
Buying equipment in Nunavut is not simple. The asset may be in another province, freight can be expensive, and seasonal work windows are short. This guide explains how equipment financing in Nunavut works, what documents you need, what assets can qualify, and how to avoid funding delays before the unit ships north.
Equipment financing in Nunavut helps businesses buy or lease commercial assets without paying the full cost upfront. Approval depends on the borrower, equipment value, time in business, cash flow, down payment, and documents. Strong files include equipment specs, bank statements, ID, void cheque or PAD form, invoice, insurance, and proof of work or revenue.
Equipment financing in Nunavut works by reviewing the business, the asset, the repayment plan, and the documents before funds are released. Remote location matters because delivery, registration, inspection, and insurance can take longer.
Mehmi Financial Group helps Nunavut businesses access equipment financing and leasing options across Canada for commercial hard assets. Structures may include a capital lease, operating lease, EFA, $1 buyout, FMV, or TRAC, depending on the asset and credit profile.
The basic process is straightforward:
Approvals may be available in as little as 4–24 hours on complete files, subject to credit approval and current market conditions. In Nunavut, the fastest files are the ones where the seller, invoice, freight plan, and insurance are already organized.
Nunavut equipment financing is different because the asset often has to work in a remote, high-cost operating environment. Credit will look harder at delivery risk, service access, resale value, and whether the equipment can generate revenue fast enough to support the payment.
Statistics Canada reported that Nunavut’s population was estimated at 42,215 on April 1, 2026, and its median age was 27.1 years as of July 1, 2025. That is a smaller and younger market than most provinces, so equipment files need a clear work purpose, not a vague “future growth” story. (Statistics Canada)
The file should explain where the equipment will be used, how it will get there, and who will maintain it. A $95,000 skid steer in Iqaluit is not reviewed the same way as the same skid steer sitting at a dealer lot in southern Ontario.
Remote files usually need stronger detail on:
This does not mean Nunavut files are weak. It means the file must answer practical questions before credit has to ask them.
Most commercial hard assets with resale value can be considered. The stronger the asset, the easier it is to support the financing request.
Common Nunavut equipment financing requests include:
Nunavut construction and contractor equipment financing is especially common where businesses need yellow iron, trucks, generators, heaters, and support units for short building seasons.
Nunavut transportation and trucking businesses may need Class 5–8 trucks, trailers, reefer units, flat decks, and service vehicles. For remote freight and community delivery work, credit will want to understand the route, contract, and expected revenue.
Nunavut natural resources, mining, and energy businesses may need stronger asset details because specialized units can be harder to value and resell. That includes site support equipment, fuel and lube units, generators, loaders, and other remote-use assets.
Nunavut businesses need a clean credit application, full equipment details, business documents, bank statements, ID, void cheque or stamped PAD form, invoice, insurance, and any work contract or proof of revenue. Missing documents are the main reason funding slows down.
For a standard equipment file, prepare:
For larger files, accountant-prepared financial statements, interim statements, CRA Notices of Assessment, or tax returns may be requested. For start-ups, a work letter, signed contract, or proof of prior experience can matter more than the company age.
Use the equipment financing calculator before submitting the file if you are deciding between a lower down payment and a shorter term. The payment has to fit the cash flow, not just the purchase price.
Yes, start-ups can be considered, but the file must show experience, work source, down payment strength, and bank conduct. A new company with no revenue needs a better story than an established business with years of statements.
A strong start-up file should include:
For example, a new Iqaluit operator buying a $72,000 compact loader for snow clearing, property maintenance, and small excavation work should provide signed service agreements or letters from customers. If the operator has five years of field experience but only three months in business, that experience must be documented.
Credit does not only ask, “How old is the company?” It also asks, “Can this person use the equipment, maintain it, and earn enough to make the payment?”
Down payment can range from 0–25% depending on credit profile, asset type, age, seller type, and cash flow. Remote files, older equipment, private sales, or weaker credit may need more equity.
Down payment is not punishment. It reduces risk when there are open questions about resale, transport cost, equipment condition, or limited time in business.
A stronger file may qualify with less down when it has:
A weaker file may need more down when it has:
Rates and approvals are subject to credit approval and current market conditions. The better move is to submit the full file first instead of guessing from the asset price alone.
Yes, used equipment can be financed when the asset has clear value, clear title, and enough useful life left for the requested term. Older units need better proof of condition.
Used equipment is common in Nunavut because new equipment may be expensive, delayed, or already committed to southern buyers. That does not make used equipment a bad file.
For used equipment, credit usually wants:
High-hour yellow iron or high-kilometre trucks need more support. If the unit has a rebuilt engine, new undercarriage, major hydraulic work, or recent repairs, include invoices.
