Technology and IT equipment leasing

Technology and IT equipment leasing
Written by
Alec Whitten
Published on
November 25, 2025

Technology and IT equipment leasing: refresh cycles and approvals

How Canadian businesses can plan IT refresh cycles and get tech equipment leases approved faster, with smarter structures and less strain on cash flow.

If your laptops, servers, and network gear are older than your junior staff, you don’t have a “tech problem” — you have a financing and planning problem.

In Canada, most businesses now refresh core IT gear roughly every 3–5 years, especially as AI-ready devices and the Windows 10 end-of-support deadline push upgrades. Leasing lets you turn those lumpy, stressful upgrades into predictable, pre-approved refresh cycles instead of last-minute panics.

This guide walks through:

  • Typical refresh cycles for key IT assets
  • How to match lease terms to tech lifecycles
  • What Canadian lenders actually look for on IT leases
  • How to speed up approvals and turn tech upgrades into a rolling program
  • Where Mehmi’s structures fit in (and where they don’t)

Why IT refresh cycles matter more than ever

Key point: Devices are lasting longer technically, but security, software support, and AI workloads are pushing Canadian businesses toward more deliberate refresh cycles, not “run it until it dies.”

A few big forces are colliding:

  • Windows 10 end of support in October 2025 is driving a global device refresh wave. Gartner notes enterprises are ramping up PC refreshes ahead of this “cliff.”
  • Gartner has also long suggested three-year refresh cycles for mobile PCs and about four years for desktops as a good balance between performance and cost.
  • New AI-capable PCs and workstations are expected to make up more than 30% of the PC market by the end of 2025 and become “the norm” by 2029.

On the finance side, Canadian commercial credit data from the Canadian Finance & Leasing Association (CFLA) and Equifax show rising equipment lending volumes, particularly for modernization and productivity upgrades by SMEs.

Put bluntly:

  • You will be replacing endpoints and infrastructure more often than in the past.
  • The real question is whether you plan and finance that refresh on your terms, or let it hit you randomly and expensively.

Leasing through a specialist like Mehmi — via equipment leases or a revolving equipment line of credit — lets you align finance with that reality instead of fighting it.

Typical refresh cycles for key IT and tech assets

Key point: You don’t need lab-grade precision, but you do need a rough refresh policy for each category, because that’s what drives term, residual, and approval logic on your leases.

Here’s a practical, Canadian-market view based on industry norms and analyst guidance:

<table>
 <thead>
   <tr>
     <th>Asset type</th>
     <th>Typical refresh cycle</th>
     <th>Common lease term</th>
     <th>Notes</th>
   </tr>
 </thead>
 <tbody>
   <tr>
     <td>Laptops & mobile PCs</td>
     <td>3–4 years</td>
     <td>36–48 months</td>
     <td>Faster refresh in security-sensitive or dev roles.</td>
   </tr>
   <tr>
     <td>Desktops & workstations</td>
     <td>4–5 years</td>
     <td>48–60 months</td>
     <td>High-end graphics/engineering often closer to 3–4 years.</td>
   </tr>
   <tr>
     <td>Servers (on-prem)</td>
     <td>4–6 years</td>
     <td>48–60 months</td>
     <td>Hardware life longer, but OS/support cycles matter.</td>
   </tr>
   <tr>
     <td>Networking (switches, Wi-Fi)</td>
     <td>5–7 years</td>
     <td>60 months</td>
     <td>Often kept a bit longer if performance is adequate.</td>
   </tr>
   <tr>
     <td>POS, kiosks, terminals</td>
     <td>3–5 years</td>
     <td>36–60 months</td>
     <td>Retail/hospitality turnover plus physical wear.</td>
   </tr>
   <tr>
     <td>Phones, conference gear</td>
     <td>4–6 years</td>
     <td>48–60 months</td>
     <td>Cloud telephony can change the equation.</td>
   </tr>
 </tbody>
</table>

Most IT-focused lessors design standard terms between 12 and 60 months to match these lifecycles.

