Learn how Canadian equipment dealers use vendor financing programs to offer monthly payments, close more deals, and protect cash flow.
Equipment Vendor Financing Programs in Canada: How Dealers Offer Monthly Payments
Canadian equipment dealers don’t have to become banks to offer monthly payments. A vendor financing program lets you sell the equipment, while a finance partner provides the capital, takes the credit risk, and collects the payments—your customer simply pays monthly instead of writing a huge cheque.
In this guide, we’ll walk through how vendor financing works in Canada, what a good program looks like, and how to roll one out in your dealership in 30–60 days, with a strong focus on leasing structures.
An equipment vendor financing program is a formal partnership between your dealership and a finance company so you can quote and close deals on monthly payments instead of just a lump-sum price.
At a high level:
This structure lines up tightly with how Canadian SMEs already behave. According to the 2023 Survey on Financing and Growth of Small and Medium Enterprises, about 49% of SMEs requested some form of external financing in 2023, including lease financing. (Statistics Canada)
In other words, almost half of your potential buyers are already thinking in terms of financing. A vendor program simply lets you keep that conversation at your dealership instead of sending them to a bank branch.
If you want a primer on the funding tools that typically sit behind these programs, Mehmi’s equipment financing overview is a good starting point for your leadership team.
Monthly payments help equipment feel affordable and cash-flow friendly, which directly boosts close rates and average order size.
From the customer’s perspective, vendor financing combines three things:
The Business Development Bank of Canada (BDC) notes that vendor financing is typically fast and convenient, with lower upfront costs versus traditional term loans—though they also caution buyers to understand terms and flexibility. (BDC.ca)
Specialist lessors that run vendor programs often report:
Mehmi sees the same pattern in dealer programs: once your team leads with “from $X/month,” upsell conversations become natural instead of pushy. Their equipment leases page outlines how different lease structures can support those sales.
A vendor program doesn’t need to be complicated. The key is a simple, repeatable workflow that your salespeople can follow.
Key idea: every quote should show both the cash price and at least one monthly payment option.
Typical dealer practice:
You don’t need to do T-values on the back of a napkin. Use your partner’s tools or plug numbers into Mehmi’s online calculator during the sales conversation.
When the customer is interested:
Behind the scenes, the funder:
The customer gets choices such as:
You can read more about how lenders think through these structures in Mehmi’s equipment leases and asset based lending pages.
Once the customer chooses a plan:
Many Canadian providers are happy using e-signature and email/fax for standard deals, which keeps the process quick and remote-friendly. (Richards Mortgage Group)
After you deliver and install:
At that point, the customer’s payments start, and the lender services the lease over its life. You’ve effectively turned a potentially slow, credit-sensitive sale into a cash-equivalent sale without touching your own balance sheet.
If you work across fleets and yard equipment, Mehmi’s heavy equipment financing page shows how these steps scale for big-ticket machines.
A good vendor program isn’t just “we offer financing.” It’s a handful of structures that actually match how your customers earn money.
Common patterns in Canadian leasing programs include:
CWB National Leasing and others highlight the ability to schedule payments to match seasonal revenue—pay when the equipment is making you money, not when it’s parked. (CWB National Leasing)
Mehmi can mirror those ideas for your customers, for example by using Rent Try Buy structures for hospitality where restaurants want to “test” new equipment before fully committing.
For your sales team:
If customers want deeper comparisons—say, lease vs using their bank line—you can point them to your partner or Canadian explainer content from BDC that compares buying and leasing. (BDC.ca)
Where equipment is only part of a broader growth plan (e.g. they also need cash for inventory or hiring), Mehmi can complement a lease with tools like a working capital loan or business line of credit, rather than forcing everything into a single structure.
Most commercial-use equipment that has a physical serial number and useful life can be placed into a vendor program.
Examples where vendor financing programs are very common in Canada:
Canadian lessors explicitly market “we can lease almost anything” lists that span everything from golf course gear to IT networks. (CWB National Leasing)
On Mehmi’s site, you can see this diversity reflected in their eligible equipment page and sector content like transportation expertise.
A strong vendor program will usually support:
For dealers with large used inventories, Mehmi can sometimes combine vendor-style funding on your units with refinancing or sale-leaseback on your own fleet to unlock equity.
The partner you choose will make or break the program. A well-designed vendor program can increase sales and margins; a poorly designed one can frustrate customers and your sales team.
Canadian vendor-leasing providers highlight benefits such as: (First Capital Leasing)
NFScapital and others also stress that a poorly designed vendor program can hurt profitability if pricing, residuals, or servicing expectations aren’t clear. (NFS Capital)
Mehmi leans heavily into this “trusted partner” role, positioning themselves as an extension of your finance function rather than just a back-end funder. Their About Us page gives a sense of the team’s multi-industry background, and the dedicated vendor program page outlines how they structure partnerships with dealers and manufacturers.
