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Finance lifts & shop gear for garages

Canadian guide for auto repair shops to finance lifts, diagnostic tools, and shop equipment using leases and working capital.

Written by
Alec Whitten
Published on
November 23, 2025

The real cash-flow problem behind lifts and shop gear

Canadian auto repair and maintenance businesses generated $26.4 billion in operating revenue in 2023, with an average operating margin of about 9.4%. Statistics Canada That’s a decent business — but thin enough that a couple of big cash purchases can wipe out your buffer.

At the same time:

  • Canadians registered 26.3 million road motor vehicles in 2022 Statistics Canada
  • Households spend roughly $79 per month on vehicle maintenance and repair on average Ratehub.ca
  • Inflation has pushed major repair bills sharply higher (e.g., transmission replacements commonly in the $5,000–$6,500 range) a-protectwarranty.com

Combine older vehicles on the road with rising repair costs, and you get strong demand — but also pressure on shops to invest in:

  • Multiple 2-post and 4-post lifts
  • Alignment racks and ADAS calibration gear
  • Scan tools and OEM-level diagnostic software
  • Compressors, tire machines, A/C machines, etc.

A proper setup can easily exceed $100,000+ once you factor in installation and software subscriptions. Individual items alone can run:

  • Lifts: often $4,000+ each installed, depending on type JMC Equipment
  • Diagnostic equipment: $1,500–$10,000+ plus annual update fees AutoLeap+1

If you pay for all of that in cash, you’re left vulnerable on payroll, rent, and parts. The smarter play is to finance the hard assets over their useful life, and keep your cash available for people and parts.

Why most shops should finance equipment, not buy everything in cash

Key point: Long-life equipment (like lifts and alignment racks) should usually be financed over years, while consumables and everyday tools should be paid from cash flow.

Here’s the contrarian stance:

If you’re a growing shop, writing a cheque for $40,000–$80,000 of equipment is often riskier than taking on well-structured equipment financing.

Why?

  • Lifts and high-end diagnostic tools generate revenue for 7–10+ years.
  • Payroll, rent, and parts orders are short-term obligations.
  • When you sink cash into iron, you often end up using credit cards or expensive emergency products to cover payroll and stock — which is the exact opposite of what a lender or landlord wants to see.

A cleaner approach:

You’re not “playing it safe” by paying cash for everything — you’re shifting the risk from lenders to your staff and customers.

Why leasing fits lifts, bays, and big-ticket shop gear

Key point: Leasing spreads the cost of major shop equipment over its revenue-earning life, while preserving your cash and bank line for payroll and inventory.

Leasing is particularly well-suited to:

  • Lifts and hoists (2-post, 4-post, scissor, alignment)
  • Air compressors and central air systems
  • Tire changers, balancers, alignment machines
  • Large toolboxes and specialty equipment

With a Mehmi equipment lease or their broader equipment financing solutions, you can typically:

  • Finance new or used equipment from a vendor or private seller
  • Include soft costs (install, freight, sometimes training) in the financed amount
  • Match term to expected useful life (often 3–7 years)
  • Choose an end-of-term option (buyout, upgrade, return depending on structure)

This lines your monthly payment up with the extra labour hours and revenue those new bays generate, instead of smashing your bank balance on day one.

Which shop equipment can be leased?

As a rule, if it has a serial number and a clear remarketing value, there’s a good chance it falls under eligible equipment. For auto repair, that often includes:

  • Lifts & hoists
  • Alignment racks
  • Tire and wheel equipment
  • Compressors and air dryers
  • A/C machines
  • Welders and frame machines
  • Bigger scan tools and diagnostic platforms (when coupled with hardware)

If you’re adding a bay or refitting your shop, a Mehmi advisor can help structure vendor invoices through a vendor program so your supplier gets paid in full and you make regular lease payments instead.

Financing lifts the smart way

Key point: Treat lifts as core, long-life assets — finance them over time, and focus on uptime and safety, not just sticker price.

Lifts are the backbone of your bay count and your labour hours. A couple of opinions from the credit side:

  1. Don’t cheap out on lift quality to avoid financing. One failed seal or safety issue can cost more than a year of lease payments.
  2. Used is fine — but verify. For used lifts, lenders will care about age, brand, and installation standards.

Typical options for lift financing:

  • Straight equipment lease: For new installs in an existing shop, financing each lift (and related gear) over 5–7 years.
  • Equipment line of credit: If you know you’ll be adding more bays, you can get pre-approved, then draw as you install lifts over time.
  • Refinancing or sales leaseback: If you already own several lifts, you can sell them to the funder, lease them back, and unlock equity to finance expansion.