A cheap unit with no service records can be harder to finance than a more expensive unit with clean documentation. Price alone does not make a file strong.
Yes, private sale equipment can be financed, but the seller and title documents must be clean. Private sales need more verification than dealer purchases.
This matters for Kijiji, Facebook Marketplace, direct seller, and community-to-community purchases. The financing company must know the seller owns the asset and that no prior lien will follow the equipment.
For a private sale, prepare:
If the equipment is not registered, the original invoice and proof of payment become more important. If there is a buyout, a valid payout letter and payment direction may be required.
Do not send money to a private seller before checking title. A lien problem can stop funding even when the credit side is approved.
Yes, sale-leaseback can work if the equipment was recently purchased and the business can prove the original purchase and payment. It is used to recover cash already tied up in equipment.
A sale-leaseback is not a rescue tool for every old asset. It works best when the equipment was bought recently, the invoice is clean, and the payment trail is clear.
A business may use sale-leaseback after paying cash for equipment to meet a job deadline. The company then finances that asset to put working capital back into operations.
For sale-leaseback, prepare:
If the owner personally paid for the equipment and the corporation now wants to finance it, title transfer must be documented properly. Otherwise, the asset may not clearly belong to the business.
Funding is delayed when the file is approved but the closing documents are incomplete. In Nunavut, delays are often caused by freight timing, insurance wording, title issues, seller documents, or missing serial numbers.
The most common problems are simple:
Nunavut buyers should also confirm freight before signing. If the asset is sitting in Alberta, Ontario, Quebec, or Manitoba, the file should state who pays shipping, when it moves, and whether the equipment is insured during transit.
A complete funding package matters more in remote deals. One missing document can cost a week.
A strong Nunavut file shows the asset, borrower, seller, and repayment plan clearly. Credit should be able to understand the deal in five minutes.
Example: An Iqaluit contractor buys a used $118,000 skid steer with 1,900 hours for municipal snow clearing and summer site work. The business has 4 years TIB, $38,000 average monthly deposits, no recent NSFs, and two signed service letters.
The file includes:
The financing request is structured over 60 months with 10% down, subject to credit approval and current market conditions. The payment fits the bank statements because the snow contract revenue is seasonal but predictable.
That is the difference between “I need equipment” and “Here is why this equipment pays for itself.”
Equipment financing may affect GST/HST input tax credits, CCA deductions, and how payments are recorded. The exact treatment depends on lease type, purchase option, accounting method, and CRA rules.
A capital lease, operating lease, EFA, and $1 buyout can be treated differently. Business owners should confirm tax treatment with their accountant before signing.
Key questions to ask your accountant:
Do not choose a structure only because the monthly payment is lower. Choose the structure that works for cash flow, tax planning, and future equipment replacement.
Nunavut businesses should prepare the file before shopping aggressively. A clean package gives credit fewer reasons to pause the deal.
Use this checklist before applying:
If the file is for a start-up, add your work letter, contract, prior experience, and personal bank statements. If the file is for refinancing or sale-leaseback, add photos, proof of ownership, buyout details, and proof of original payment.
The better the first submission, the faster the answer.
Yes, challenged credit can be considered, but the file needs support. Strong bank statements, down payment, a hard asset, proof of work, and a clear explanation of past credit issues can help. Recent NSFs, unpaid collections, or unclear income may require more documents or more cash down.
Yes, equipment located in another province can be considered if the seller, title, invoice, delivery, and insurance are clear. The file should explain how the asset will be transported to Nunavut, who pays freight, and when risk transfers from seller to buyer.
Yes, a void cheque or stamped PAD form is usually required for PAP/PAD payments. Direct deposit forms are often not accepted. The banking name should match the borrower, corporation, director, or guarantor where required by the approval.
Yes, private marketplace purchases can be considered, but they need more verification. Expect to provide a bill of sale, seller ID, proof of ownership, lien search, photos, inspection if required, and proof of any deposit from the borrower’s bank account.
Complete files may be reviewed in as little as 4–24 hours, subject to credit approval and current market conditions. Funding can take longer if insurance, lien search, seller documents, registration, inspection, or delivery confirmation is missing.
Assets with weak resale value, unclear title, missing serial numbers, high hours, major repairs, or limited service support are harder to finance. Consumer vehicles, cannabis-related assets, crypto-related assets, and unclear personal-use equipment are not a fit for standard commercial equipment financing.
Equipment financing in Nunavut is won or lost on file quality. Get the invoice, equipment specs, bank statements, insurance, seller documents, and PAD form ready before the asset ships north. Call Mehmi Financial Group at (437) 777-5901.