
Buying used equipment on Kijiji or Facebook Marketplace can work, but the financing process is not the same as buying from a dealer. The seller may be private, the asset may have liens, and the invoice may not meet funding standards. This guide explains how to lease equipment from Kijiji or Facebook Marketplace in Canada without creating delays.
Yes, you can lease equipment found on Kijiji or Facebook Marketplace in Canada, but it is treated as a private sale. You need seller ID, bill of sale, proof of ownership, equipment details, PPSA or RDPRM lien search, insurance, and PAD setup before funding can happen.
Yes, but the platform is only where you found the asset. The financing file still has to pass credit, asset, ownership, insurance, and funding review.
Mehmi Financial Group can review private-sale equipment financing and leasing across Canada before a hard credit check. The key is simple: do not send a deposit or promise the seller a closing date until the file is reviewed.
Kijiji and Facebook Marketplace listings are often missing the details credit needs. A clean post with photos is not enough.
Private sale leasing works by having the buyer approved first, then verifying the seller, asset, ownership, and lien status before funds are released.
The process usually looks like this:
Do not treat the Facebook message thread as the invoice. It may help confirm the deal, but it is not enough for funding.
Hard commercial assets with clear resale value are the best fit. Weak resale assets, consumer vehicles, cannabis-related assets, crypto-related assets, and unclear ownership files are not a fit.
Good examples include:
For transportation and trucking equipment, private sale files need extra care around VIN, kilometres, registration, carrier work, safety, and engine history. A truck with high kilometres may need repair invoices or proof of rebuild.
For construction and contractor equipment, credit looks closely at hours, condition, attachment value, work use, and whether the machine is adding revenue or replacing a broken unit.
You need proof that the seller owns the equipment and has the right to sell it. This is where many Kijiji and Facebook Marketplace deals fail.
Ask the seller for:
If the seller refuses ID, ownership proof, or lien review, walk away. A cheap asset with unclear title can become an expensive mistake.
You need to prove who you are, what the business does, how the equipment will earn revenue, and how payments will be made.
Prepare:
A direct deposit form should not replace a void cheque or stamped PAD form. PAD setup is part of the funding process.
A lien search confirms whether another party has a registered claim against the equipment. In most provinces this means PPSA; in Quebec, it means RDPRM.
This matters because the seller may still owe money on the asset. If there is a lien, the file may need a payout letter, release letter, or third-party buyout before funding.
Never rely on “it’s paid off” in a Marketplace chat. Credit needs proof.
Avoid paying a deposit until the file has been reviewed. If you must pay one, make sure it comes from the buyer’s business account and can be proven with a bank record.
Deposits can create problems when:
Before committing cash, use the equipment financing calculator to test the payment against cash flow. A good deal is not good if the monthly payment creates pressure.
Credit reviews the buyer, asset, seller, repayment source, and ownership trail. Private sale risk is higher because the seller is not a regular commercial vendor.
The strongest files answer five questions:
ISED’s 2025 Key Small Business Statistics reported 1.08 million small businesses in Canada as of December 2024, representing 98.2% of employer businesses. That matters because many equipment purchases are made by small businesses that need to protect cash flow while replacing or adding assets. (ISED Canada)
Statistics Canada reported that Canada’s commercial and industrial machinery and equipment rental and leasing industry generated $18.1 billion in operating revenue in 2024, up 4.5% from 2023. Used equipment and leasing remain major parts of how Canadian businesses access productive assets. (www150.statcan.gc.ca)
Most delays come from missing seller documents, incomplete invoices, lien issues, or insurance errors. Approval does not mean same-day funding if the paperwork is not ready.
Common delays include:
The safest approach is to verify first and pay second.
A strong private sale file has a clean buyer, a clear seller, a strong asset, and no confusion around ownership. It should tell the full story before credit has to ask.
Example: a Mississauga contractor found a 2021 skid steer on Facebook Marketplace for $64,500 plus HST. The seller had the original invoice, matching serial plate photo, registration support, and a clean PPSA result. The buyer had 3 years time in business, 6 months of bank statements, a CRA NOA, and a signed snow removal contract.
That file is stronger because the asset, seller, and repayment plan all make sense. For buyers comparing equipment financing in Mississauga, the local detail matters because Ontario registration, HST, insurance, and PPSA handling must line up before funding.
Yes, start-ups can be reviewed case by case, but the file needs more support. A private sale plus a start-up profile is higher risk, so the story must be tight.
A start-up should prepare:
A new business with no contract, no experience, and a vague seller will struggle. A new business with real work lined up, clean statements, and a strong asset has a better chance.
You avoid scams by slowing the deal down and forcing the seller to prove ownership. A real seller should be able to provide proper documents.
Watch for red flags:
Do not let urgency replace due diligence. The cheapest listing can become the most expensive file if the title is not clean.
Leasing can be better when the business needs to preserve cash, match payments to revenue, or keep operating capital available. Paying cash can make sense if the business has excess liquidity and no higher-return use for that money.
Statistics Canada reported that Canadian machinery and equipment capital expenditures were intended to reach $132.3 billion in 2025. That shows businesses continue to invest heavily in productive equipment, even when cash flow needs to be managed carefully. (www150.statcan.gc.ca)
In the second quarter of 2026, Statistics Canada also reported that 64.3% of Canadian businesses expected cost-related obstacles over the next three months. That is why payment structure matters as much as approval. (www150.statcan.gc.ca)
Before messaging the seller, get your financing file reviewed. That gives you a realistic budget before negotiating.
Use this message:
“I’m interested in the equipment. Before I move forward, can you confirm the year, make, model, serial number or VIN, hours or kilometres, ownership documents, and whether there is any financing or lien on it?”
If the seller answers clearly, the file can move. If the seller avoids the basics, keep looking.
Yes, if the asset qualifies and the seller can prove ownership. The deal is treated as a private sale, so you need seller ID, bill of sale, equipment details, lien search, insurance, and PAD setup. The listing itself is not enough for funding.
Yes, but the buyer still has to qualify for financing. Some files may require a down payment based on credit, asset, seller risk, and cash flow. Do not pay the seller before the file is reviewed unless you understand the deposit risk.
The file may still work if there is a valid buyout letter and clear payout instructions. The lien must be handled before or during funding. Credit will not ignore an active PPSA or RDPRM registration just because the seller says the asset is almost paid off.
No. The seller can be an individual, but that usually means more documentation. Expect seller ID, bill of sale, proof of ownership, and lien search. If the seller is a company, legal name, tax number, invoice details, and ownership support may be required.
Yes, but older equipment gets more scrutiny. Credit may ask for photos, inspection, service records, engine rebuild invoices, hours, kilometres, and proof that the asset still has resale value. Older equipment with poor documents can be harder than newer equipment with clean records.
A clean file can move quickly, but private sales often take longer than dealer sales because seller ID, lien searches, ownership proof, and inspections may be required. Approval speed and funding speed are not the same. Missing documents cause the biggest delays.
You can lease equipment from Kijiji or Facebook Marketplace, but treat it as a private sale with real document risk. Before paying a deposit, collect the seller’s legal details, proof of ownership, asset specs, and lien information. For a file review before a hard credit check, call Mehmi Financial Group at (437) 777-5901 or use the contact page.