Your refresh policy doesn’t need to be perfect. It just needs to be:

  • Written down
  • Tied to lease terms
  • Aligned with security and support timelines

That’s enough for a lender — and your own leadership — to treat IT refresh as a planned program, not a constant emergency.

Matching lease structures to your refresh cycles

Key point: The trick is not “cheapest rate,” it’s choosing terms and end-of-lease options that match how long you’ll actually keep the gear.

For IT, two structures dominate:

  1. Fair market value (FMV) / operating-style leases
  2. Fixed-buyout (e.g., $1 or 10%) / finance-style leases

Most providers (and Mehmi) can do both inside a broader equipment financing strategy.

When to use FMV / refresh-friendly structures

FMV leases usually:

  • Run shorter terms (24–48 months on laptops, sometimes 60 on infrastructure)
  • Have lower monthly payments because the lessor expects to resell or re-lease
  • Shine when you know you’ll upgrade at or before term

They’re a strong fit for:

  • Endpoints (laptops, tablets, thin clients)
  • POS and customer-facing devices where wear and branding matter
  • Hardware in fast-changing roles (developers, data science, media)

At the end of term you typically:

  • Return and refresh
  • Negotiate an extension (often at a lower “rental” rate)
  • Buy at FMV if you really want to keep some units

The catch is vague contracts. You want clear language around how FMV will be set, not “at lessor’s sole discretion.”

When to use fixed-buyout / long-life structures

Fixed-buyout or “$1” leases behave more like a loan:

  • Terms often 48–60 months
  • Payments are higher but you know the buyout (e.g., $1 or 10%)
  • Best where you’ll keep the asset beyond the term

They work well for:

  • Core network infrastructure
  • Servers you’ll sweat longer, especially in smaller shops
  • Specialized gear (lab, production, or medical IT) that doesn’t obsolete as fast

Often the smartest move is a mix: FMV on endpoints, fixed-buyout on core infrastructure, all inside one overarching facility or equipment line of credit.

What Canadian lenders actually look at on IT lease approvals

Key point: For technology, lenders care less about the brand of laptop and more about cash flow, time in business, and a believable refresh plan. Get those right and approvals get much easier.

Public guidance from BDC’s technology equipment loan and equipment financing pages highlights a few recurring themes:

  • You need to be based in Canada, generating revenue, with at least 12 months of operating history for most conventional facilities.
  • Lenders assess your financial statements, including the last few years plus interim results, especially on larger tickets.
  • They look at credit history, existing debt, and whether the equipment is essential and has reasonable resale value.

For an IT leasing request, a Mehmi-style underwriter will usually look at:

  1. Who you are
    • Time in business, industry, and size
    • Whether you fit within Mehmi’s target industries (most do, including healthcare, professional services, logistics, and retail)
  2. How big the ask is
    • Small deals might be “application-only” (simpler, faster).
    • Larger programs (multi-site refresh, data centre) require full financials and a deeper review.
  3. The refresh logic
    • Do your requested terms make sense for the asset’s life?
    • Are you obviously over-funding luxury tech relative to your revenue?
  4. Existing capital stack
    • Bank operating lines and term loans
    • Other leases and whether there’s room before covenants pinch
    • Whether IT leasing can free up capacity via asset based lending or tailored structures
  5. Secondary exit
    • For endpoints, there’s a deep resale market — that’s good for approvals.
    • For very niche tech, they’ll consider how easily they could remarket if needed.

The good news: compared to heavy construction or specialized industrial assets, IT is often easier to underwrite, because lifecycles and resale markets are well understood.

Building an IT refresh program lenders like (and your CFO can sign off on)

Key point: You’ll get faster approvals and better structures if you pitch your IT leasing as a program with rules, not a string of one-off panic purchases.

Here’s a simple playbook you can adapt.

1. Map your current fleet and pain points

You don’t need fancy tooling. Start with:

  • Number of laptops/desktops, by age band (0–3, 3–5, 5+ years)
  • Key servers and network gear, with approximate install dates
  • Obvious risk: unsupported OS, frequent failures, security gaps

Tie each line to a business pain: downtime, slow staff, security exposure, compliance issues.

