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Lease term length Canada: 24–72 month costs

See how 24–72 month equipment lease terms change total cost, cash flow, and risk for Canadian businesses – with practical scenarios and examples.

Written by
Alec Whitten
Published on
November 24, 2025

Picking 24, 36, 60 or 72 months doesn’t just change your payment; it changes how much you really pay, how likely you are to be approved, and how much risk you’re taking on the asset and the economy.

In Canada’s current interest rate environment, many SMEs quietly overpay by choosing the “comfortable” term their vendor suggests instead of matching the term to asset life, cash flow, and rate risk. This guide breaks down how term really works for equipment leases and gives you a simple way to choose between 24–72 months.

What term length actually changes in a Canadian equipment lease

Term length mainly changes how the same total cost is spread over time – but it also shifts interest cost, upgrade flexibility, tax timing, and even approval odds.

In most Canadian equipment leases, term length affects:

  • Monthly payment: Longer term = lower monthly payment, because you’re stretching principal repayment over more months.
  • Total interest paid: Longer term = more interest dollars, especially at today’s still-elevated rates. Bank of Canada+1
  • Residual and buyout risk: The further out the term, the harder it is to predict fair market value and condition.
  • Approval appetite: Some funders will only stretch to 72 months for prime assets and stronger credit.CWB National Leasing+1
  • Tax timing: Under CRA rules, you generally deduct lease payments as they’re incurred, so longer terms spread deductions out over more years. Canada+1

That’s why Mehmi rarely talks about “the rate” in isolation. For a given piece of eligible equipment, term length can be the difference between a lease that strengthens your business and one that quietly drains it.

Equipment Financing Overview
Eligible Equipment

24 vs 36 vs 60 vs 72 months at a glance

Shorter terms concentrate cost but reduce interest and risk; longer terms ease cash flow but increase interest and lock-in.

Here’s a conceptual snapshot of how common term bands behave for the same equipment at the same rate:

<table>
 <thead>
   <tr>
     <th>Term length</th>
     <th>Monthly payment</th>
     <th>Total interest paid</th>
     <th>Risk profile</th>
     <th>Best suited for</th>
   </tr>
 </thead>
 <tbody>
   <tr>
     <td>24 months</td>
     <td>Highest</td>
     <td>Lowest</td>
     <td>Low market/tech risk, high payment strain</td>
     <td>Short-life gear, strong cash flow, upgrades soon</td>
   </tr>
   <tr>
     <td>36 months</td>
     <td>High</td>
     <td>Low–medium</td>
     <td>Balanced; less rate & tech risk</td>
     <td>Most core equipment where ownership is likely</td>
   </tr>
   <tr>
     <td>48–60 months</td>
     <td>Medium</td>
     <td>Medium–high</td>
     <td>Payment-friendly, more interest and lock-in</td>
     <td>Long-life assets (fleets, heavy equipment, CNC)</td>
   </tr>
   <tr>
     <td>72 months</td>
     <td>Lowest</td>
     <td>Highest</td>
     <td>Lowest immediate strain, highest long-run exposure</td>
     <td>Prime, long-life assets with stable demand only</td>
   </tr>
 </tbody>
</table>

Canadian leasing providers like CWB National Leasing stress that term choice directly affects cash flow and total interest, and encourage matching term to useful life and upgrade needs, not just what feels comfortable. CWB National Leasing+1

At Mehmi, we treat 36–60 months as the “workhorse zone” for most equipment leases, with 24 months reserved for short-life or high-uncertainty assets, and 72 months used surgically for very durable assets (like late-model trucks or heavy equipment) with strong resale support.

Equipment Leases

How today’s Canadian rate environment changes the term decision

Term strategy in 2021 (near-zero rates) is not the same as term strategy in 2025. Rates have come down from their peak but are still not “cheap.”

  • The Bank of Canada’s policy rate sat as high as 4.75% in mid-2024 and is now in the mid-2% range after a series of cuts. Bank of Canada+2Reuters+2
  • Canadian prime has followed, falling from over 7% in 2023 to the mid-4% range in late 2025. ICICI Bank

That matters because:

  • Long terms amplify interest cost. Every extra year at a mid-single-digit or higher rate adds real dollars, even if the payment feels manageable. Loan and lease calculators from BDC and others illustrate how extending amortization dramatically increases total interest paid. BDC.ca+1
  • Shorter terms reduce exposure to rate changes. If you’re in a rising-rate environment, locking in a long term could be smart; if rates might drift down, tying yourself up for 72 months with prepayment penalties can be expensive.

