • Photos (all sides + serial plate + hour meter)
  • Purpose of funds (working capital, refinance, purchase, consolidation)
  • Requested structure (amount, term, payment preference)
  • Last 2–3 years financials (if available) or recent bank statements
  • Any existing lien details and buyout statements (if refinancing)
  • Insurance broker contact (to issue COI quickly)

The 7-sentence “underwriter summary” (copy/paste)

We operate [business type] in [province] and have been operating for [X] years. We’re seeking a secured loan of $[X] using [equipment list] as collateral to [purpose]. The equipment is located at [location] and is in [condition], with [hours], and we can provide proof of ownership and photos. Repayment will come from [cash flow source], and we can provide [financials/bank statements] to support capacity. There are [no / these] existing liens, and we can provide buyout statements if needed. We can provide insurance documentation immediately.

A quick scenario table: secured loan vs lease vs ABL (which fits your goal?)

Anonymous case study: turning “idle equity” into working capital (without breaking cash flow)

Situation: A mid-sized Ontario contractor owns several pieces of equipment outright. Spring is coming, and they’ve won jobs—but deposits, payroll, and materials hit before progress draws.

Problem: They don’t want to drain cash and risk missed payroll, but the bank line is tight. They have equity in equipment but no desire to sell it.

What we structured (the logic):

  • Collateral: selected the most liquid, financeable units (easy resale market, clear serials, clean ownership)
  • Capacity: tied repayment to realistic cash flow (not “perfect month” assumptions)
  • Capital: preserved a cash buffer instead of maximizing leverage
  • Conditions: packaged documentation upfront to avoid lien/security delays under PPSA

Outcome: The business unlocked liquidity using equipment as collateral, kept jobs moving, and avoided stacking short-term debt.

Lesson: The best equipment-secured loans are used to fix timing problems, not to mask profitability problems.

FAQs (Canada-specific)

1) Can I get a secured business loan using equipment as collateral in Canada?

Often, yes—especially if the equipment is marketable, properly documented, and insurable. Many lenders commonly take equipment as collateral for business borrowing. (BDC.ca)

2) How do lenders register security on equipment in Canada?

Typically through provincial PPSA frameworks (for example, Ontario’s Personal Property Security Act governs security interests in personal property). (Ontario)

3) How much can I borrow against my equipment?

Most lenders size loans based on an appraised or supportable value and an advance rate (a percentage of that value). The exact percentage depends on asset type, age/condition, and market liquidity.

4) What if my equipment already has a lien?

You can still qualify in many cases, but the lender usually needs a buyout statement and will require the prior lien to be discharged or paid out at funding. Lien cleanup is one of the most common reasons fundings slow down.

5) Is it better to lease equipment instead of borrowing against it?

If your priority is preserving cash and keeping payments aligned to use, leasing is often the better first look. If your priority is unlocking equity in equipment you already own, an equipment-secured loan can be a better fit. CRA’s leasing guidance highlights that lease structures can change how deductions and CCA are handled in certain situations. (Canada)

6) If I borrow to rebuild equipment, is that expense deductible?

It depends on whether the spend is a current repair or a capital improvement. CRA explains that improvements beyond original condition are usually capital expenses, while restoring to original condition is usually a current expense; capital-in-nature repairs are generally handled through CCA. (Canada)

Calm next step (CTA)

If you have a list of equipment and a target amount you want to raise, Mehmi can help you sanity-check what will qualify, estimate realistic availability, and structure payments so you unlock capital without starving your working cash.

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