For shops that also service or upfit trucks, Mehmi’s truck repair financing can cover heavy-duty lifts and specialized gear tailored to fleets and commercial vehicles.

Financing diagnostic tools and software without strangling cash flow

Key point: High-end scan tools and software are essential but depreciate quickly; use financing to spread the hit, and avoid locking yourself into obsolete tech.

Modern vehicles use complex electronics, ADAS systems, and manufacturer-specific codes. Generic tools aren’t enough anymore, and advanced diagnostic setups can look like this:

  • Base scanner hardware: $1,500–$3,600 BusinessDojo
  • Optional OEM add-ons and adapters
  • Annual software updates/subscriptions: $200–$500+ per year BusinessDojo

Three common approaches:

  1. Lease the hardware, budget the software.
    • Finance the scanner, laptop, and interface under an equipment lease.
    • Treat annual subscriptions as an operating expense funded from your working capital loan or line of credit.
  2. Bundle install and training.
    • Where possible, roll one-time install, training, and setup fees into your equipment line of credit draw so you’re not nickeled and dimed in cash.
  3. Plan for upgrades.
    • Opt for a term that lets you upgrade tools before they’re obsolete. A 3–5 year term often aligns with how quickly diagnostic tech changes.

My opinion: it’s better to lease a proper OEM-level setup and actually fix vehicles in one shot than limp along with underpowered tools and lose customers.

Shop equipment beyond lifts: compressors, tire gear, and more

Key point: Group your “hard” shop equipment into one financing plan so you don’t end up with five different micro-loans and messy payments.

Outside of lifts and scan tools, a modern garage needs a full ecosystem:

  • Air compressor and dryer
  • Tire changers and balancers
  • Alignment machine
  • A/C recovery machine
  • Presses, extractors, jacks, etc.

Canadian guides put “essential tools” alone in the ballpark of $15,000+, with lifts and diagnostic machines adding tens of thousands more as you grow. AutoLeap

Instead of financing each piece piecemeal, a Mehmi advisor can help you:

You end up with one clear monthly payment for the hardware that makes your bays productive, instead of a jumble of vendor finance deals and high-rate cards.

Other ways to unlock cash: refinancing and asset-based lending

Key point: If you already own good equipment, you may not need a new bank loan — you might just need to unlock equity tied up in your shop.

Many established garages have tens or hundreds of thousands of dollars of paid-off equipment on the floor:

  • Older but solid lifts
  • Compressors, tire machines, alignment racks
  • Specialty gear for European, EV, or fleet work

Two underused tools:

  1. Refinancing or sales leaseback
    • You sell your existing equipment to the funder at an agreed value.
    • You lease it back and continue using it as normal.
    • You receive a lump sum you can use for expansion, rebranding, or paying off expensive short-term debt.
  2. Asset based lending
    • The lender advances a percentage of the orderly liquidation value of your equipment.
    • Security stays tied mainly to the hard assets, not your home.

This is especially useful if your bank is tapped out or not keen on auto-sector exposure, but your shop floor is full of good-quality gear.

Pairing equipment financing with working capital tools

Key point: Lifts, racks, and scanners should be on equipment facilities; payroll, inventory, and software updates should sit on working-capital facilities. Mixing them is where shops get into trouble.

Once the gear is handled, you still have to manage:

  • Payroll and benefits
  • Rent and utilities
  • Bulk parts orders
  • Subcontracted services (machine shops, ADAS calibration, bodywork)

Here’s how the main working-capital tools fit a typical Canadian garage.

<html><table><thead><tr><th>Need</th><th>Best-fit tools</th><th>Usually avoid</th></tr></thead><tbody><tr><td>Day-to-day cash swings</td><td>Business <a href="https://www.mehmigroup.com/services/business-loans/line-of-credit">line of credit</a></td><td>Long-term term loans for small gaps</td></tr><tr><td>Planned expansion (new tech, marketing)</td><td><a href="https://www.mehmigroup.com/services/business-loans/working-capital-loan">Working capital loan</a>, possibly <a href="https://www.mehmigroup.com/services/business-loans/secured-loan">secured</a></td><td>Maxing personal credit cards</td></tr><tr><td>Card-heavy revenue (small quick-service shops)</td><td>Carefully structured <a href="https://www.mehmigroup.com/services/business-loans/merchant-cash-advance">merchant cash advance</a></td><td>Using MCAs for long-life equipment</td></tr><tr><td>Slow-paying fleet accounts</td><td><a href="https://www.mehmigroup.com/services/business-loans/invoice-freight-factoring">Invoice factoring</a> on approved receivables</td><td>Borrowing against your home to carry receivables</td></tr></tbody></table></html>

Mehmi’s business loans overview gives you the high-level menu, but in practice you might combine:

One strong opinion here: don’t use a 5-year loan or lease just to plug a short-term cash hole. That’s how otherwise good shops end up over-leveraged two years later.