2. Decide your refresh rules by category

For each bucket (endpoints, POS, servers, network):

  • Pick a target refresh window (e.g., laptops at 3 years, core switches at 6).
  • Decide whether the default end-of-term behaviour is refresh, extend, or buyout.

Write it down as a short internal policy. Lenders love seeing this — it shows you’re proactive, not reactive.

3. Bundle into a 3–5 year program, not a one-year shopping list

Rather than begging for each batch:

  • Build a 3–5 year roadmap that phases upgrades by site or department.
  • Roll that into a single proposal for an IT leasing facility or equipment line of credit.

BDC explicitly recommends presenting a clear written proposal explaining why you need the equipment and how it will impact your operations when seeking equipment financing. That same approach works with Mehmi: you’re asking for a program, not a toy.

4. Decide what belongs in a lease vs other funding

Not everything tech-related belongs in an equipment lease. As a rule of thumb:

  • Lease: hardware, core infrastructure, POS, some perpetual licences, and setup costs that can be treated as “soft costs.”
  • Fund separately: one-time consulting, short-term pilots, or marketing spend via working capital loans or business lines of credit.

Leasing too much “squishy” spend confuses everyone — including CRA and your auditors.

5. Align internal approvals up front

IT refresh touches:

  • IT (requirements, vendors)
  • Finance (budget, covenants)
  • Tax (lease vs buy, CRA treatment)
  • Leadership (risk, strategic priorities)

If you build a cross-functional sign-off before you go to the market or to Mehmi, approvals tend to fly through instead of getting bogged down at the last minute.

Tax and accounting basics for Canadian IT leases

Key point: In Canada, computer and IT equipment lease costs are usually deductible as you go, which often fits the short life of tech better than slow CCA on owned assets. But tax should support your strategy, not drive it.

CRA’s guidance on computer and other equipment leasing costs and general leasing costs says:

  • If you lease computers, phones, or other equipment, you can deduct the portion of lease costs that reasonably relates to earning your business income.
  • For business property leases, you generally deduct the lease payments you incur in the year.

If you buy instead of lease:

  • Computer hardware is capital property (often in CCA Class 50 or 12 depending on the type and timing), and you deduct its cost gradually via CCA.
  • You might be able to accelerate some deductions using tax incentives, but you still don’t usually get a full deduction in year one.

The contrarian view:

“Don’t choose leasing just for tax —
use tax to support the cash-flow and refresh strategy you actually need.”

In practice, Mehmi will often:

  • Work with your accountant to compare lease vs buy after tax using the calculator.
  • Shape term and residual so deductions line up with when you’ll actually use and replace the equipment.

The goal is a structure that keeps CRA happy and makes sense for your security, support, and cash flow.

Advanced tools: lines, sale-leasebacks, and vendor programs

Key point: Once you get past one-off deals, you can cut cost and friction by setting up standing facilities and recycling capital in older gear.

Revolving IT equipment facilities

Instead of negotiating every time you buy 20 laptops:

  • Set up a revolving equipment line of credit sized to your 3–5 year roadmap.
  • Draw on it as you roll through each phase of the refresh.
  • Keep documents, covenants, and pricing largely pre-agreed.

This feels more like a “renewable tech budget” than a series of individual leases, and it can dramatically speed up approvals for each wave.

Refinancing older tech to help fund the next cycle

If you’ve paid cash for servers or built out a small data centre, there may be capital locked up in that hardware. A refinancing or sales leaseback can:

  • Turn owned equipment into leased equipment
  • Free up cash for new projects or to pay down more expensive debt
  • Move you toward a more consistent “lease and refresh” rhythm

CFLA and federal small business financing rules explicitly recognize capital leases for new and used equipment as a tool for providing necessary equipment to small businesses.

