
Most “hidden” fees in equipment leases aren’t really hidden – they’re just buried in dense wording that no one explains. The smart way to avoid nasty surprises is to slow down at the term sheet, ask a few very specific questions, and set up reminders for key dates.
In Canada, small businesses can get fair, transparent equipment leases that protect cash flow – especially if you work with a specialist and not just whoever your vendor pushes you to. A partner like Mehmi can structure clear equipment leases with straightforward fees and predictable payments so you can focus on using the equipment, not decoding the contract.
Let’s walk through the fees that actually matter and how to stay one step ahead of them.
Most small-business owners think “hidden fees” means someone is trying to rip them off. In reality, some fees are standard and reasonable, while others quietly jack up your cost for no good reason.
These are common across Canadian lessors and lenders:
They’re not “hidden” if:
These aren’t automatically bad, but they’re where surprises usually live:
Smart move: when you get a quote, ask your advisor for a simple one-pager showing:
If they can’t or won’t provide that, you’ve learned something important about the relationship.
Interim rent is a classic “I didn’t see that coming” charge. The concept is simple: it’s rent you pay between the day you accept the equipment and the day your regular payment schedule starts.
Many lessors set all leases to start on the 1st of the month or quarter. If your equipment arrives on the 10th, you might pay per-day rent for those 20+ days, on top of all your regular payments. (hyster.com)
On one small excavator or commercial oven, interim rent might only mean a few hundred dollars. On a multi-piece fit-out or fleet, it can add up to thousands in extra cost – essentially creating a 13th (or 14th) payment over the term.
Some lease education resources call interim rent a “yield enhancement” tool for lessors – in plain English, a subtle way to bump their return. (medonegroup.com)
You don’t have to fear interim rent, but you should control it:
“How is interim rent calculated in this lease? What’s the worst-case dollar amount for my deal?”
Providers focused on long-term relationships – like Mehmi through its broader equipment financing solutions – are usually open to transparent interim rent language. If you get vague answers, treat that as a warning sign.
Evergreen or auto-renewal clauses are where a lot of frustration comes from. An evergreen clause simply means the lease renews automatically unless you give notice by a certain date. (greenbaumlaw.com)
For example:
“Unless you give us written notice 90 days before the end of the term, this lease renews for 12 months at the same payment.”
Miss that tiny sentence and you might end up making payments for a year on equipment you thought you’d own or return.
Look for these in your contract:
Some lessors and law firms have documented cases where evergreen clauses kept businesses paying even when the residual was just $1, because the customer never sent proper notice. (leasingnews.org)
You don’t need to be a lawyer; you just need systems:
Transparent Canadian funders are increasingly moving to clearer end-of-term options. Mehmi’s own approach, including in blogs like Equipment Lease Rates in Canada, emphasizes knowing your buyout upfront instead of leaving it to chance.
Insurance and taxes are legitimate costs – but the way they’re handled in leases can feel “hidden” if no one walks you through the math.
Every lessor wants the equipment insured. That’s fair. But there are two very different models:
Some finance companies charge separate insurance fees, and some vendors warn that these can be higher than market rates if you’re not careful. (greatamerica.com)
Smart moves:
“Can I use my existing commercial policy? What happens if proof of insurance is late?”
For many Mehmi clients, folding equipment into an existing policy is cheaper and simpler than paying a per-item program fee.
In some jurisdictions, equipment is assessed for property tax, and the lessor passes that cost on, sometimes with a small processing fee. (greatamerica.com)
Questions to ask:
You can’t avoid tax, but you can avoid being surprised by how it’s billed.
Long-term leases for complex assets (like copiers, medical devices, or forklifts) often bundle maintenance or usage-based charges:
None of these are inherently bad – they can actually protect you from big repair hits – but they need to be:
If the maintenance piece feels fuzzy, ask your provider (or Mehmi advisor) to separate the finance component from the service component, so you can compare apples to apples.
Vendor financing – where the dealer arranges the lease for you – is incredibly convenient. But it’s also where owners most often sign contracts they don’t fully understand.
BDC notes that vendor finance can sometimes carry higher costs, especially on used equipment, compared with going directly to a bank or specialist lender. (BDC.ca)
That doesn’t mean vendor finance is bad. In fact, Mehmi runs its own vendor program for dealers – but with an emphasis on transparency and Canadian SMEs’ needs.