What lenders look for from auto repair shops

Key point: You don’t need perfect books, but you do need a clear story, stable cash flow, and proof that new equipment will actually generate revenue.

For lifts, diagnostics, and shop equipment, lenders usually focus on:

  1. Time in business and owner experience
    • How many years has the shop been operating?
    • What’s your automotive background (licensed tech, service manager, dealership experience)?
  2. Financials and bank behaviour
    • For larger tickets, underwriters want basic financial statements and recent bank statements to see how cash actually moves.
    • They’ll look at your ability to support new monthly payments alongside rent and payroll.
  3. Revenue mix and customer base
    • General retail work vs. fleet contracts vs. warranty work.
    • A mix of retail and fleet can stabilize cash flow, but big concentration in one fleet needs explaining.
  4. Collateral and structure
    • What assets are being financed?
    • Are you offering a secured loan alongside an equipment lease, or keeping them separate?
    • Is there a personal guarantee, or can the deal stand largely on its own?

A good advisor (like Mehmi) will help you package:

  • A simple write-up of your shop, team, and growth plan
  • Equipment quotes and vendor details
  • Basic history of revenue and car count

Then they’ll run the numbers with tools like Mehmi’s calculator so you’re not guessing at payment levels.

Step-by-step funding plan for a new bay or second location

Key point: Don’t wait until the lift installer is booked and the scanner is on promo — map your financing before you sign equipment quotes.

Here’s a practical roadmap for a Canadian shop owner:

1. Clarify what you’re trying to do

  • Add one or two bays in your existing shop?
  • Build out a new specialty (EVs, European, diesel, fleet)?
  • Open a second location in another part of town?

Write it down. Lenders react better to a clear plan than “we’re just upgrading equipment.”

2. Build an equipment list

List each item with rough cost:

  • Lifts and alignment racks
  • Diagnostic gear and software
  • Tire, brake, and suspension equipment
  • Compressors and air treatment
  • Furniture and IT (desks, POS, computers)

Separate what’s clearly financeable equipment (with a serial number) from softer items that might fit better in working capital.

3. Decide what to lease vs pay cash

As a rule of thumb:

  • Lease/finance: everything big, bolted down, or central to your bays
  • Pay from cash flow: small hand tools, consumables, minor accessories

Your Mehmi advisor can map these into a lease versus a working capital loan or unsecured loan for the softer pieces.

4. Check your numbers with a calculator

Use the Mehmi calculator to:

  • Test different terms (e.g., 48 vs 60 vs 72 months)
  • Compare scenarios with and without a residual/buyout
  • See how adding a second tech or advisor affects cash flow

If the numbers only work in a “perfect month”, the plan needs tweaking.

5. Get pre-approved before you order

Once you have:

  • Your equipment list and quotes
  • Last few months of bank statements
  • Basic financials or at least a P&L and revenue summary

…your advisor can help you obtain pre-approvals on both equipment and working capital facilities. That way, when the vendor is ready to ship, the financing is already lined up.

6. Keep one advisor coordinating the stack

It’s tempting to say yes to in-house vendor financing, a bank loan, and a quick online cash advance — and end up with three lenders double-secured on the same assets.

Working with a single partner such as Mehmi to structure:

…reduces nasty surprises and keeps your security structure clean. When you’re ready, you can reach out via Contact Us and walk through your plan with a Canadian credit specialist.

Anonymous case study: turning a cramped two-bay shop into a profitable four-bay operation

Key point: The right equipment financing mix can double bay count and add revenue without blowing up cash flow.

A real-world style example (details changed for privacy):

The shop

  • Independent garage in Ontario, focused on general maintenance and light repairs
  • 2 bays, both with older lifts, one aging compressor
  • $900K annual revenue, reasonably profitable but cramped and always backed up

The opportunity
Demand was strong. The owner wanted to:

  • Add two more bays (4 total)
  • Install two new 2-post lifts + one alignment rack
  • Upgrade to OEM-level diagnostics and alignment equipment
  • Improve waiting area and add a dedicated service advisor

Total equipment, install, and minor renovations priced around $180,000.