Vendor programs and standardized stacks

If you buy most of your gear from one or two vendors, a formal vendor program with Mehmi can:

  • Standardize models and specs (simpler support and redeployment)
  • Embed leasing options into quotes
  • Speed up approvals because everyone is working off the same templates

That’s especially powerful for MSPs, software firms, and franchise systems that want a repeatable, “plug-and-play” way to put standardized IT in multiple locations.

Where business loans fit alongside IT leasing

Key point: Leasing is great for hardware and some soft costs, but a full tech program usually needs working capital as well. You don’t want to max out your operating line on laptops.

In a healthy capital stack, you might use:

  • Leasing for devices, infrastructure, POS, and eligible project costs
  • Business loans (term facilities) for larger one-time projects that mix tech, fit-out, and training
  • Working capital loans or lines of credit for implementation costs, hiring, and ongoing expenses

Used well, that mix:

  • Keeps your bank lines focused on operations, not hardware
  • Makes it easier for lenders to say “yes” to each piece (they’re not all trying to do the same job)
  • Reduces the temptation to stretch refresh cycles just because your line is tight

Mehmi’s team can walk through your plan, then plug options into their FAQ resources and modelling tools so you see how leases and loans work together.

Anonymous case study: turning a messy laptop fleet into a three-year refresh machine

Background

A 120-person engineering and consulting firm based in Ontario had:

  • Laptops ranging from 1 to 7 years old
  • A mix of vendors and models, many out of warranty
  • End of Windows 10 support looming
  • A bank that was already cautious on their operating line

IT wanted to move to AI-capable laptops and tighten security. Finance wanted … not to blow up cash flow.

Old way: one-off scrambling

Historically, they:

  • Bought laptops in small batches when something failed or when a new hire started
  • Used their bank line and corporate cards
  • Haggled each time with both vendors and bankers

Result:

  • Inconsistent performance and images
  • Surprise spikes in hardware spend
  • Long lead times waiting on approvals

New way: program-based leasing with pre-approved refresh

Working with Mehmi, they:

  1. Mapped the fleet by age and risk, then set a simple rule:
    • All laptops to be on a 3-year refresh, with a hard cutoff at four years.
  2. Standardized on two laptop models and one docking/monitor setup, all clearly falling under Mehmi’s eligible equipment criteria for IT hardware.
  3. Built a four-year roadmap:
    • Year 1: Replace 60 oldest laptops
    • Year 2: Replace 30 more plus core meeting rooms
    • Year 3: Replace remaining 30 and uplift a few power users
    • Year 4: Start the cycle again on the first batch
  4. Put this into a single IT leasing facility with:
    • A master lease and sub-schedules under an equipment line of credit
    • 36-month FMV leases on laptops (assumes refresh)
    • 48-month fixed-buyout leases on core networking gear
  5. Paired the program with a modest working capital facility so they didn’t lean on their bank line for rollout costs.

Approvals and execution

Because the program was structured coherently, Mehmi’s credit team could approve the full multi-year facility up front, rather than re-underwrite each small batch. The firm then:

  • Drew down on the facility in phases
  • Kept internal approvals simple: the plan and budget were already approved by leadership
  • Used Mehmi’s calculator to show the board how lease payments compared with a lump-sum purchase and CCA, after tax

Results after 18 months

  • Over half the fleet refreshed with consistent, AI-capable hardware
  • No major surprises in monthly cash flow
  • Bank operating line utilization actually improved (less hardware hitting it)
  • IT could point to a clear, documented refresh plan — which also helped with cyber insurance and client security questionnaires

The CFO’s verdict:

“We didn’t just get cheaper laptops —
we got a system for staying current without choking our cash.”

FAQ: Technology and IT equipment leasing in Canada

1. How often should a Canadian business refresh laptops and desktops?

Most organizations aim for 3–4 years on laptops and 4–5 years on desktops, in line with analyst guidance that balances performance and cost. Security, OS support (e.g., Windows 10 end of support), and user productivity are now just as important as raw hardware life. Critical roles (developers, traders, designers) may need faster cycles.

