Learn how equipment leases and loans are deducted in Canada: lease payments, interest, CCA, GST/HST ITCs, common mistakes, and a case study.
If you financed equipment in Canada, you don’t “write off the financing” the same way in every deal. The tax treatment depends on what you signed: a lease (most common in equipment finance), a loan/term facility, or a hybrid that looks like one thing but behaves like another.
This guide shows you—plainly and practically—how Canadian businesses typically deduct equipment costs when they:
We’ll keep the focus leasing-first, because in the real world, many Canadian operators choose leasing primarily for cash flow and approval, and the tax treatment becomes a clean secondary benefit.
Primary keyword: how to write off equipment financing on Canadian taxes
Close variants: are equipment lease payments tax deductible Canada, deduct equipment loan interest Canada, CCA vs lease payments Canada, GST HST on equipment lease payments ITC, equipment financing tax write off
Search intent promise: After reading, you’ll know what you can deduct for leases vs loans in Canada, how to record it, what to keep for CRA, and how to compare “tax outcomes” when choosing a structure.
Key point: CRA cares what the payment is for, not what you call it. Your deductions usually fall into one of these buckets: lease expense, interest/bank charges, or capital cost allowance (CCA).
Here’s the “taxonomy” that makes everything else click:
If you want the simplest “lease vs buy” decision framing first (before taxes), use this Mehmi guide:
Lease vs buy equipment in Canada
Key point: If you lease equipment used in your business, CRA generally allows you to deduct the lease payments incurred in the year for business use. (Canada)
Typical deductible items (assuming business use and proper documentation):
CRA’s leasing-costs guidance is the anchor reference here: it states you can deduct lease payments incurred in the year for property used in your business. (Canada)
In equipment finance, you’ll hear:
Tax-wise, CRA focuses on the substance and documentation. Don’t try to force a tax outcome by renaming a deal—keep the paperwork consistent and defensible.
If you want a practical explanation of lease structures (not accounting jargon), see:
Construction equipment leasing Canada: complete guide (2026)
If the financed “equipment” is a passenger vehicle, there are specific limits and calculations. CRA has separate guidance for motor vehicle leasing costs. (Canada)
Key point: With a loan, the equipment cost is capital (CCA over time), and the financing cost is usually interest and eligible bank charges.
CRA’s guidance on interest/bank charges states you can generally deduct interest on money borrowed for business purposes or to acquire property for business purposes, subject to limits and conditions. (Canada)
CRA even highlights in its “other business expenses” guidance that if you buy certain equipment, you can’t deduct the cost directly—you can deduct CCA and interest that relates to earning business income. (Canada)
If you’re comparing loan-like structures to leases, this can help you normalize pricing:
Equipment lease rates Canada: 2025 guide & tips
Key point: When you own depreciable equipment, the usual “write-off” is capital cost allowance (CCA)—a percentage claim based on the asset’s class.
CRA explains that CCA is the deduction allowed for depreciable property under the Income Tax Act (for corporations this is typically calculated on Schedule 8). (Canada)
CRA also provides the commonly used CCA classes and rates. (Canada)
Because CCA class depends on asset type, you should verify the class for your equipment using CRA’s class lists and guides. (Canada)
Practical advice: Don’t guess the class based on what your buddy did with “a similar machine.” CRA classing can be unintuitive—especially for specialized assets and vehicles.
If you want the deal-structure angle for heavy iron (where CCA timing and resale risk matter a lot), start here:
Heavy equipment loans Canada: financing guide (2026)
Key point: For most commercial equipment leases, you typically pay GST/HST on each payment, and GST/HST registrants can usually recover it through ITCs (to the extent of commercial use).
