Need working capital? Learn how to unlock cash from equipment you already own—via sale-leaseback—without stopping operations. Docs, timeline, costs.
If you own equipment that’s paid off (or mostly paid off), you may be sitting on usable working capital—without realizing it. The “no downtime” way to access it is usually a sale-leaseback: you sell the equipment to a leasing company and immediately lease it back, so you keep using it while freeing up cash.
This guide covers:
If you want a general primer on equipment financing structures first, start here: the ultimate guide to equipment financing in Canada (2026).
Key point: You’re not borrowing against your equipment in the traditional sense—you’re usually converting owned equipment into cash, then paying for the right to keep using it.
The most common structure is sale-leaseback, defined as selling equipment to a leasing company and leasing the same equipment back to the original owner, who continues to use it.
This matters because it sets expectations:
If your team needs a refresher on how leasing works (FMV vs fixed buyout, residuals, etc.), bookmark this: equipment leasing in Canada (2026 guide).
Key point: Sale-leaseback is a working-capital tool—best when cash is tight or growth is real—worst when it’s used to paper over a broken business model.
BDC’s cash flow resources explain why even profitable companies can face cash crunches and how to manage working capital cycles. (BDC.ca)
A defensible (slightly contrarian) opinion:
If you have a healthy operating line and the issue is simply timing (one late customer), it can be cheaper to fix your cash conversion cycle than to convert owned equipment into a multi-year fixed payment. Use sale-leaseback when it improves your overall risk position—not just because it’s available.
Key point: Underwriters aren’t just asking “Is the equipment worth something?” They’re asking “Will the business stay stable enough to make payments?”
Most equipment deals can be explained through the 5Cs: character, capacity, capital, collateral, and conditions.
Here’s how sale-leaseback is judged in plain language:
If you’re weighing lease vs finance vs cash for a new asset (different question, same thinking), this comparison helps: finance vs lease equipment in Canada (2026 decision guide).
Key point: These get lumped together—but they solve different problems.
If you’re making an ownership decision more broadly, keep this in your cluster: lease vs buy equipment in Canada.
Key point: The usable cash isn’t the equipment’s sticker price—it’s the equipment’s current market value, minus any liens, plus/minus deal costs.
Use this quick estimate:
Estimated cash-out = (market value × advance %) − existing lien payout − closing costs
Where:
This is why two operators with “the same machine” can get different outcomes: underwriters price and advance based on risk and collateral quality.
For cost benchmarking (so you don’t get surprised by pricing), compare against these references: equipment leasing rates in Canada and equipment financing rates in Canada—what’s normal in 2026.
Key point: Sale-leaseback is document-heavy compared to a simple vendor purchase because the lessor has to prove (1) you owned it and (2) it’s free of liens at funding.
A typical sale-leaseback funding package may require:
That one bullet—original proof of payment—is where many “we own it” deals slow down.
If you want the broader doc list across deal types, here’s the internal resource: documents needed for equipment financing in Canada.
Key point: Speed comes from preparation. Most delays are ownership/lien/insurance issues—not the credit decision.
Here’s a realistic timeline when the file is clean:
If your priority is speed (and you’re comfortable with the tradeoffs), these two reads help you avoid common slowdowns: equipment financing quick approval in Canada and equipment financing with minimal documents in Canada.
Key point: Sale-leaseback isn’t just a financing decision—it can create tax timing effects (and sometimes surprises) when you “dispose” of depreciable property.
When you sell depreciable property, it can trigger CCA recapture (or a terminal loss) depending on proceeds vs the undepreciated balance. CRA’s guidance discusses the tax implications of disposing of depreciable property, including recapture and terminal loss. (Canada)
Practical translation:
GST/HST mechanics depend on registration status and how the transaction is structured. CRA explains how input tax credits (ITCs) work and eligibility rules. (Canada)
CRA also outlines rules and definitions around capital property for GST/HST ITC purposes. (Canada)
The Canada-specific “gotcha”:
Even if you can claim ITCs, there can be a timing gap—you pay GST/HST (or charge it) now and recover/settle later through filings. That timing matters if you’re doing sale-leaseback specifically because cash is tight.
Key point: Sale-leaseback solves liquidity—but it also creates a new fixed monthly obligation, so the structure must match your business cycle.
This is the “credit brain” moment: underwriters care about capacity—your ability to service the lease through your worst months. That’s why lenders may require bank statements for certain sectors and risk tiers.
Ask these questions:
If you answer “no” to multiple questions, it’s a sign you need a different working capital plan—or a smaller, shorter structure.
Key point: Most declines and delays come from ownership gaps, lien complexity, or a story that doesn’t match the bank activity.
Here are the common deal killers:
Fix: Gather purchase paperwork first. If it was paid personally, be ready to document the transfer properly.
Fix: Start lien discharge immediately—before you negotiate final terms.
Lenders may want 3 months of bank statements in PDF (not separate photos), especially in certain industries.
Fix: Provide one clean PDF and a short explanation of any anomalies (one NSF, a temporary dip, a big one-time expense).
Key point: Treat sale-leaseback like a project: one folder, one owner, one clear story.
Underwriters love clarity: “We’re unlocking $X to fund inventory for Y contract,” beats “general working capital.”
Lease documentation errors and inconsistencies cause “deal drift.” Proper document execution is critical for timely funding.
If you want to compare providers and processes before you start, this cluster link is helpful: top Canadian equipment leasing companies (what each is best for).
Key point: The win wasn’t just “getting cash”—it was avoiding a cash crunch while keeping production running.
Business: Ontario-based fabrication and install company (anonymous)
Problem: Strong backlog, but cash was tied up in receivables and material deposits. Payroll pressure was building during a growth month.
Asset: Fully owned CNC and supporting equipment, still in strong condition with clear resale market.
Mehmi structured a sale-leaseback:
The practical payoff: They avoided expensive “panic” funding and delivered contracts on time—protecting revenue and reputation.
If you’re considering using owned equipment to unlock working capital, Mehmi can pressure-test the asset, confirm what will be required (proof of ownership, liens, insurance), and structure a leaseback that preserves operations without creating a payment you’ll regret in your slow months.
It’s when you sell equipment to a leasing company and lease it back, continuing to use it in your business. The equipment typically stays on site—no operational pause required.
Common requirements include signed lease documents, IDs, void cheque/PAD, insurance, a bill of sale, original purchase invoice and proof of payment, lien search satisfaction, and sometimes inspection/registration transfers.
If paperwork is clean, credit decisions can move quickly—delays usually come from lien payouts, insurance, or missing ownership proof. Treat the “conditions to fund” phase as the main timeline driver.
Often, yes—selling depreciable property can affect CCA, potentially creating recapture or terminal loss depending on proceeds and UCC. CRA discusses disposal implications including recapture and terminal loss. (Canada)
GST/HST depends on registration status and how the transaction is structured. CRA explains ITC eligibility and how GST/HST paid/payable is handled. (Canada) Talk to your accountant about the specific mechanics for your situation.
Because the new lease payment changes your fixed obligations. In certain industries or risk tiers, lenders may request the last 3 months of statements in a single PDF to confirm capacity and cash behaviour.