Dassault Aviation equipment financing and leasing in Canada helps corporate flight departments, charter operators, aircraft management firms, private aviation businesses, and executive transport operators acquire high-value business jets without draining working capital. Mehmi Financial Group finances eligible new and used Dassault aircraft through structured equipment leasing in Canada, helping operators preserve liquidity for insurance, crew, hangarage, maintenance reserves, inspections, avionics, and operating costs.
Dassault Aviation aircraft are premium business aviation assets used across Canada for executive travel, corporate flight operations, charter service, aircraft management, international business travel, and high-value client transportation. Falcon models such as the Falcon 50, Falcon 900, Falcon 2000, Falcon 7X, Falcon 8X, Falcon 6X, and Falcon 10X can support serious business mobility, but the aircraft purchase is only one part of the capital requirement. Operators still need cash for pilots, maintenance reserves, insurance, hangarage, inspections, avionics support, fuel, navigation fees, and downtime planning.
Financing can be stronger than paying cash when the aircraft supports business travel or revenue-producing charter activity. A Canadian aircraft management company adding a used Falcon 2000, for example, may prefer to preserve working capital for crew onboarding, insurance deposits, maintenance planning, and client operations instead of placing the full aircraft cost on the balance sheet upfront. A Gold or Prime borrower with five or more years in business, clean bureau, homeownership, strong trade depth, and clean bank conduct may qualify with 0–5% down. A Silver file may need 5–10% down, while Bronze or Sub-Prime files should expect 10–25% down and tighter approval conditions.
Tax treatment should be reviewed before closing. With a lease, qualifying Canadian businesses may generally deduct lease payments when the aircraft is used to earn business income, while goods and services tax or harmonized sales tax registrants can typically claim input tax credits on the tax portion of lease payments. If the aircraft is purchased, the company may claim capital cost allowance instead. The better structure depends on use, ownership goals, accounting treatment, aircraft hold period, and whether the aircraft is primarily used for commercial or corporate business purposes. For broader purchase planning, the new versus used equipment financing Canada guide can help compare new aircraft, used aircraft, upgrades, and replacement units.
Mehmi can review financing for eligible new and used Dassault Aviation aircraft, including Falcon 50, Falcon 900, Falcon 2000, Falcon 7X, Falcon 8X, Falcon 6X, Falcon 10X, and other commercially supportable Dassault business jets. Approval is not based on the Dassault name alone. Aviation lenders review aircraft age, total time, engine status, maintenance logs, inspection history, avionics, interior condition, ownership trail, registration, lien position, insurance, operating purpose, and resale demand.
Dassault aircraft are not underwritten like construction equipment, highway trucks, or standard business equipment. They are specialized aviation assets, and high-value business jet financing is documentation-heavy. A newer Falcon 8X or Falcon 6X with complete records, strong maintenance history, current inspections, modern avionics, and a clear corporate or charter use case will usually be easier to finance than an older Falcon with incomplete logs, major inspections coming due, unclear title, dated avionics, or limited resale demand. The requested term must make sense against the aircraft’s value, age, condition, useful life, and marketability.
A practical example would be a Canadian charter operator with ten years in business financing a used Dassault Falcon 900 as a replacement aircraft. If the aircraft has complete logbooks, clean title, current inspection status, documented engine support, strong valuation, and confirmed insurance, the file has a stronger credit and collateral story. If the same aircraft has missing records, significant upcoming maintenance exposure, unclear ownership history, or weak charter demand, the lender may require more down, a shorter term, additional collateral, or may decline the transaction. Buyers reviewing used aircraft should also read the used equipment financing Canada guide, because aircraft documentation can affect both approval and funding speed.
A strong Dassault Aviation financing file usually includes a credit application, 3–6 months of original PDF bank statements, aircraft purchase agreement or invoice, serial number, registration details, maintenance logs, inspection status, engine and airframe time, avionics list, photos, insurance information, ownership structure, and a personal net worth statement for most owner-managed files. Financial statements are generally required over $250,000, and a credit write-up is commonly required over $100,000. Application-only programs may be available up to $250,000 for qualifying files, but most Dassault transactions exceed that threshold and require full underwriting.
Clean dealer, manufacturer-supported, or reputable aircraft broker files may receive an initial review within 24–48 hours when credit, cash flow, aircraft details, and seller documentation are complete. Private sales, older aircraft, larger transactions, international ownership history, challenged credit, or incomplete aircraft records usually take 3–5 business days or longer. Private sales require a bill of sale, proof of payment flow, lien search, title verification, and clean ownership trail. Some lenders restrict private sales, so the seller structure should be reviewed before the buyer commits funds.