CRA’s ITC guidance explains how registrants can claim input tax credits for GST/HST paid or payable on purchases and expenses acquired for commercial activities. (Canada)
For the leasing-specific “who pays what and when” explanation (written for business owners), see:
HST/GST on equipment leases in Canada: who pays what and when
If you mix personal and business use (common with vehicles and some tools), your ITC claim should reflect business/commercial-use percentage. CRA has detailed guidance on calculating the percentage of use in commercial activities. (Canada)
Key point: Many owners choose leasing because deductions often track the payment stream, while buying typically spreads deductions via CCA.
Here’s a simple way to think about it:
If you want an apples-to-apples cost model (before you decide), use:
Equipment financing cost calculator Canada (free) + full guide
Key point: Don’t pick a structure based on “payment only.” Use a simple after-tax estimate to stress-test affordability.
Use this quick estimate (not tax advice—just a planning tool):
After-tax monthly cost ≈ Payment × (1 − Tax rate) − Monthly ITC recovery (if applicable)
Example (simplified):
This is exactly why many operators focus first on cash flow safety, then optimize tax.
Key point: Clean deductions usually come from clean documentation—the same thing lenders want.
Lenders typically require:
CRA wants the parallel universe:
In many leases, funding conditions include insurance and proof-of-delivery. After funding, covenants can include maintaining insurance and keeping the asset in good standing.
If you breach terms, you can create:
That’s why we’re leasing-first: structure should reduce surprises.
Key point: If you can’t prove it, you can’t deduct it. Keep a simple folder per asset.
Use this checklist:
If the equipment was bought used or from a private seller, documentation controls matter even more:
Private sale vs dealer equipment: how to finance either
Key point: Sale-leaseback can unlock working capital while turning an owned asset into a lease payment stream—but the tax implications need to be handled carefully.
Sale-leaseback is common when:
Start with:
Sale-leaseback financing in Canada
Then read the tax nuance here:
Sale-leaseback tax implications Canada guide
Key point: The best tax outcome is the one that stays defensible when your accountant changes—or CRA asks questions.
Business: Ontario-based field services contractor (crews, dispatch, seasonal swings)
Need: $145,000 for a service truck build + specialized tools and onboard equipment
Choice: Bank term loan vs lease structure
What happened:
Solution (leasing-first, documentation-first):
Outcome:
The real win: the business avoided the classic trap—claiming 100% business use when reality was 90–95%. CRA problems often start with small inconsistencies, not big fraud.
Key point: Most tax problems aren’t aggressive—they’re sloppy.
If you bought equipment, you typically deduct via CCA, not the full cost. (Canada)
CRA’s interest guidance makes it clear: you generally deduct interest on borrowed money used for business purposes, not principal. (Canada)
Lease payments often have GST/HST each month; registrants may recover through ITCs if rules are met. (Canada)
If there’s mixed use, your claims should reflect that—especially for ITCs. (Canada)
If you’re financing equipment and want to choose a structure that’s easy to approve, cash-flow safe, and tax-clean, Mehmi Financial Group can help you compare lease options, model after-tax affordability, and package a lender-ready file that won’t create surprises at year-end.
For context on lender options in Canada (and what they tend to prefer), see:
Top equipment leasing companies in Canada
Generally, CRA allows you to deduct lease payments incurred in the year for property used in your business (subject to rules and exceptions). (Canada)
No. Typically, you can deduct the interest (if the borrowing is for business purposes and meets CRA conditions), but principal is not deductible. (Canada)
Usually you claim CCA over time based on the equipment’s class and rules. Corporations typically calculate CCA on Schedule 8. (Canada)
Typically you pay GST/HST on lease payments, and GST/HST registrants may recover it through ITCs to the extent of commercial use, following CRA ITC rules. (Canada)
Keep the lease/loan contract, invoices showing GST/HST, payment records, proof of business use, and your CCA schedule (if owned). For mixed-use, keep support for your percentage-of-use. (Canada)
Not always. Leasing often gives cleaner timing and paperwork, while buying can be advantageous depending on CCA class, business income, and your plans for the asset. The “best” answer is usually the one that fits cash flow and stays defensible.