Contrarian view: in a “normal-ish” rate world like 2025, chasing the lowest possible payment with 72 months is often more dangerous than slightly stretching for a 48–60 month term that you can pay off faster and refinance against later if needed.

Mehmi’s calculator is built exactly for this trade-off: we’ll show you how much interest you’re adding for every 12 months you tack on.

Calculator

Cash flow vs total cost: finding your break-even term

Term choice is always a fight between today-you (cash flow) and future-you (total cost and flexibility).

To choose well, Canadian SMEs should look at three numbers side by side:

  1. Monthly payment
  2. Total paid over the full term (including buyout)
  3. Worst-case and typical monthly cash flow from bank statements

BDC’s equipment financing guidance makes the same point: match financing to the useful life of the asset, but don’t ignore liquidity – the wrong term can either starve your cash flow or inflate your total cost. BDC.ca+1

A simple practical approach we use at Mehmi:

  • Start with a realistic target payment based on your last 6–12 months of bank statements (including bad months, not just the good ones).
  • Model the equipment over 36, 48, 60, and 72 months.
  • Eliminate terms where payments would have been tight in your three worst recent months.
  • Among the remaining options, choose the shortest term you can comfortably handle – not the longest term the funder will approve.

That balancing act is also where support facilities like an equipment line of credit or modest working capital loan come in – they can give breathing room so you don’t have to max out term just to survive the first year.

Equipment Line of Credit
Working Capital Loan

How term length affects approvals and structure

Term length doesn’t just change math; it changes how underwriters view the risk profile of your file.

Canadian lessors and banks look at term through the lens of:

  • Asset life: You shouldn’t have a 72-month term on equipment that’s obsolete in 3–4 years. BDC and other lenders explicitly say terms should align with useful life to avoid negative equity. BDC.ca+1
  • Credit quality: Stronger credit profiles get more flexibility on term; B/C credit is often kept tighter to reduce risk. ISED Canada+1
  • Residual value: Longer terms push the equipment closer to end-of-life, which compresses the residual and may force higher payments or bigger down payments.

Practically:

  • 24–36 months are more common on: higher-risk sectors, softer assets (IT, décor, some hospitality), or where credit is bruised.
  • 48–60 months are standard for: trucks, trailers, construction gear, CNC, medical equipment – assets that hold value and generate revenue over many years.
  • 72 months are typically reserved for: prime assets in core industries (transport, construction, agriculture) with good resale data and stronger credit.

Mehmi’s asset-based lending and refinancing / sale-leaseback options are often used to reshape older term-heavy leases that have become a drag on approvals for new equipment.

Asset Based Lending
Refinancing or Sales Leaseback

Industry snapshots: picking terms that fit your sector

Every industry has its own “sensible” term range. Here’s how we typically see 24–72 months used in some of Mehmi’s core sectors.

Transportation and logistics

For trucks and trailers, term setting revolves around kilometres per year and trade cycle:

  • Established highway carriers might run tractors 4–5 years before rotating them.
  • Regional and vocational units may stay longer but with more wear and tear.

Typical patterns we see:

  • 48–60 months on late-model tractors and reefers
  • 36–48 months on older units or vocational gear with harsh duty cycles
  • 72 months only when the asset is newer, spec is mainstream, and the fleet has strong maintenance and resale history

Mehmi’s truck and trailer financing team also thinks about what happens after term: do you plan to keep that unit for another 3–5 years, or trade it? That answer heavily influences where we land between 48 and 72 months.

Truck and Trailer Financing
Transportation Expertise

If a major repair hits mid-term, we’d rather solve it with truck repair financing than extend or stretch the original lease to the breaking point.

Truck Repair Financing

Construction and heavy equipment

Excavators, loaders, dozers, cranes – these are long-life assets, but they work hard. For them:

  • 60–72 months is common on newer units with solid utilization and contracts.
  • 36–48 months is safer on older iron, or where resale markets are more volatile.
  • Very short terms (24–36 months) might be used on attachments or highly specialized gear.

