A Canadian decision guide to refinancing vs replacing equipment—24-month cost framework, cash flow, tax, and lender approval factors.
If you’re staring at an aging machine and a new quote, the real question isn’t “Which payment is lower?” It’s which choice produces the lowest 24-month total cost—including repairs, downtime risk, and the cash flow pressure you’ll feel in a slow month.
A practical rule we use in credit reviews is this:
This guide gives you a CFO-style framework to compare both options over the next 24 months, with Canadian tax and lender logic baked in.
Key point: If you compare only monthly payments, you’ll often choose wrong. Compare total cash out over 24 months, then stress-test it.
Use this simple “all-in” equation for each option:
24-month total cash cost =
You won’t know every number perfectly. That’s fine. You’ll still get a better answer than “payment shopping.”
If you want the quick primer on structures and terms that change the payment side of the equation, start here: typical terms for equipment financing (https://www.mehmigroup.com/blogs/what-are-typical-terms-for-equipment-financing).
Key point: “Refinance” and “replace” can mean multiple deal structures—your costs change depending on which one you’re actually doing.
Common refinance structures:
Lenders typically ask for full specs, registration, buyout details (if applicable), photos, and—critically—the reason for refinancing. They may also request recent bank statements and repair invoices depending on asset condition.
For a deeper “why structure matters more than rate” explanation, this helps: equipment financing vs operating lines of credit (https://www.mehmigroup.com/blogs/equipment-financing-operating-lines-of-credit).
Replace usually means:
Replacement financing often moves faster and underwrites cleaner when the asset is common and the paperwork is clean—because collateral is easier to value and recover.
If you need the “equipment financing basics” in Canada (plain language), use: https://www.mehmigroup.com/blogs/what-is-equipment-financing-canada-guide-for-2026
Key point: Underwriters don’t just underwrite the payment—they underwrite risk, and refinance deals can look riskier than replacement deals.
Most lenders still think in the classic 5Cs: character, capacity, capital, collateral, conditions.
Refinance deals can get sticky on two Cs:
Refinance files also commonly come with “proof” requirements (photos, registration, buyout letter) because the lender is stepping into an existing situation, not funding a clean purchase.
Key point: Refinance wins when your machine is still a dependable producer and you’re mainly fixing cash flow, not avoiding replacement.
Refinance is usually the lower 24-month cost when:
You’re not constantly repairing it, and you’re not one breakdown away from missing deadlines. If you’re already seeing rising failures, refinancing can be a trap (more on that below).
Refinance can lower monthly payments by extending term and/or restructuring the buyout. That matters because cash flow stress is a real default driver.
If the broader issue is working capital tightness (not just this machine), read: cash flow crunch: keep your business funded (https://www.mehmigroup.com/blogs/cash-flow-crunch-keep-your-business-funded).
A sale-leaseback can convert trapped equity into usable cash—powerful when the equipment is solid and you need liquidity for inventory, payroll buffering, or expansion. (It’s not a magic trick; it’s a restructuring tool.)
Two balanced reads:
Lenders don’t love vague reasons like “to save money.” A clearer story is:
That “reason for refinancing” is explicitly treated as important in lender documentation expectations.
Key point: Replacement can look more expensive on the payment line and still be cheaper overall if it reduces repairs, rentals, and missed work.
Replace is often the lower 24-month cost when:
If the machine needs major components soon, your 24-month cash cost is no longer “payment + minor repairs.” It becomes “payment + big repairs + downtime + emergency rentals.”
This is the contrarian truth: the most expensive equipment is the one you “saved money” on—until it fails at the worst time.
Examples:
If your machine is a bottleneck, replacement can create capacity that pays for itself—especially in a 24-month window where revenue opportunity matters.
Predictability is a credit quality trait. Underwriters like it, and operators benefit from it. Lower surprise cost often wins.
If you’re debating “lease vs buy” on the replacement itself, use: https://www.mehmigroup.com/blogs/lease-vs-buy-equipment-in-canada
Key point: Build a side-by-side that forces you to account for hidden costs.
Fill in estimates; don’t aim for perfection. Aim for honesty.
Now, stress-test both options:
Key point: If you can answer these cleanly, you’ll both decide faster and get approved faster.
