Why use Mehmi Financial Group? Learn how a leasing-first partner improves approvals, cash flow, and total cost—plus what to prepare before you apply.
If you’re a Canadian business owner trying to finance equipment, the “benefit” of using a partner like Mehmi Financial Group isn’t a magic rate. It’s reducing approval risk, protecting cash flow, and avoiding deal terms that trap you later—while still getting the machine (or vehicle) you need on the timeline you promised your customers.
This guide explains the real benefits in plain language, how underwriters think, what to prepare, and how to decide if Mehmi is the right fit for your next equipment lease.
A good equipment financing partner isn’t just shopping lenders. You’re buying decision quality: the ability to structure the lease so it fits your business, get the deal approved cleanly, and keep you financeable for the next purchase.
If you want a benchmark for what “good” looks like in Canada, start with this internal guide: Best equipment leasing in Canada: what makes one good?
Here’s the key point: Lenders approve the deal you present—not the deal you meant. Small gaps (missing documents, unclear story, mismatched asset/term) create big friction.
Underwriters tend to evaluate equipment deals using a version of the 5Cs:
Under the hood, lenders are managing risk in three buckets (you don’t need the math—just the logic):
A strong financing partner improves your outcome by lowering PD (better packaging + structure), lowering EAD (right down payment/term), and lowering LGD (better asset selection and documentation).
If you want a practical comparison of when a broker beats a bank, here’s a helpful internal decision guide: Broker vs bank equipment financing (decision guide)
A “good” deal is the one your business can comfortably carry in a slow month—not the one with the lowest advertised payment. Lease structure is where a lot of owners win (or lose) without realizing it.
Key structure levers include:
A useful framework is to compare lease vs loan vs rent by use case, not by vibe. See: Lease vs loan vs rent: best equipment option (Canada)
The cheapest deal on paper can be the most expensive operationally if it:
In other words: don’t optimize for rate—optimize for survivability and flexibility.
Most declines aren’t “because of credit.” They’re because the file is incomplete, unclear, or mismatched to the lender’s box. A big benefit of using Mehmi is having someone who knows what underwriters will ask, and in what order.
A lender-ready package typically clarifies:
BDC’s equipment financing guidance and loan-prep resources are a good proxy for the kinds of documents lenders commonly request. (BDC.ca)
A good partner helps you anticipate both—so you don’t get surprised at the finish line.
Speed comes from fewer surprises. When the paperwork is clean and the structure fits, approvals move faster and funding doesn’t stall.
In practice, faster closings usually come from:
If you want to understand what a broker actually does in a file (beyond “shopping”), this is a solid explainer: Equipment financing broker guide (Canada)
Real equipment deals aren’t always neat dealership invoices. This is where a leasing-first partner often adds outsized value.
Examples where deals get tricky:
If you’re deciding between equipment financing and broader working capital, this internal guide helps you avoid mixing tools: Working capital vs equipment financing (Canada)
The point isn’t “tax tricks.” It’s avoiding avoidable mistakes that change your real cost. Canadian leasing has two common gotchas: income tax timing and GST/HST timing.
In general, the CRA allows businesses to deduct lease payments for property used to earn business income (subject to specific rules, reasonableness, and special limits in certain cases). (Canada)
If you buy, you typically deduct the cost over time using capital cost allowance (CCA) when the property is available for use. (Canada)
A practical internal read (written in plain language) is: CCA vs leasing: how the math differs in Canada
On most commercial equipment leases, you pay GST/HST on each payment and many fees, based on where the equipment is used—then (if you’re registered and eligible) you may recover it via input tax credits (ITCs). CRA guidance on ITCs and how they’re calculated is here. (Canada)
For a plain-English internal guide: HST/GST on equipment leases in Canada
Quick note: This isn’t tax advice—your accountant should confirm the best approach for your entity, province, and asset class.
A smart deal today should make the next deal easier—not harder. That’s a hidden benefit many owners only discover when they go to expand.
A leasing-first partner helps you avoid:
If you want a fast way to compare monthly and short-horizon total cost (where many real decisions happen), see: Lease vs loan payment calculator (Canada)
If your situation matches any of these, using Mehmi tends to be worth it. If none match, going direct can be fine.
For another internal perspective on comparing provider types, see: Banks vs brokers vs alternative lenders (equipment financing comparison)
Key point: This deal got approved because the structure matched the business reality—and the file answered underwriter questions before they were asked.
The situation (Ontario):
A two-year-old trades contractor wanted to buy a used skid steer + attachments from a non-franchise seller. Revenue was real but uneven (busy spring/summer, slower winter). Financial statements were thin, and the owner was worried a bank would stall the deal.
What typically kills deals like this:
How the deal was structured:
Outcome:
The business secured the equipment on time, protected working capital for payroll and materials, and—most importantly—ended the year in a stronger position to finance the next unit because the deal didn’t strain cash flow or create ugly back-end surprises.
Key point: The fastest approvals come from being “document-ready,” not from rushing. Here’s a practical prep list that keeps momentum:
BDC’s resources outline many of the same items lenders often request, especially around equipment quotes/invoices and preparation. (BDC.ca)
If you’re considering an equipment lease and want clarity fast, don’t start with “what’s the rate?” Start with this:
If you share those four points, Mehmi Financial Group can review your use case and show you what a clean lease structure might look like—term, buyout, fees, and the documents needed—so you can decide with confidence.
Lease payments for property used to earn business income are generally deductible, subject to CRA rules and special limitations in some cases. (Canada)
Typically, yes—GST/HST is charged on each lease payment (and many fees) based on where the equipment is used. If you’re registered and eligible, you may recover it through input tax credits (ITCs). (Canada)
Buying generally uses capital cost allowance (CCA), which deducts the asset cost over time (once it’s available for use). Leasing generally deducts lease payments as an expense, changing the timing of deductions and cash flow. (Canada)
Common requests include company/owner details and an equipment quote/invoice, plus financials or bank statements depending on deal size and risk. (BDC.ca)
Yes. Lease pricing is influenced by overall borrowing costs and market rates. The Bank of Canada sets the policy interest rate (target for the overnight rate) on scheduled decision dates, which flows into broader lending conditions. (Bank of Canada)
It’s often better when the deal is time-sensitive, the asset is used/specialized, financials are thin, or structure needs to match seasonal cash flow. In those cases, packaging and lender fit can matter more than headline rate.