Learn what equipment financing is in Canada: leases vs financing, approvals, documents, terms, tax basics, and how lenders decide yes or no.
What Is Equipment Financing? The Canadian Guide Business Owners Actually UseEquipment financing is simply using a lender to spread the cost of business equipment over time—so you can put the asset to work now, while protecting cash for payroll, inventory, and growth. In Canada, “equipment financing” usually includes equipment leases (leasing-first) and secured financing/conditional sales (ownership-first). BDC describes equipment financing as a business loan that enables a company to get funds for buying or leasing tangible long-term assets. (BDC.ca)
This guide explains:
Who this is for: Canadian business owners planning to buy equipment (from $15K add-ons to $5M+ projects), plus operators who’ve been declined by a bank and need a cleaner structure.
How we put this together: This is based on real-world deal structuring logic (leasing-first), Canadian tax guidance for lease costs, and industry/lender practice and terminology. (Canada)
Key point: Lenders like assets that are identifiable, durable, insurable, and resaleable—because the asset itself is part of the risk mitigation.
Commonly financeable categories:
Harder to finance (not impossible, just trickier):
If you want the leasing-first overview in one place, see:
Equipment leasing in Canada (Mehmi guide)
Key point: In Canadian conversations, “equipment financing” is an umbrella term—your actual product is usually one of these.
A lease is typically structured around:
Leasing is popular because it can reduce upfront cash and match payments to usage. (Many businesses pick it for cash flow—especially during growth or seasonality.)
Start here:
Mehmi Equipment Financing (leases-first)
This is closer to a “finance purchase”:
Large projects often need:
For ABL context:
Asset-based lending (ABL)
Key point: The best choice is usually the one that keeps your business liquid while still getting approved on clean terms—not the one that “sounds cheaper.”
BDC summarizes the tradeoff well: buying is usually cheaper over the life of the asset, while leasing usually requires less cash upfront. (BDC.ca)
Here’s what changes in practice:
If you want the deeper “choose the right structure” breakdown:
Leasing vs financing in Canada (how to choose)
Lease vs buy equipment in Canada
Key point: “Lease” doesn’t mean “never own.” The buyout option is what tells you how ownership-heavy the deal is.
Typical options:
If you’re pricing offers, this is the guide you’ll use:
Equipment lease rates in Canada (how pricing really works)
Key point: Underwriters don’t just ask “can you pay?” They ask “what happens if things go wrong—and what can we recover?”
A classic framework is the 5Cs of credit: character, capacity, capital, collateral, and conditions.
Here’s how that shows up in equipment financing:
Do you pay as agreed, respond quickly, and keep your story consistent with documents?
Can cash flow support payments in an average month, not just your best month?
How much cushion do you have—down payment, retained earnings, liquidity?
How strong is the asset’s resale market? Is it standard, serviceable, and insurable?
What’s happening in your sector and the economy, and what are the deal terms? (Rates and credit appetite matter; the Bank of Canada’s policy rate is a key benchmark, and the Bank publishes the current target rate and recent changes. (Bank of Canada))
Practical takeaway: You improve approvals fastest by strengthening capacity clarity (clean cash story) and collateral clarity (clean asset story), not by arguing about rate first.
Key point: Lenders use two mechanisms to reduce risk: requirements before funding and monitoring after funding.
In equipment deals, common “before funding” items include:
Common monitoring triggers after funding:
Key point: Your cost isn’t just “the rate”—it’s the total structure: term, residual/buyout, fees, and payout rules.
Key point: Underwriters and good operators both ask the same question: does the equipment create enough benefit to comfortably cover its payment?
Use this simple screen:
Key point: Most problems happen because the file is messy, not because the business is bad.
Solution: Split the project.
Solution: Use a clean bill of sale, serial/VIN verification, lien search, and condition report.
Solution: Ask about early payout.
CRA’s guidance is clear that you generally deduct lease payments incurred in the year for property used in your business, and there are specific rules and choices that can apply depending on the lease. (Canada)
So: align the structure with your accountant’s plan (especially for larger tickets).
If you want the Canada-specific treatment breakdown:
Capital lease tax treatment in Canada (CCA vs deductions)
CCA class decision guide (Canada)
Key point: Equipment financing should fund long-term assets; working capital tools should fund short-term cash gaps.
If you try to fund payroll/inventory with an equipment lease, you can end up:
A common “clean stack” looks like:
If you’re exploring non-bank options:
Alternatives to bank loans for equipment (Canada)
Key point: Many equipment deals aren’t “bank loans”—they’re asset-backed structures delivered through specialized finance.
The Canadian Finance & Leasing Association (CFLA) describes itself as Canada’s only organization advocating for the asset-based financing, vehicle and equipment leasing industry. (Canadian Finance & Leasing Association)
CFLA also publishes industry intelligence like the Equipment Finance Activity Survey (EFAS), which benchmarks leasing and equipment financing activity. (Canadian Finance & Leasing Association)
What this means for you:
Business: Mid-sized Canadian food manufacturer (B2B + retail channels)
Project: $620,000 processing line upgrade (mixing + packaging)
Problem: Bank was slow and wanted broader security + tighter covenants. Management also didn’t want to drain cash ahead of peak season.
The business protected working capital, completed the install without starving operations, and avoided a “cheap-but-fragile” structure that could have caused stress in a slow month.
Key point: Fast approvals come from complete packages.
Here’s the short list:
If you want to unlock cash from equipment you already own, consider:
Sale-leaseback financing in Canada
If you’re buying equipment and want a structure that’s realistically approvable (and cash-flow safe), Mehmi can help you map the best lease-first option and package the file so lenders see the deal clearly.
Equipment financing is the umbrella term. Leasing is a common type of equipment financing where the asset and end-of-term option (FMV, fixed buyout, token buyout) define the structure.
Yes, especially when the equipment is financeable and the story is clean—expect more cash in, tighter terms, and more documentation.
CRA guidance generally allows you to deduct lease payments incurred in the year for property used in your business, subject to rules and choices depending on the agreement. (Canada)
Because collateral affects recovery. Assets with strong resale markets (standard models, known brands, service support) reduce risk.
Missing invoice details, unclear vendor payment instructions, and no delivery/acceptance proof are common delays. For larger deals, weak interim reporting or unclear project scope also slows approvals.
Rates influence lender pricing and appetite. The Bank of Canada publishes the policy interest rate and changes over time; this environment can influence borrowing costs. (Bank of Canada)