The Liebherr LTM 1750-9.1 Crane is used by Canadian crane rental companies, wind-energy contractors, infrastructure builders, industrial maintenance firms, and heavy-lift operators that need large-capacity mobile lifting. Mehmi Financial Group can help finance new and used units through crane financing in Canada, helping preserve working capital for mobilization, operators, insurance, permits, and project costs.
The Liebherr LTM 1750-9.1 Crane is a nine-axle all-terrain mobile crane used for major Canadian lift work, including wind turbine projects, bridge construction, refinery maintenance, industrial shutdowns, power generation, infrastructure builds, and heavy civil work. Its high lifting capacity, road mobility, telescopic boom system, and heavy-lift configuration make it a revenue-producing asset when utilization is strong.
Financing or leasing can make more sense than paying cash because the crane is only one part of the total operating cost. A crane company still needs cash for operators, rigging, counterweight transport, annual inspections, insurance, permits, repairs, fuel, and slow-paying project receivables. A lease can help match the payment to the crane’s earning life, especially when comparing mobile crane financing in Canada and broader equipment leasing in Canada structures.
For example, an Alberta crane rental company adding an LTM 1750-9.1 for wind and industrial shutdown work may choose a finance lease instead of draining cash reserves. The approval story is stronger when the company can show fleet experience, signed work, utilization history, and enough cash flow to handle slower months.
New and used Liebherr LTM 1750-9.1 Crane units can be financed when the crane is complete, identifiable, insurable, and properly documented. Lenders review model year, hours, mileage, boom condition, carrier condition, counterweight package, jib package, service history, inspection records, certification status, accident history, emissions condition, and resale demand.
A used LTM 1750-9.1 with current inspections, complete components, verified ownership, and maintenance records is easier to support than a high-hour crane with missing records or uncertain compliance. Brand reputation also matters because lenders often view Liebherr, Tadano, and Grove through a resale and serviceability lens, as explained in Liebherr versus Tadano versus Grove crane financing. Older cranes can still qualify, but files must address the risks covered in used crane financing.
For example, an Ontario heavy-lift contractor buying a dealer-sourced LTM 1750-9.1 with inspection records and a full counterweight package will usually present a stronger file than a private-sale crane with unclear title. Private sales can still work, but lenders require lien checks, seller verification, serial numbers, inspection proof, and a proper bill of sale, similar to private sale equipment financing.
The process usually starts with a quote or bill of sale, crane specifications, serial numbers, inspection status, seller details, business information, credit review, and recent bank statements. Larger crane files may also require financial statements, tax filings, debt schedules, contract support, fleet lists, insurance confirmation, inspection reports, and proof of permitted operating use.
Clean files can often be reviewed within 24 to 48 hours. Larger, older, private-sale, complex, or challenged-credit crane files may take three to five business days because lenders need more time to confirm collateral value, condition, compliance, cash flow, and funding conditions. Buyers preparing early can use pre-approved equipment financing to reduce timing risk before bidding on a crane.
Lenders review character, capacity, capital, collateral, and conditions. Character means repayment history, capacity means the business can carry the payment, capital means down payment or liquidity, collateral means the LTM 1750-9.1 has recoverable resale value, and conditions include project demand, safety requirements, utilization, and regional heavy-lift activity. Mehmi also considers insurance, security registration, residual value, finance lease versus operating lease structure, capital cost allowance planning, and goods and services tax and harmonized sales tax on equipment leases.
FAQ
Q: Can I finance used Liebherr LTM 1750-9.1 Crane equipment in Canada?
A: Yes, used Liebherr LTM 1750-9.1 Crane equipment can be financed in Canada when the age, hours, mileage, inspection status, condition, and seller documents support the file. Lenders review boom condition, carrier condition, counterweights, service records, compliance, and resale demand. Older units may still qualify with the right down payment, term, inspection support, and borrower strength. Mehmi Financial Group can review dealer and private-sale crane options.
Q: What Liebherr LTM 1750-9.1 Crane models does Mehmi Financial Group finance?
A: Mehmi Financial Group can assist with Liebherr LTM 1750-9.1 cranes, counterweight packages, jibs, boom extensions, rigging-related components, and supporting heavy-lift equipment when the asset details are clear. Approval depends on the crane’s condition, marketability, documentation, cash flow, and intended use. Lenders prefer complete crane packages with current inspection records and clear serial numbers. Crane rental and heavy-lift companies with proven utilization usually present stronger files.
Q: How long does approval take?
A: Clean crane applications can often be reviewed within 24 to 48 hours. Larger purchases, private sales, older cranes, challenged-credit files, or transactions needing inspection may take three to five business days. Timing depends on how quickly the lender can confirm cash flow, crane value, seller documents, insurance, and funding conditions. This is similar to the timing explained in equipment financing approval time in Canada.
Q: What documents do I need to apply?
A: Most applications require a quote or bill of sale, business details, owner identification, credit consent, recent bank statements, and crane specifications. Larger crane files may require financial statements, tax returns, debt schedules, inspection reports, service records, proof of insurance, and contract support. Used units should include photos, serial numbers, hour and mileage details, and lien confirmation where applicable. Strong documents reduce lender uncertainty and improve funding speed.
Q: Is leasing or buying better for Liebherr LTM 1750-9.1 Crane equipment in Canada?
A: Leasing is often better when the business wants predictable lease payments and wants to preserve cash for mobilization, operators, permits, repairs, and insurance. Buying may make sense when the company has strong liquidity, steady utilization, and plans to keep the crane long term. The better structure depends on tax planning, residual value, down payment capacity, project pipeline, and repair risk. A lease-first review helps compare cash flow before committing to ownership.
Q: How does goods and services tax or harmonized sales tax work on leased Liebherr LTM 1750-9.1 Crane equipment in Canada?
A: On most commercial leases, goods and services tax or harmonized sales tax is charged on each lease payment based on where the crane is used. This can reduce the upfront cash burden compared with paying tax on the full purchase price at closing. Registered businesses may be able to claim input tax credits when the crane is used in commercial activity. Crane buyers should review input tax credits on financed equipment with their accountant before choosing between a lease and financed purchase.
