TRAC leases explained for Canadian trucking: how the residual true-up works, pros/cons, tax & GST/HST basics, approval tips, and when to avoid TRAC.
A TRAC lease (Terminal Rental Adjustment Clause) is a commercial vehicle lease where you and the lessor agree on a residual value up front, and then you get a final “true-up” at the end based on what the truck actually sells for.
That’s the whole point of TRAC:
If you’re an owner-operator or fleet manager, TRAC can be a great tool—when you understand the end-of-lease math before you sign. This guide shows you exactly how it works, how lenders underwrite it, and how to tell if TRAC is the right structure for your lane and replacement cycle.
For a bigger “lease vs finance” decision framework (Canada-wide), read:
Leasing vs Financing in Canada: Best Option for Business
https://www.mehmigroup.com/blogs/leasing-vs-financing-in-canada-best-option-for-business
Key point: TRAC is a lease with a planned end value and a final adjustment based on real resale.
With TRAC, the contract typically sets:
At the end, the truck is sold (or you buy it out), and the lease “settles” against that residual—this is the Terminal Rental Adjustment Clause doing its job. (Efleets)
A lot of Canadian operators will also hear TRAC described as open-end leasing or residual-based trucking leases. The naming can vary by lessor, but the economics are the same: the end-of-term settlement matters. (Efleets)
If you’re applying in Ontario and want the lender-document reality, see:
Toronto delivery truck leasing: approvals & documents
https://www.mehmigroup.com/blogs/toronto-delivery-truck-leasing-approvals-documents
Key point: TRAC fits trucking because trucks have active resale markets and operators plan replacement cycles.
TRAC is common in commercial vehicles because:
You’ll see TRAC referenced as a structure that can “keep payments low” while maintaining a known end-of-term outcome. (PacLease)
For Canadian tax framing on trucks specifically, this cluster post pairs well with TRAC:
Truck Financing vs Leasing in Canada: Tax Comparison
https://www.mehmigroup.com/blogs/canadian-truckers-tax-tips-for-leasing-vs-financing
Key point: the difference is who carries residual risk and how the lease ends.
If you’re already thinking about what happens at the end of your current lease, this is the most relevant next read:
End of Truck Lease? Return, Buyout, or Upgrade
https://www.mehmigroup.com/blogs/end-of-lease-options-buyout-return-or-upgrade-your-truck
Key point: TRAC only feels confusing until you write down the settlement formula.
Most operators can think of the end-of-term settlement like this:
TRAC True-up = Net sale proceeds − Preset residual
Where net sale proceeds means the actual resale outcome after typical remarketing costs (auction fees, transport, reconditioning, etc., depending on the channel).
Depending on your contract, that could show up as:
This is the “surprise bill” that TRAC critics complain about—and it’s real risk. The solution is not “avoid TRAC,” it’s set the residual intelligently and run your truck in a way that protects resale.
Key point: lenders approve TRAC when it reduces monthly stress without creating an unmanageable end risk.
A credit team is basically asking:
TRAC can help approvals because the payment can be lower than a fully-amortizing “loan-like” structure. (PACCAR Financial)
But TRAC can also get declined when the file has no buffer for a possible end-of-term shortfall—because then the deal is just “kicking risk down the road.”
If you’re earlier in your trucking journey, this guide helps you package a lender-ready file:
First Semi-Truck Loan: Guide for Canadian Owner-Operators
https://www.mehmigroup.com/blogs/first-semi-truck-loan-guide-for-canadian-owner-operators
And if your biggest friction is upfront cash, see:
Truck Loan Down Payments in Canada (2026 Guide)
https://www.mehmigroup.com/blogs/truck-loan-down-payments-in-canada-2026-guide
Key point: TRAC is still a lease—so in most cases you’re dealing with lease payment deductions and GST/HST on payments, with important “end event” timing.
CRA notes that leases generally include taxes (GST/HST or PST), but not items like insurance and maintenance (which are paid separately). (Canada)
That matters because it affects how you model cash flow: payments may be manageable, but you still need a maintenance plan.
CRA explains how GST/HST applies to motor vehicle leases, including rules that can depend on lease length and where the vehicle must be registered. (Canada)
Practically, most trucking operators experience this as: GST/HST is charged on each lease payment, and GST/HST may apply again on a buyout if you purchase the truck.
For an Ontario-specific breakdown, use this:
HST/GST on Trucks in Ontario: Buy vs Lease
https://www.mehmigroup.com/blogs/hst-gst-on-trucks-in-ontario-buy-vs-lease
And if you want the bigger Canada-wide tax timing logic:
Lease vs Buy Tax Comparison Canada (2026 Guide)
https://www.mehmigroup.com/blogs/lease-vs-buy-tax-comparison-canada-2026-guide
Key point: TRAC is a strategy—if you don’t have a strategy, it becomes a surprise.
If your plan is “I’ll just refinance later,” read this first so you understand the options:
Equipment Refinancing in Canada (Mehmi Group)
https://www.mehmigroup.com/blogs/equipment-refinancing-in-canada-mehmi-group
Key point: you negotiate TRAC by negotiating residual, term, and disposal rules, not just “rate.”
Use this checklist:
A 60-month TRAC is risky if you’re realistically rotating at 36–48 months.
Write down two “bad but realistic” resale outcomes:
If you can’t comfortably handle that, adjust:
If you want a simple mental model of leasing structures and why “cheap payments” can be expensive later, read:
Leasing to Increase Sales & Protect Cash Flow (Canada)
https://www.mehmigroup.com/blogs/leasing-to-increase-sales-protect-cash-flow-canada
Are you looking for a truck? Look at our used inventory (https://www.mehmigroup.com/inventory).
Scenario: A small Ontario carrier (3 trucks) wanted to replace one high-mileage unit that was generating downtime and repair spikes.
The problem
What we changed
Outcome
The big lesson: TRAC works when you treat the residual as a business plan—not a payment hack.
If you’re comparing TRAC vs FMV vs fixed buyout for a truck or trailer, Mehmi can help you model the true “all-in” outcome (payment, end settlement risk, and tax timing) and package the deal in a way lenders approve cleanly.
If you’re also choosing partners, this guide helps you compare lender types:
Best Truck Financing Companies in Canada (Guide)
https://www.mehmigroup.com/blogs/best-truck-financing-companies-in-canada-guide
The TRAC concept is often described as an open-end lease structure and is widely associated with U.S. commercial leasing terminology. (Automotive Fleet) In Canada, you’ll still see TRAC-style residual true-ups and open-end fleet leasing concepts, even if the paperwork uses different labels depending on the lessor. (Efleets)
Often, yes—because the lease is structured around a preset residual, which can reduce monthly payments compared to a standard loan structure. (PACCAR Financial)
You can owe a deficiency (a true-up payment). That’s why residual setting and truck condition discipline matter.
GST/HST generally applies to motor vehicle lease payments, with rules that can depend on the lease period and registration location. (Canada)
Not usually. CRA notes leases generally include taxes but not items like insurance and maintenance, which you pay separately. (Canada)
If you want predictable ownership and hate settlement risk, fixed buyout can be cleaner. If you rotate trucks and manage resale well, TRAC can optimize cash flow—just don’t stretch the residual to the point it becomes a future crisis.