Learn how TRAC leases work in Canada, the real pros/cons, what lenders look for, and a checklist to decide if TRAC is right for your truck or fleet.
If you’re financing a truck (or a whole fleet), a TRAC lease can look like the “best of both worlds”: lower payments than a straight finance plan, plus flexibility at the end.
But here’s the truth: a TRAC lease doesn’t eliminate cost — it moves it. Specifically, it shifts residual value risk (what the vehicle is worth at the end) onto you. Done right, that’s a smart bet. Done wrong, it’s a surprise bill.
This guide breaks down what TRAC is, when it’s a great fit, when it’s not, and how to read the terms like an underwriter. You’ll leave with a decision checklist, a simple residual “calculator,” and practical negotiation points you can use on your next offer.
A TRAC lease is a lease structure used primarily for vehicles (trucks, trailers, certain commercial vehicles) where the residual value is set up front, and you (the lessee) are responsible for the difference between that residual and what the vehicle actually sells for at the end.
In training terms, it’s described as a Terminal Rental Adjustment Clause (TRAC) that functions like a lessee-guaranteed residual value in vehicle leasing.
In plain English:
A good Canadian reference point is Ford Credit Canada’s CommerciaLease: it’s explicitly an open-ended lease where the residual is flexible—and they note you’re responsible for any deficiency between the balance owed and selling price under the master lease agreement. (Ford Motor Company)
Most business owners compare leases by payment. Lenders compare them by who carries residual risk.
Underwriters think in risk components:
When you accept TRAC/open-end residual responsibility, you’re lowering the lender’s LGD risk—because the lender has a contractual path to recover more if the asset underperforms.
That’s why TRAC-style leases can be easier to approve when the file is otherwise borderline—especially in sectors with high utilization, high km, and fast equipment cycles.
And it ties directly to the classic 5Cs underwriting framework—character, capacity, capital, collateral, conditions.
With TRAC, the lender is leaning harder on collateral and conditions, while still caring about capacity.
Residual value is simply the expected end value of the asset.
A TRAC lease adds one key idea:
End-of-term adjustment = Contract residual − Net sale proceeds
(with contract-specific fees, sale costs, and timing rules)
Use this quick sanity check:
Step 1: Write down
Step 2: Run three scenarios
Step 3: Convert your bad-case deficiency into a monthly number
If that hidden number makes the TRAC payment “not actually cheap,” you’ve just saved yourself a painful surprise.
Here are the situations where TRAC tends to be genuinely smart.
If your operation is hard on assets (long-haul, regional distribution, high idle time, heavy payload), closed-end leases can get expensive through excess km and condition charges.
Open-end TRAC-style programs may explicitly cater to high use. Ford Credit Canada highlights eligibility that includes high kilometrage and heavy use vehicles. (Ford Motor Company)
TRAC works best when you can answer:
If you already cycle units through a known dealer, auction lane, or broker, TRAC becomes a controllable variable—not a gamble.
TRAC can lower the payment by setting a stronger residual. That helps when:
If you’re comparing structures, it can also be worth reading how a general equipment lease is positioned for flexibility and cash flow planning (buyout/upgrade options, term customization). For context, see our guide to equipment leases here: equipment lease options for Canadian businesses.
In equipment finance, collateral quality matters because lenders often rely on the asset’s resale value in a default.
TRAC is most attractive when the asset is:
This is where people get hurt.
If you don’t know who buys your used units (and at what price), TRAC can turn into a “payment trap”:
If a $10k–$30k deficiency would create a cash crisis, you’re too tight for TRAC risk.
In that case, you may need a structure that protects liquidity more directly—like pairing your asset financing with dedicated operating cash. Depending on your file, that could mean exploring a working capital loan for operating expenses (instead of squeezing the asset structure too hard).
TRAC is a bet on future resale. Avoid it when:
If the whole point of leasing (for you) is to return the vehicle and move on, TRAC undermines that. A closed-end lease is usually closer to that outcome (with km/condition rules). (Ford Motor Company)
Use this before requesting pricing.
