
Edmonton equipment buyers often need the asset before they want to spend all their cash. A contractor may need a skid steer, a shop may need a CNC machine, and a trucking customer may need a trailer before the next contract starts.
A vendor financing program in Edmonton lets equipment sellers offer customer financing at the point of sale. Mehmi Financial Group reviews the buyer, structures the file, coordinates documents and helps the supplier get paid once approval, delivery, insurance and funding conditions are complete.
A vendor financing program in Edmonton helps equipment dealers, suppliers and manufacturers turn a cash-price objection into a monthly-payment conversation. Mehmi reviews the customer before any hard credit check, supports commercial equipment purchases across Alberta, and helps suppliers receive EFT payment after the file is approved, documented and funded.
A vendor financing program lets an Edmonton equipment seller offer financing without carrying the customer’s monthly payment risk. The seller provides the quote or invoice. The customer applies. Mehmi reviews the buyer, asset, cash flow and requested structure.
This is built for commercial hard assets with clear business use. Examples include trucks, trailers, excavators, loaders, skid steers, forklifts, CNC machines, restaurant equipment, medical equipment, oilfield support equipment and warehouse systems.
Edmonton suppliers can use Mehmi’s vendor financing program to add financing to the sales process without building an internal credit department.
Financing helps buyers move forward without draining working capital. A customer may need the machine today, but still has payroll, rent, fuel, insurance, GST, supplier bills and CRA obligations to manage.
Edmonton is heavily driven by small and mid-sized businesses. Alberta’s Regional Dashboard reports that 94.1% of businesses in Edmonton were small businesses in 2025, and the city had 34,378 businesses that year. (Alberta Regional Dashboard)
Across Canada, ISED reported that 36% of small businesses requested external financing in 2024. Statistics Canada also reported intended machinery and equipment capital expenditures of about $127.2 billion for 2026. (ISED Canada)
The process starts with a clean quote and ends with supplier payment after all funding conditions are cleared.
First, the supplier provides the quote or invoice. It should show the legal seller name, buyer details, equipment price, taxes, delivery details, year, make, model, VIN or serial number, kilometres or hours where applicable.
Next, the customer applies securely. Mehmi reviews the file before any hard credit check. Credit may consider FICO, Equifax Business, PayNet, bank statements, time in business, down payment, PNW, CRA Notices of Assessment, contracts or financial statements.
Then the terms are structured. The offer may include term, payment, down payment, purchase option and funding conditions, subject to credit approval and current market conditions.
Vendor documentation should not move forward until the supplier is approved, the supplier invoice or quote is compliant, and conditions are cleared. Vendor documentation requirements also note that registration documents or NVIS may be needed when applicable.
The best fit is any Alberta business selling revenue-producing commercial equipment.
A construction equipment supplier in Edmonton, Nisku, Leduc, Acheson, Sherwood Park or Spruce Grove can use vendor financing for excavators, skid steers, loaders, compactors, telehandlers and lifts.
A transportation and trucking seller in Edmonton or the surrounding industrial parks can offer financing on highway tractors, dry vans, reefers, flatbeds, dump trucks and vocational trucks.
A manufacturing and wholesale supplier can offer payment options on CNC machines, forklifts, pallet wrappers, packaging systems, shop machinery and warehouse equipment.
A natural resources and energy equipment seller can use financing for eligible oilfield, service, utility and support equipment where the asset has clear commercial use.
The supplier needs clean paperwork, verified banking and complete equipment details. Missing documents slow down funding even when the customer is approved.
For standard vendor deals, funding packages usually include signed financing documents, IDs, the customer’s void cheque or stamped PAD form, customer email, current vendor invoice or bill of sale, vendor void cheque, vendor email, proof of initial payment where applicable, payment stream details and insurance certificate. Direct deposit forms are not accepted in place of the required customer banking document.
The invoice must be complete. Funding instructions state that sales orders, quotes, proforma invoices or sales contracts are not accepted as final invoices. Serialized assets need year, make, model and serial number, and used equipment must show the year.
Alberta files need attention to GST, PPSA, registration and equipment use. Alberta has no provincial sales tax, but GST still matters on invoices and payment calculations.
For registered vehicles and trailers, the file may require registration, NVIS or other ownership documents. If the buyer paid a deposit to the supplier, proof of payment should come from the customer’s account and match the customer’s banking information.
For private-sale or title-sensitive files, PPSA review matters. A vendor program works best when the seller has clear title, a proper invoice, verified banking and complete asset details.
Present financing as an option, not a guaranteed approval. Never promise a fixed rate, exact payment or automatic approval before the customer file is reviewed.
Use this line:
“Many customers finance this equipment to preserve cash. We can send your file for review before any hard credit check and compare the cash price with estimated monthly payment options.”
Use the equipment financing calculator at the decision point to show estimated payment ranges. Calculator results are not approvals; final terms depend on credit, equipment type, asset age, down payment and current market conditions.
For sales-team training, read how to offer financing to equipment customers in Canada.
Vendor financing works best when the payment conversation happens before the customer walks away.
An Edmonton contractor needs a compact loader before a site-prep job starts. The seller submits the quote, serial number, customer application and equipment details so Mehmi can assess the file.
A Nisku trucking customer wants a used flatbed trailer but needs cash left for fuel, insurance and repairs. The dealer provides the trailer VIN, invoice, customer details and requested structure for review.
A west Edmonton fabrication shop wants a CNC machine but needs working capital for materials and payroll. The supplier offers financing so the customer can compare the cash price with a monthly payment structure.
Supplier payment is delayed when the file is not ready to fund. Common issues include missing serial numbers, incomplete invoices, unapproved supplier information, unsigned documents, wrong banking forms, unclear deposit proof, missing insurance or equipment not delivered.
Funding checklists also stress that the vendor should be approved before submission, equipment should be delivered unless prefunding is approved, and approval conditions should be satisfied before the package proceeds.
Yes. In equipment sales, vendor financing and supplier financing usually mean the same thing. The equipment seller offers financing during the sales process, while Mehmi reviews the customer, structures the file, manages documentation and supports funding.
No. The customer is responsible for the financing agreement once approved and documented. The supplier provides the equipment, invoice, delivery confirmation and required vendor information, then receives payment after the transaction funds.
Yes, used commercial equipment can be considered. The file needs clear equipment details, useful life, fair value, proper ownership and a current invoice. Older or specialized equipment may require photos, inspection, maintenance records or stronger credit support.
Clean files can move quickly when the application, invoice, equipment details and bank statements are complete. Some approvals may be available in as little as 4–24 hours, but funding still depends on signed documents, insurance, banking, delivery and final conditions.
Yes, start-ups can be reviewed case by case. A stronger file usually includes prior industry experience, recent bank statements, a work letter or customer contract, reasonable down payment and equipment that clearly supports revenue. Credit guidelines also flag prior sector experience, bank statements and work letters as important support for newer or higher-risk files.
A vendor financing program helps Edmonton equipment sellers close more deals by giving customers a practical payment path.
Prepare your equipment categories, average invoice size, quote format, service area and typical buyer profile.
Call (437) 777-5901 or visit Mehmi Financial Group’s vendor financing program to set up an Edmonton equipment financing option for your customers.