2. What lease term works best for IT hardware?

Common terms for IT leases in Canada are 24–60 months, with many IT-focused lessors standardizing on 12–60 months to align with asset lifecycles. A good rule: keep lease term at or slightly under your planned refresh cycle. For example, 36 months on laptops if you plan a 3-year refresh, and 48–60 months on core infrastructure you’ll keep longer.

3. Are IT lease payments tax-deductible in Canada?

Yes, usually. CRA says that if you lease computers or other equipment, you can deduct the portion of lease costs that reasonably relates to earning business income, and more generally, you deduct lease payments you incur in the year for business property. If you bought the same equipment instead, you’d typically claim CCA over time instead of expensing the full cost immediately.

4. What do lenders look at when approving an IT lease?

They look at your time in business (often 12+ months), revenue and profitability, credit history, and how the equipment fits your operations. BDC and other Canadian lenders emphasize providing recent financial statements and a clear written proposal explaining why you need the equipment and how it benefits the business. For IT specifically, a documented refresh plan and standardized hardware stack can significantly speed approvals.

5. Can I bundle software and services into an IT equipment lease?

Often, yes — within reason. Many lessors will finance certain “soft costs” such as installation, configuration, and perpetual licences as part of the total project cost, similar to how equipment loans can cover up to 125% of asset cost to include shipping and training. However, recurring SaaS subscriptions and purely consulting-type services are usually better funded through working capital or term loans. Mehmi can help decide what goes into equipment financing versus business loans.

6. How can I speed up approvals for recurring tech refreshes?

Treat IT as a program, not a series of emergencies. Build a 3–5 year refresh roadmap, standardize hardware, and work with a partner like Mehmi to set up a revolving equipment line of credit or master lease so each batch of devices is just a draw on an existing facility. Combine that with clean financials and tax-aware structuring, and approvals usually become routine rather than painful.

Internal links used

  1. Equipment leases – https://www.mehmigroup.com/services/equipment-financing/equipment-leases
  2. Equipment financing overview – https://www.mehmigroup.com/services/equipment-financing
  3. Equipment line of credit – https://www.mehmigroup.com/services/equipment-financing/equipment-line-of-credit
  4. Asset Based Lending – https://www.mehmigroup.com/services/equipment-financing/asset-based-lending
  5. Refinancing or Sales Leaseback – https://www.mehmigroup.com/services/equipment-financing/refinancing-sales-leaseback
  6. Vendor Program – https://www.mehmigroup.com/services/vendor-program
  7. Business Loans overview – https://www.mehmigroup.com/services/business-loans
  8. Working Capital Loan – https://www.mehmigroup.com/services/business-loans/working-capital-loan
  9. Line of Credit (business loans) – https://www.mehmigroup.com/services/business-loans/line-of-credit
  10. Eligible Equipment – https://www.mehmigroup.com/eligible-equipment
  11. Industries overview – https://www.mehmigroup.com/industries
  12. Calculator – https://www.mehmigroup.com/calculator
  13. Blog – https://www.mehmigroup.com/blog
  14. FAQ – https://www.mehmigroup.com/faq
  15. Contact Us – https://www.mehmigroup.com/contact-us

External citations used

  1. Gartner / Computing – guidance on 4-year desktop and 3-year mobile PC replacement cycles.
  2. CIO Dive – article on Windows 10 end-of-support driving a major device refresh cycle.
  3. ITPro – summary of Gartner research on AI PCs becoming the norm by 2029.
  4. CRA – “Computer and other equipment leasing costs”, “Leasing costs”, and “Other business expenses” pages on deductibility of computer and equipment lease costs.
  5. CRA – “Capital cost allowance (CCA) classes” for computer hardware.
  6. BDC – “Technology equipment loan”, “Equipment loan”, and “Equipment financing 101” pages (requirements, coverage, and examples).
  7. BDC – “How to build your equipment financing proposal” (what lenders look for).
  8. Canadian Equipment Finance / CFLA – overview of equipment leasing vs loans and commercial credit trends.
  9. Canada Small Business Financing Regulations – treatment of capital leases for equipment.

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