Guides on equipment financing emphasize aligning term with contract life and expected utilization – if your biggest job is 30 months long, a 72-month term might leave you over-levered when that job ends. BDC.ca+1

Mehmi often pairs heavy equipment leases with asset-based lending or a line of credit to smooth seasonal dips rather than pushing every deal to the absolute longest term.

Heavy Equipment Financing

Medical, dental and clinics

Clinical equipment is a mix of durable hardware and fast-moving tech. For example:

  • Imaging or core treatment devices can justify 60-month terms if technology cycles are reasonably stable.
  • Certain aesthetic or diagnostic devices may suit 36–48 months because tech and patient expectations move faster.

Here, cash flow is often strong but ramp-up for a new clinic or added room takes time. Mehmi will sometimes use a step-up lease within a 48–60 month term or pair the lease with working capital so owners don’t feel forced into 72 months just to get through year one.

Eligible Equipment

Hospitality, restaurants and retail

Front-of-house and décor assets age quickly – both physically and from a branding standpoint. In this world, our bias is:

  • 24–48 months for most soft assets and décor
  • 48–60 months only for heavy back-of-house gear (hoods, dishwashers, core cooking equipment)

Because CRA generally allows lease payments as deductible expenses, many restaurant owners prefer shorter terms and FMV structures that keep payments lean and upgrades flexible. Canada+1

Mehmi’s Rent Try Buy – Hospitality solutions are built specifically for this space: shorter commitments, option to purchase, and terms aligned with how often most owners re-fit their concept.

Rent Try Buy – Hospitality

When shorter terms are actually safer (even if they sting now)

The default SME instinct is “lowest payment wins.” But especially for B and C credit, that instinct can be expensive.

Here’s the blunt reality:

  • High-rate leases stretched over 72 months compound a lot of interest.
  • If your industry is cyclical (construction, trucking, forestry), the chances that something changes in 6 years – rates, contracts, regulations – are high.

StatCan’s SME credit condition reports show that while approval rates remain high, the cost and complexity of financing have increased, particularly for smaller firms. ISED Canada+2ISED Canada+2 That means every extra year of term matters more.

We regularly recommend shorter terms when:

  • A client is paying a higher rate due to recent credit issues.
  • The asset is key to operations but tech or regulations may change.
  • The owner has a realistic path to refinancing once financials improve.

In those cases, a 36–48 month term plus a small working capital facility or merchant cash advance to handle ramp-up can be safer than a 72-month “stretch” that becomes a handcuff.

Merchant Cash Advance

Contrarian takeaway: if a 72-month term is the only way you can make the payment today, the real problem might not be term – it might be timing, deal size, or rate. That’s where reshaping the deal (used vs new, sale-leaseback on existing gear, or splitting into phases) is smarter than just adding years.

How to choose the right term: a simple decision framework

Here’s a practical, Mehmi-style way to decide between 24–72 months – without a spreadsheet degree.

Step 1: Decide how long you genuinely want the asset

If you answer honestly:

  • 3 years or less” → Focus on 24–36 months and consider FMV structures.
  • 3–6 years” → 36–60 months is the sweet spot for most assets.
  • 7+ years” → 60–72 months can work on durable, low-obsolescence assets only.

BDC’s advice echoes this: the financing term should be aligned with the asset’s lifespan and your business plan, not just maximum allowed. BDC.ca+1

Step 2: Stress-test payments against your worst months

Take your three worst revenue months in the last year. Ask:

“If this lease had been in place, would we still have been okay?”

If the answer is “barely” or “no” at 36 months but “yes” at 48–60, that’s a sign to lean toward the middle, not to jump straight to 72.

Step 3: Sanity-check total cost and flexibility

With help from a calculator or your leasing partner, compare:

  • Total payments over 36, 48, 60, and 72 months (including buyout).
  • How easy it would be to trade/upgrade in years 3–5 under each scenario.

If longer terms only save you a few hundred dollars per month but add tens of thousands in extra interest and tie your hands, they’re not actually cheaper.

