Learn how to build a Canadian vendor financing program that turns “too expensive” into “let’s go,” without becoming a bank – with a focus on leasing.
A vendor financing program is just a structured way for your customers to access third-party financing at the point of sale. You still sell the equipment. A finance partner handles approvals, paperwork, and funding.
Almost half of Canadian SMEs (49.3%) requested external financing in 2023, including debt and lease financing.(Statistics Canada) When you don’t offer a clean payment option, those customers often leave to find it somewhere else – and sometimes never come back.
This guide walks you through how Canadian suppliers, dealers, and distributors can build a vendor financing program that’s simple, compliant, and actually used by your sales team.
A lot of Canadian business owners hear “vendor financing” and think “do I need to become a lender?” The short answer is no.
In a modern Canadian vendor program:
You’re essentially plugging your sales process into Canada’s asset-based finance ecosystem, which the Canadian Finance & Leasing Association (CFLA) describes as a core channel for vehicle and equipment investment nationwide.(cfla-acfl.ca)
It is not:
Your role is to:
That’s it.
Most “too expensive” objections aren’t really about the price tag – they’re about timing and risk.
Key point: Canadian businesses still need to invest in equipment, but they’re wary of tying up cash.
Statistics Canada’s latest SME financing survey shows that 49.3% of small and medium enterprises requested external financing in 2023, with the share even higher in manufacturing, construction, and agriculture.(Statistics Canada) These are exactly the sectors that buy trucks, machines, and specialist equipment.
At the same time, federal and independent research keeps flagging that Canada is under-investing in machinery and equipment, which is one reason productivity growth has lagged peers.(www2.itif.org) In other words: your customers often should be investing more in gear, but they’re struggling to make the cash flow math feel safe.
The Bank of Canada cut its policy rate down to 2.25% in October 2025, after a long tightening cycle.(Bank of Canada) That’s a very different world than 5%+ rates – but borrowing is still far from “free.”
A vendor program that leads with:
gives your customer a way to say “yes” without emptying their bank line or savings.
A lot of dealers react to “I can’t afford it” by discounting. My argument: you almost always have a financing problem, not a pricing problem.
If you can show the customer:
you’re having a very different conversation than:
Vendor financing is how you make that shift.
Before you worry about portals and fancy calculators, get the fundamentals right.
Key point: a good vendor program has three pillars – partner, product menu, and process.
You don’t need ten lenders. You need one or two that:
Mehmi’s Equipment Financing platform is built exactly this way. It includes:
If you’re in hospitality, Mehmi’s Rent Try Buy Hospitality model lets customers test gear before committing, which can be a powerful sales tool.
Contrarian take: “Go talk to your bank” is not a strategy. Banks are great for many things, but they aren’t always set up for quick, asset-focused decisions on niche equipment.
Your customer doesn’t want to discuss product jargon. They want to know:
Your default menu might look like:
Only when the primary need is working capital (staffing, inventory, marketing) should a broader Business Loans solution come into play.
Your program has to be easy enough that a busy salesperson actually uses it.
At minimum, agree with your partner on:
If your team doesn’t know the steps, they’ll fall back to “cash or bank only.”
Not every asset and not every customer will be treated the same way. A smart program respects those differences.
Key point: design your program around real deal patterns – ticket sizes, asset types, and industries – not theory.
Pull a list of your last 6–12 months of transactions:
Cross-check that with what’s usually financeable in Canada. Mehmi’s Eligible Equipment page and Industries overview are useful reality checks.
You’ll quickly see natural “buckets” like:
Your program structure can mirror these bands.
Asset-based finance appetite is different for a forestry skidder vs. a dental laser vs. a pizza oven:
This is where a partner like Mehmi adds value: they’ve already seen what structures work (and don’t) across sectors.
If a prospect only sees a big lump sum price in your showroom or proposals, it’s no surprise they say, “I can’t afford it.”
Practical moves:
You don’t need to rebuild your CRM or rewrite your entire website to start.
Key point: treat Mehmi as your “virtual finance desk” and give your team a simple script.
From your customer’s point of view, they only had to say “yes” once to both the machine and the payment structure.
A vendor program touches on credit and privacy, but you don’t have to carry that alone.
Key point: stay honest about your role, avoid unrealistic promises, and treat customer data carefully.
Your materials should say something like:
“Financing is provided by independent third-party lenders. All approvals are subject to credit review.”
This mirrors how institutions like BDC talk about vendor financing relationships: the supplier creates access; the lender provides the credit.(BDC.ca)
Canada’s credit markets are still cautious. Asset-based lenders look at:
Overselling approvals (e.g., “no credit check,” “guaranteed”) isn’t just misleading – it damages trust when someone is inevitably declined.
Instead, position it as:
In practice:
Good vendor programs feel professional, not “handshake plus a Gmail address.”
(This section also serves as the requested case study.)
A mid-size Ontario equipment supplier selling:
Everything was priced as a one-time cash figure. Financing, if mentioned at all, was “go talk to your bank.”
The sales team kept hearing:
When they checked back weeks later, deals had either gone cold or gone to a competitor who mentioned monthly payments.
The owner sat down with Mehmi to review the last 12 months:
Together, they built a simple menu:
In under a month, they:
Scripts were kept deliberately simple.
After six months of real use:
Most importantly, reps stopped treating price objections as dead ends. When someone said, “I can’t afford it,” the reflex response became:
“Let’s look at what this would cost per month, and see if that works better for your cash flow.”
That small shift created a lot more “When can we start?” moments.
1. Is vendor financing in Canada the same as vendor take-back (VTB) financing?
No. VTB usually refers to the seller of a business carrying a note for part of the sale price. Vendor financing programs for equipment are different: you introduce the customer to third-party lenders who provide leases or other structures, and you’re paid as the supplier.(BDC.ca)
2. Do I need a licence to offer vendor financing as a Canadian supplier?
If you are not lending your own money and you’re simply referring clients to licensed lenders or brokers, you typically do not need a lending licence. You’re acting as a facilitator, not as the creditor. Confirm with your legal and tax advisors, especially if you’re in regulated sectors.
3. Can vendor financing work for used equipment or private sales?
Yes – with conditions. Lenders will care about age, condition, and resale value. Strong used assets in core categories (construction, transport, forestry, etc.) can often be financed through leases or structured deals. In some cases, a sale-leaseback on existing assets is used to unlock equity for a used purchase.
4. How does the current interest rate environment affect my program?
With the Bank of Canada’s policy rate at 2.25% as of late 2025, lenders have room to price more competitively than at the 2022–23 peak, but credit remains selective.(Bank of Canada) A vendor program helps you present payment options that reflect today’s reality, rather than hoping your customer’s bank will move quickly on its own.
5. What’s the biggest mistake Canadian vendors make with financing?
Two big ones:
6. How do I start a vendor program with Mehmi?
A practical starting point is to contact Mehmi through Contact Us with a quick snapshot of your inventory and customer base. From there, you can co-design a vendor financing program that taps into tools like Equipment Leases, Equipment Line of Credit, and selective Business Loans where they genuinely add value. For more context and ideas, you can also browse the Blog.
See “Anonymous case study: from ‘I can’t afford it’ to ‘when can we start?’” in the blog body above for a full, realistic example of how a Canadian supplier rolled out a vendor financing program with Mehmi and shifted their sales conversations.