Underwriters assess character, capacity, capital, collateral, and conditions. Character includes bureau quality, payment history, PayNet or Equifax conduct, and bank statement behaviour, especially repeated insufficient funds. Capacity means the business can support the aircraft payment after pilots, maintenance reserves, insurance, hangarage, fuel, inspections, and existing debt. Capital means down payment, liquidity, net worth, and owner support. Collateral means the aircraft’s age, condition, logbooks, engine status, inspection history, avionics, interior condition, and resale demand. Conditions mean the aviation sector, aircraft purpose, time in business, revenue plan, and whether the Dassault aircraft is replacing an existing revenue-producing aircraft or expanding the fleet. Missing logs, unresolved liens, unclear insurance, major maintenance due without reserve capital, CRA arrears without a payment plan, or weak cash flow can kill a Dassault approval quickly. For preparation before submission, review how to get pre-approved for equipment financing in Canada.
Q: Can I finance used Dassault Aviation aircraft in Canada?
A: Yes, used Dassault Aviation aircraft can be financed in Canada when the aircraft has clean documentation, identifiable value, strong resale demand, and a clear business use case. Lenders will review total time, engine condition, maintenance logs, inspection status, title history, insurance, and cash flow. A used Falcon 900, Falcon 2000, Falcon 7X, or Falcon 8X with complete records is usually easier to structure than a lower-priced aircraft with missing logs or major upcoming maintenance. If the aircraft is being purchased from a private seller, review the private sale equipment financing Canada guide.
Q: What Dassault Aviation models does Mehmi Financial Group finance?
A: Mehmi Financial Group can review eligible Dassault Aviation models such as the Falcon 50, Falcon 900, Falcon 2000, Falcon 7X, Falcon 8X, Falcon 6X, and Falcon 10X when the aircraft, borrower, use case, and documentation fit lender requirements. Corporate-use aircraft, charter aircraft, and aircraft management assets are generally stronger than unclear personal-use requests. Approval depends on aircraft value, maintenance records, insurance, operating history, credit strength, and repayment capacity. For broader asset eligibility, see Mehmi’s eligible equipment for financing page.
Q: How long does approval take?
A: A clean Dassault Aviation financing file may receive an initial review in 24–48 hours if the buyer has strong credit, complete bank statements, clear aircraft records, and a well-documented seller path. Private sales, older aircraft, large transactions, cross-border title questions, upcoming major maintenance, or challenged credit can take 3–5 business days or longer. Business jet financing often requires more review than standard equipment because lenders must verify title, registration, logs, inspection status, insurance, valuation, and engine support. Mehmi helps package the file so the lender sees the full credit, collateral, and operating story upfront.
Q: What documents do I need to apply?
A: You should expect to provide a credit application, 3–6 months of original PDF bank statements, aircraft invoice or purchase agreement, registration details, serial number, maintenance logs, inspection status, engine and airframe time, avionics list, aircraft photos, insurance information, ownership structure, and a personal net worth statement. Financial statements are usually needed over $250,000, and a credit write-up is commonly required over $100,000. Private sales also need a bill of sale, proof of payment, lien search, and clear ownership trail. If the file has weaker credit, the bad credit equipment financing Canada guide explains how down payment, collateral, and bank conduct affect structure.
Q: Is leasing or buying Dassault Aviation aircraft better for my Canadian business?
A: Leasing is often better when the aircraft supports business activity and the operator wants to preserve cash for crew, insurance, maintenance reserves, hangarage, inspections, and operating risk. Buying may fit when the company wants long-term ownership and has the balance sheet strength to carry the aircraft directly. For corporate aviation, aircraft management, and charter operators, leasing can align payments with aircraft use while keeping liquidity available for unpredictable aviation costs. A broader comparison of Canadian financing structures is covered in top equipment financing options for Canadian businesses.
Q: How does goods and services tax or harmonized sales tax work on leased Dassault Aviation aircraft in Canada?
A: In most lease structures, the lender pays the applicable goods and services tax or harmonized sales tax at purchase and passes the tax through each lease payment. If the business is registered and the aircraft is used for eligible commercial activity, it can generally claim input tax credits on the tax portion of those lease payments. Provincial sales tax may apply in British Columbia, Saskatchewan, and Manitoba, while Quebec sales tax applies in Quebec. Mehmi can help structure the file so the aircraft payment, tax treatment, seller documentation, and funding conditions are clear before closing.