Key point: Tax changes cash flow timing, and in a 24-month window, timing matters.
CRA guidance generally allows you to deduct lease payments incurred in the year for property used in your business (with specific rules/limits depending on circumstances). (Canada)
This is one reason leasing can feel “cleaner” in cash flow planning—especially if you’re trying to preserve working capital.
If this topic comes up internally, this explainer is helpful: https://www.mehmigroup.com/blogs/canadian-tax-benefits-of-leasing-vs-financing-equipment-2026
CCA treatment depends on the asset class. CRA publishes the common classes of depreciable property and related guidance. (Canada)
Place-of-supply rules determine which GST/HST rate applies to a sale or lease of goods/tangible personal property. (Canada)
For an operations-first breakdown, see: https://www.mehmigroup.com/blogs/hst-gst-on-equipment-leases-in-canada
Note: confirm your specific tax treatment with your accountant—structure and province matter.
Key point: You can’t control rates, but you can choose a structure that survives rate movement.
As of the Bank of Canada’s December 10, 2025 announcement, the target overnight rate was held at 2.25% (with the Bank Rate at 2.5%). (Bank of Canada) The Bank explains how it uses the policy rate to influence short-term rates. (Bank of Canada)
Instead of predicting the next 24 months, do this:
If a +1% move breaks the deal, it wasn’t affordable.
Key point: If you’re refinancing to move fast, prepare for the lender’s pre-funding requirements.
Lenders use conditions precedent (things that must be true before funds are advanced) and covenants (monitoring clauses after funding).
In practical terms, refinance delays usually happen when:
Key point: Most regret comes from comparing the wrong numbers.
Correct comparison: 24-month total cost including downtime and repairs.
Correct comparison: repair cost + downtime + lost margin vs the delta in payment.
Correct comparison: structure that fits the asset + cash flow wins. Underwriters price for risk and security quality; pricing isn’t just rate, it’s the whole risk package.
Key point: Replacement “won” because the downtime risk cost more than the payment difference.
Business: Western Canadian fabrication shop (repeat contract work, tight delivery windows)
Asset: older CNC unit, still functional but increasingly unpredictable
Decision: refinance to lower payment vs replace with a newer unit under lease
Initial math (what they saw):
What changed the answer:
We ran the 24-month table and treated downtime as a real cost:
Outcome: Replacement was the lower expected 24-month cost—despite the higher monthly payment—because one big failure would erase the refinance savings.
(And from an approval lens, replacement was also a cleaner collateral story.)
If you want a broader “choose the right provider lane” guide (bank vs independent lessor vs broker access), use: https://www.mehmigroup.com/blogs/best-equipment-financing-company-canada-2026-guide
Key point: A complete package lets you compare options accurately and prevents avoidable approval delays.
For refinance, lenders commonly want:
For replacement:
If you’re trying to keep working capital available while you do either option, revisit: https://www.mehmigroup.com/blogs/working-capital-vs-equipment-financing-canada-guide
Key point: The cheapest decision is the one that keeps your operation stable—especially in a bad month.
Do the 24-month comparison with honest repair and downtime assumptions. If refinance still wins after stress-testing, it’s likely the right move. If replacement wins once you price downtime, don’t let a higher payment scare you away from the lower total cost.
If you’d like Mehmi to pressure-test your assumptions (payment structure, term/residual, refinance documentation, and “what breaks approvals”), we can help you structure the option that truly costs less over the next 24 months—not just the one that looks cheaper on month one.
Often yes, but the lender will typically need full specs, registration, photos, buyout details, and a clear reason for refinancing; bank statements may also be requested depending on profile and industry.
Sometimes. Refinance tends to win when the asset is reliable and you’re mainly improving cash flow. Replace tends to win when downtime, repairs, or capacity constraints are the real cost drivers.
The classic 5Cs—especially collateral quality and conditions. Replacement can underwrite cleaner because the asset is newer and easier to value.
CRA guidance generally allows you to deduct lease payments incurred in the year for property used in your business (subject to specific rules/limits). (Canada)
If you own the equipment, CCA depends on the applicable asset class; CRA publishes common classes and related guidance. (Canada)
GST/HST treatment depends on the nature of the supply and place-of-supply rules for goods/tangible personal property (sale or lease). (Canada)