Step 4: Combine, don’t force

Often, the best answer is a mix of term lengths and tools:

  • 36 or 48 months for fast-changing or soft assets.
  • 60 or 72 months for heavy, durable equipment.
  • A sale-leaseback on owned equipment to free cash and avoid over-stretching new leases.
  • A small line of credit or secured loan for installation and ramp-up instead of pushing the entire structure out to 72 months.

Refinancing or Sales Leaseback
Line of Credit
Secured Loan

Step 5: Bring your accountant and a specialist into the conversation

CRA allows lease payments as deductible expenses for business property, but questions like CCA vs pure expense, balance sheet impact, and covenant ratios are best answered jointly by your CPA and a leasing specialist. Lexpert+3Canada+3Canada+3

Mehmi’s role is to translate vendor quotes into real-world scenarios and structure terms that your accountant, underwriter, and cash flow can all live with.

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Contact Us

Anonymous case study: the 72-month term that looked safe – and wasn’t

Business: Ontario landscaping and snow services company
Equipment: 3 used one-ton dump trucks and a new skid steer
Original ask: “We need the lowest possible payment – just quote 72 months.”

The first quotes

Through a dealer, the owner received:

  • A 72-month FMV lease on the skid steer
  • A 72-month fixed buyout lease on the used trucks

On paper, the payments were attractive and just barely fit into last winter’s tight cash flow. The vendor framed it as “makes everything affordable.”

Mehmi’s review

When the deal came to Mehmi for a second look, we pulled:

  • 12 months of bank statements (very lumpy due to seasonality)
  • The last two year-ends
  • Realistic auction values for 10-year-old one-tons and 7-year-old skid steers

We then modelled the same equipment over 48, 60, and 72 months and compared:

  • Monthly payments vs the company’s worst winter months
  • Total interest by term at current market rates
  • Likely resale values in years 4–6 based on Canadian auction data

The outcome:

  • The 72-month term only saved ~$450/month compared to a 60-month option, but added thousands in extra interest.
  • With the company’s usage, the trucks would be heavily depreciated by year 5; stretching them to year 6 or beyond added risk of major repairs under an still-active lease.
  • The skid steer would likely be worth well above the implied FMV residual at year 6; keeping it under a very long FMV lease offered little advantage.

The structure that actually worked

We redesigned the package as:

  • 60-month fixed buyout on the trucks
  • 48-month FMV lease on the skid steer
  • A modest working capital facility to cover early-season cash flow dips and a set-aside for repairs

The new monthly cost was about $300 higher than the original 72-month quote – but:

  • Total interest paid over the life of the leases dropped significantly.
  • The company had earlier options to upgrade or restructure in years 3–5.
  • Term length now matched realistic equipment life and seasonal cash flow.

One year in, the owner told us:

“If we’d locked into 72 months, this year’s fuel and labour jump would have crushed us. The slightly higher 60-month payment hurt at first, but now it feels like the smart decision.”

That’s the real lesson of 24–72 month terms: the “cheapest” monthly payment is often the most expensive long-term plan.

FAQ: 24–72 month equipment lease terms in Canada

1. What is a typical term length for equipment leases in Canada?
Most Canadian equipment leases run 36–60 months. Shorter terms (24–36 months) are common for fast-changing tech or higher-risk situations, while 72-month terms tend to be reserved for long-life assets and stronger credit in core industries like construction, transport, and agriculture. Lenders such as BDC and established lessors emphasize matching term to asset life and business needs, not just picking the longest option. BDC.ca+2CWB National Leasing+2

2. Does a longer lease term always mean I pay more interest?
In almost all cases, yes. At a given rate, extending the term means you’re paying interest for more months, so total interest dollars go up even if the rate stays the same. Tools like BDC’s loan calculator show how total interest climbs as you increase amortization. BDC.ca+1 That said, if a shorter term is so tight that it forces you into expensive emergency financing later, a moderate extension (e.g., 36→48 or 60 months) can still be the safer option.

3. How do Canadian tax rules treat different lease terms?
For business equipment, CRA generally lets you deduct lease payments as an expense in the year you incur them, regardless of term, so total deduction is spread over more years as term increases. Canada+2Canada+2 For leases that effectively act like financing (e.g., $1 buyout), your accountant may capitalize the asset and claim CCA instead. The key drivers are structure and ownership, not just 36 vs 72 months, so always confirm with your CPA.