Ask potential partners:
If the answers sound vague or heavily one-size-fits-all, treat that as a red flag.
You don’t need a huge project plan. A practical rollout for a Canadian dealership can happen in a few focused steps.
Be clear about what you want from the program:
Write down 2–3 metrics you’ll track—e.g. close rate on quoted deals, average deal size, and percentage of financed deals.
Work with your chosen partner (for example, Mehmi) to:
Mehmi generally keeps this compact; they understand that dealers need clarity, not a 40-page legal tome for a mid-sized program.
Agree internally on:
Some dealers pair this with asset-based lending or a small equipment line of credit for their own inventory, which can smooth cash flow while the vendor program ramps up.
Hold at least one focused session where:
Mehmi will usually help with these sessions and may also point your team to educational content on their blog and industries overview.
Easy, high-impact updates:
Dealers who promote financing on their website and proposals consistently see higher uptake than those who only mention it verbally. (easylease.ca)
After 3–6 months, look at:
Share the numbers with your partner and adjust your offer (e.g. highlight different terms, change default buyout) based on real-world behaviour.
If you want an outside view, Mehmi’s Contact Us page is the easiest way to start that conversation with sample deals and performance snapshots.
Financing can deepen loyalty—or destroy trust—depending on how you present it.
BDC points out that vendor financing is convenient and reduces upfront cost, but some structures can be shorter-term and less flexible than traditional bank loans. (BDC.ca)
As a dealer, you should:
If customers want to compare financing to using their bank line, help them think through impacts on their borrowing capacity and covenants, not just the rate.
Customers are trusting you with sensitive information. At a minimum:
To reduce confusion for your team, point them to Mehmi’s public FAQ so they can answer common questions consistently instead of improvising.
The real power of a vendor program shows up when:
Mehmi’s business loans overview shows how they also support clients beyond the initial equipment, which reinforces your role as a long-term partner rather than a one-and-done vendor.
A contrarian but important point: a vendor program is powerful, but it’s not always the best fit.
Examples where you might not push financing:
In those cases, you can still mention financing but avoid forcing it. That honesty usually earns more trust—and often future business—than pushing a lease that doesn’t make sense.
Where there are broader cash-flow challenges beyond the equipment itself, your partner may suggest complementary tools like a merchant cash advance or invoice or freight factoring, but those should solve real working-capital issues, not just add complexity.
Background
A mid-sized material-handling dealer in Southern Ontario sold forklifts, pallet racking and small warehouse equipment. Average deal size was $45,000, with many SME buyers in logistics, light manufacturing and e-commerce.
They had no formal vendor program. Reps occasionally mentioned that “banks can finance this,” but there was:
Pain points
After a simple internal review, the dealer discovered that:
Solution
They approached a Canadian equipment finance specialist similar to Mehmi and set up a formal vendor program:
Internally, they:
Results after 12 months
Comparing the first year of the program to the prior year:
The dealer now treats financing as part of its core value proposition. Monthly payments are on the first page of every proposal, and the vendor program is mentioned alongside service and parts support in their sales pitch.
In Canada, a vendor financing program is a formal partnership between your dealership and a finance company (like Mehmi) that lets you offer monthly payments on the equipment you sell. Your customer signs a lease or similar agreement with the lender; you deliver the gear and get paid by the lender, often within a few days of proof of delivery. The dealer isn’t acting as a bank—it’s acting as a distribution partner for a specialist finance provider.
In most provinces, equipment dealers do not need a separate lending licence just to introduce customers to a third-party funder, as long as:
Large players like BDC and CWB National Leasing encourage buyers to ask questions and compare options, but they don’t suggest dealers must be licensed lenders to discuss vendor financing. (BDC.ca)
Mehmi can clarify any dealer-specific regulatory considerations during onboarding.
Most Canadian vendor programs are designed to work with more than just perfect credit. A specialist like Mehmi typically:
You won’t save every file, but you’ll rescue far more deals than if your only answer is “go to your bank,” which is often slow or conservative with younger or non-prime borrowers. (Bizfund)
Well-run vendor programs typically pay dealers within 2–5 business days after:
Several Canadian vendor leasing providers advertise quick payouts after completion of the funding package. (Mortgage Centre Canada)
Mehmi’s processes for equipment financing and vendor program deals are built around that same expectation, so you can rely on predictable post-delivery cash flow.
Often yes. Many Canadian lessors are comfortable including:
as part of a single lease schedule, subject to underwriting and tax rules. (CWB National Leasing)
From a sales standpoint, this is powerful: you can present “one monthly payment” for a complete solution instead of separate line items. Mehmi’s equipment leases are often structured this way for turnkey packages.
To explore a program with Mehmi:
You can start that conversation via Contact Us, learn more about their vendor program, or browse related topics on the Mehmi blog and FAQ page.