The financing plan

Working with a Mehmi advisor, they structured it as:

  1. Equipment lease bundle
    • New lifts, alignment rack, tire changer, balancer, and A/C machine packaged into a single equipment lease over 72 months.
    • Payments sized to be comfortably covered by the extra bay hours.
  2. Refinancing existing gear
  3. Working capital and renovation budget
    • A working capital loan to fund the service advisor’s salary for the first six months and minor renovations.
  4. Back-up line of credit
    • A modest line of credit to smooth seasonal slowdowns and large parts orders.

The outcome

Within 12 months of the upgrades:

  • Revenue grew from ~$900K to ~$1.4M as the four bays ran near capacity.
  • The shop reduced turnaround time and started saying “yes” more often instead of turning jobs away.
  • Monthly payments were comfortably covered by the extra gross profit, and the owner kept personal and home equity off the table.

The key wasn’t a single product — it was pairing the right equipment financing for the hard assets with sensible working capital tools for people and parts.

FAQ: Financing lifts, diagnostic tools, and shop equipment in Canada

1. Is it better to lease or buy shop equipment for a garage in Canada?

For most growing shops, leasing big-ticket equipment (lifts, racks, diagnostic platforms) makes more sense than buying outright. A Mehmi equipment lease lets you spread costs over 3–7 years while preserving cash for payroll and inventory. Buying in cash can make sense for smaller items or when you’re already very cash-rich and stable.

2. Can I finance used lifts and equipment, or does it have to be new?

You can often finance used equipment, especially from reputable brands, as long as the condition is good and the lender can get comfortable with its resale value. Mehmi can review your list against their eligible equipment criteria and suggest whether a lease, asset based lending, or refinancing/sale-leaseback makes the most sense.

3. Can diagnostic tools and software subscriptions be financed?

Yes, usually the hardware (scanner, laptop, interface modules) can be financed under an equipment facility. Ongoing software subscriptions and updates are typically treated as operating expenses and funded from cash flow or a working capital loan. Talk to a Mehmi advisor about bundling install and training costs into the same equipment financing package where possible.

4. How can a new or recently opened auto repair shop get financing?

Start-ups can still get equipment financing, but lenders will lean heavily on:

  • Your personal experience as a tech or manager
  • Solid projections and a realistic business plan
  • Personal credit and, sometimes, additional security

For very new shops, the first step might be smaller leases on essential equipment plus a modest unsecured loan or secured loan for fit-out costs. Mehmi works with a range of funders and can help position your file even if you’ve just launched.

5. Can I roll installation, freight, and electrical work into equipment financing?

Often, yes — many lenders will let you include certain soft costs (freight, installation, electrical work directly tied to equipment) within the financed amount, especially when you’re adding bays or moving into a new building. This is where an equipment line of credit shines: you can draw once the full vendor and contractor invoices are in. A Mehmi advisor can help you structure this so you’re not over-financing work that doesn’t add lasting value.

6. What if cash flow is tight because my fleet or warranty customers pay slowly?

If your cash is tied up in slow-paying receivables, but your equipment is in place, consider:

Mehmi can review where your cash is stuck and design a mix of equipment and working capital facilities so you can fund both steady operations and your next upgrade.

Internal links used (list)

External citations used (list)

  • Statistics Canada, Repair and maintenance services subsector, 2023 – revenue and profit margin for automotive repair and maintenance in 2023. Statistics Canada
  • Innovation, Science and Economic Development Canada / Statistics Canada, Automotive statistics – Vehicle registrations, 2022 – 26.3 million vehicles registered in Canada. Statistics Canada
  • Ratehub, What is the total cost of owning a car? – average Canadian household spends $79/month on maintenance and repairs (StatsCan data). Ratehub.ca
  • A-Protect Warranty, Rising Cost of Auto Repairs Due to Inflation – examples of rising repair costs in Canada (brakes, transmissions, etc.). a-protectwarranty.com
  • AutoLeap, Average Cost to Open an Auto Repair Shop – essential tools and rough equipment cost ranges. AutoLeap
  • DojoBusiness, Auto Repair Shop: Equipment Budget – cost and subscription profile for advanced diagnostic equipment.

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