4. Is a 72-month lease term a bad idea?
Not necessarily – but it’s not something to choose by default. 72-month terms can make sense when you’re financing durable, long-life equipment that you’ll use well beyond the lease term, in a stable business with predictable cash flow. They’re riskier when:

  • The asset’s technology or regulations change quickly
  • Your rate is high (B/C credit)
  • Your contracts are shorter than the lease term

In those cases, shorter 36–60 month terms – possibly combined with other tools like sale-leaseback or a line of credit – are usually safer.

5. How does term length affect my chances of approval?
Underwriters look at term through the lens of risk and asset life. For strong credits and prime assets, longer terms are easier to justify. For thinner files, riskier sectors, or older equipment, lenders may insist on shorter terms to reduce residual and default risk. SME credit condition data from Innovation, Science and Economic Development Canada shows that while approval rates remain high, lenders have become more cautious on structure and pricing as financing has gotten more expensive. ISED Canada+2ISED Canada+2

6. How can Mehmi help me pick the right term between 24 and 72 months?
Mehmi starts with your industry, cash flow, and real-world plans for the equipment, then:

  • Models 24–72 month scenarios in our calculator
  • Shows total cost and monthly impact side by side
  • Considers rate risk and resale values for your specific asset class
  • Blends in tools like asset-based lending, refinancing / sale-leaseback, or working capital where needed

The goal isn’t to push the longest term possible – it’s to land on a structure that your business, your underwriter, and your future self will all be happy with.

Equipment Financing Overview
Business Loans Overview
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Internal links used (list)

  1. https://www.mehmigroup.com/services/equipment-financing
  2. https://www.mehmigroup.com/eligible-equipment
  3. https://www.mehmigroup.com/services/equipment-financing/equipment-leases
  4. https://www.mehmigroup.com/calculator
  5. https://www.mehmigroup.com/services/equipment-financing/equipment-line-of-credit
  6. https://www.mehmigroup.com/services/business-loans/working-capital-loan
  7. https://www.mehmigroup.com/services/equipment-financing/asset-based-lending
  8. https://www.mehmigroup.com/services/equipment-financing/refinancing-sales-leaseback
  9. https://www.mehmigroup.com/services/equipment-financing/truck-trailer-financing
  10. https://www.mehmigroup.com/transportation-expertise
  11. https://www.mehmigroup.com/services/equipment-financing/truck-repair-financing
  12. https://www.mehmigroup.com/services/equipment-financing/heavy-equipment-financing
  13. https://www.mehmigroup.com/services/equipment-financing/rent-try-buy-hospitality
  14. https://www.mehmigroup.com/services/business-loans/merchant-cash-advance
  15. https://www.mehmigroup.com/services/business-loans/line-of-credit
  16. https://www.mehmigroup.com/services/business-loans/secured-loan
  17. https://www.mehmigroup.com/services/business-loans
  18. https://www.mehmigroup.com/about-us
  19. https://www.mehmigroup.com/contact-us

External citations used (list)

  1. CWB National Leasing – The complete guide to equipment leasing and Your equipment leasing, buying and borrowing checklist (term, cash flow and upgrade considerations). CWB National Leasing+1
  2. BDC – Equipment financing 101: Everything you need to know and Equipment purchase financing (matching term to useful life, liquidity trade-offs). BDC.ca+1
  3. CRA – Leasing costs and Other business expenses – property leasing costs (deductibility of lease payments). Canada+2Canada+2
  4. Bank of Canada – Key policy interest rate and rate history; TradingEconomics – Canada interest rate summary (current mid-2% policy rate and cuts from 2024 highs). Bank of Canada+2Trading Economics+2
  5. ICICI Bank – Canadian prime rate history (trend from 7%+ in 2023 down to mid-4% by late 2025). ICICI Bank
  6. Innovation, Science and Economic Development Canada & Statistics Canada – Small Business Credit Condition Trends and Survey on Financing and Growth of SMEs (approval rates, costs and trends in SME debt financing). BetaKit+3ISED Canada+3ISED Canada+3
  7. MNP & other Canadian tax resources – discussions on lease classification, CCA vs expense, and impact on financial statements. Lexpert

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