TRAC is usually a fit if you can say yes to most of these:
TRAC is usually NOT a fit if you can say yes to most of these:
If you’re trying to unlock cash while keeping the asset, see refinancing and sale-leaseback options.
Tax treatment depends on structure and your accountant should confirm, but here are the Canadian realities that show up in real deals:
The CRA’s guidance on leasing costs explains how lease payments are generally treated as business expenses, and also outlines special elections that can apply to certain leased property (with important exclusions). (Canada)
Key practical takeaway: a TRAC lease may feel like ownership risk, but tax and accounting treatment depends on the actual agreement and CRA rules—not marketing language.
For specified motor vehicles, CRA notes GST/HST generally applies on lease payments, and the applicable rate depends on factors like lease term and where the vehicle must be registered. (Canada)
CRA’s GST/HST publication on ITCs explains that when property is acquired by lease, you can generally claim ITCs on each periodic payment (if the usual ITC conditions are met). (Canada)
Canadian “gotcha” that gets missed: ITCs and GST/HST don’t behave like U.S. sales tax assumptions. You want to model cash timing (when tax is paid vs when credits are claimed), not just the headline payment.
Most TRAC problems aren’t “bad rates.” They’re bad definitions.
Here’s what you need to find in the offer:
Look for language similar to Ford Credit Canada’s note: responsibility for deficiency between balance owed and selling price, plus selling costs as applicable. (Ford Motor Company)
TRAC leases can be unforgiving if you exit early. Ask:
Lenders often include:
These concepts matter in equipment deals too: conditions precedent are requirements before funds are advanced; covenants are monitoring terms after.
Examples of conditions precedent can be as simple as confirming security is in place before funds are lent.
Practical examples you’ll see in leases:
A TRAC lease often looks cheaper because the payment is lower. But you’re effectively using leverage against the future resale value.
If you can price resale like a pro, TRAC can be a powerful tool.
If you can’t, TRAC is just a low monthly payment with a balloon-shaped risk you don’t see yet.
Business: Ontario-based carrier doing regional + cross-border lanes
Need: 3 used highway tractors, high km expected, wants to preserve cash for insurance + fuel float
Problem: Closed-end quotes looked attractive, but high km projections made excess km penalties likely
What we structured (conceptually):
Underwriter lens:
Outcome:
If you’re considering TRAC, ask these questions before accepting the offer:
If you’re weighing a TRAC lease against other structures, the main value is getting the structure matched to how you actually operate (km, routes, replacement cycle, resale channel)—not just chasing the lowest payment.
If you want a second set of eyes on a TRAC offer (especially the end-of-term adjustment language), Mehmi can help you compare structures and reduce surprise risk. You can start by exploring our broader business funding options alongside leasing—because the cleanest deal is often a package, not a single product.
“Are you looking for a truck? Look at our used inventory (https://www.mehmigroup.com/inventory).”
TRAC-style/open-end vehicle leasing exists in Canada through certain captive and commercial finance programs. For example, Toyota Commercial Finance Canada lists “Trac lease” among its products for Canadian Hino customers. (Toyota Commercial Finance)
Not automatically. TRAC is about how residual value is handled—not a guarantee of ownership. Your end options depend on the contract (purchase, renew, or sell/settle).
In an open-end/TRAC-style structure, you generally owe the deficiency (the gap between what’s owed and the net sale proceeds), based on the agreement’s calculation method. (Ford Motor Company)
GST/HST generally applies to lease payments on specified motor vehicles, and the rate can depend on where the vehicle must be registered (especially for leases longer than three months). (Canada)
Often, yes—if you’re a GST/HST registrant and the leased property is used in commercial activities, CRA guidance explains ITCs are generally claimable on each periodic lease payment when due/paid (subject to the usual rules). (Canada)
If you’re choosing TRAC purely for payment relief, be careful. Sometimes it’s safer to pick a structure that fits your replacement cycle and then solve cash flow separately—via a business line of credit, invoice/freight factoring, or (in specific cases) a merchant cash advance—so you’re not “borrowing” cash flow from future resale value.