When a vendor says, “We can take care of the financing,” you can say:
Then:
For many Canadian small businesses, the best setup is: vendor you trust, plus independent finance partner you chose, not just whoever is on the vendor’s referral list.
Here’s a practical script you can use with any lessor – Mehmi included. Each question is designed to flush out hidden costs.
1. Payments and term
2. Interim rent
3. Buyout and end-of-term
4. Fees
5. Insurance and risk
6. Flexibility
If a provider can’t answer these without deflecting, you may be better off with a more transparent partner – even if the base rate is a touch higher. Clarity is worth real money.
There’s no such thing as a zero-fee lease. The real question is whether the economics are obvious and fair. Mehmi’s philosophy, especially with small and mid-sized Canadian businesses, is:
Practical ways Mehmi-style deals help you avoid surprises:
You can read more about our approach on the Mehmi blog or the company’s story on the About Us page – and if you’re staring at a complicated quote right now, you can always send it through the Contact Us form for a second set of eyes.
Background
A three-room physiotherapy clinic in southern Ontario wanted to upgrade:
They got a vendor financing offer for $95,000 in equipment.
The vendor’s sales rep said:
“It’s simple – just one low monthly payment of $2,150 for 60 months. Sign here and we’ll deliver next week.”
The owner, rightly suspicious, asked their accountant to take a quick look. The accountant flagged a few clauses and sent the package to an independent advisor for a deeper review.
What the review found
The contract included:
When the advisor modelled the worst-case scenario (full interim rent plus an extra year of auto-renewal), the effective cost jumped by almost 20% compared with the quoted headline rate.
How they restructured the deal
Instead of signing, the clinic:
Monthly payments came out slightly higher – about $2,220 instead of $2,150 – but the total cost over five years was lower once avoided fees were factored in.
Outcome
Their comment afterwards:
“The first proposal looked cheaper on paper, but once we understood the hidden moving parts, paying a bit more per month for a clean deal was a no-brainer.”
1. What are the most common hidden fees in equipment leases for Canadian small businesses?
The most common “hidden” fees are interim rent, auto-renewal clauses, forced insurance programs, property tax processing fees, and poorly disclosed end-of-term charges (inspection, restocking, or return fees). (medonegroup.com) None of these are automatically unfair, but they become a problem when they’re buried in small print instead of being explained clearly at the proposal stage.
2. Is interim rent always a bad thing?
No. Interim rent is a normal way for lessors to charge for the period between equipment delivery and the first scheduled payment. It becomes a problem when the policy is vague, uncapped, or not explained in dollars and cents. You can usually control it by timing your deliveries, asking for a cap or true per-day calculation, and getting the policy in writing before you sign. (hyster.com)
3. How can I avoid getting stuck in an auto-renewing (evergreen) lease?
First, find the evergreen clause in your contract and write down the notice deadline. Then set calendar reminders 6–9 months before the end of the term so you can decide whether to buy, return, or renew. Send your notice in writing (email plus registered mail if required) and keep proof of delivery. Many Canadian businesses get burned simply because no one tracks the dates. (leasingnews.org)
4. Can I use my own insurance instead of the lessor’s program?
In many cases, yes – and it’s often cheaper. Most lessors are happy as long as the equipment is insured to an agreed value and they’re listed as loss payee. Problems arise when businesses don’t provide proof of insurance on time and get automatically enrolled in a higher-cost program. Talk to your broker before you sign and make sure they know what documentation is needed and when. (greatamerica.com)
5. Are documentation and admin fees negotiable in equipment leases?
Sometimes. A reasonable documentation or admin fee covers credit checks, PPSA registration, and setup – but there’s no harm in asking for a reduction, especially on larger deals or when you’re financing multiple assets. What matters more than shaving a small admin fee is ensuring there are no unexpected recurring fees that hit your cash flow later. A transparent partner will happily list all fees on one summary page so you can see the whole picture.
6. What should I ask an equipment finance provider before I sign anything?
Ask them to walk you through:
If you’re not getting clear, patient answers, consider talking to a specialist in Canadian equipment financing – or connect with Mehmi through the FAQ and Contact Us pages for a second opinion.