All posts

Medical equipment financing for clinics & dentists

Learn how Canadian clinics and dental practices can finance new medical equipment with leases, lines of credit, and refinancing while protecting cash flow.

Written by
Alec Whitten
Published on
November 23, 2025

Financing Options for Small Clinics and Dental Practices Buying New Medical Equipment

The short answer: you have more options than you think

Small clinics and dental practices in Canada can usually finance new medical equipment through equipment leases, equipment lines of credit, refinancing or sale-leaseback of existing assets, and, where needed, working capital or unsecured business loans. The right mix depends on your cash flow, credit profile, and how fast the equipment will pay for itself.

The Canadian dental and clinic market is big and competitive: there are roughly 25,000–26,000 dentists working out of about 15,000–16,000 dental offices across the country, and the sector has returned to growth after COVID disruptions.Tempfind+2Canadian Dental Association+2 Upgrading chairs, imaging, sterilization, and software is now a constant, not a one-time event—so how you finance those upgrades matters as much as which brand you buy.

The rest of this guide walks through the main options, when each fits, and how a lender like Mehmi typically looks at small medical and dental deals in Canada.

Why equipment leasing is usually the first stop

For most clinics and dental practices, leasing medical equipment is the cleanest way to spread cost, preserve cash, and keep up with technology. Compared with paying cash or taking on a generic bank loan, leases are purpose-built for hardware and often give you more flexibility.

Leasing is widely used in Canadian healthcare for exactly these reasons: it preserves working capital, helps clinics stay current with rapidly changing technology, and can offer tax advantages where lease payments are treated as deductible operating expenses.Soluco+3Remington Medical+3Henry Schein+3

You can explore Mehmi’s leasing options on the Equipment Leases page:
https://www.mehmigroup.com/services/equipment-financing/equipment-leases

How a medical or dental equipment lease works in Canada

In a typical lease for clinic equipment:

  • The lender buys the equipment from the vendor.
  • Your clinic or practice becomes the lessee and makes fixed monthly payments over a set term (often 36–84 months).
  • At the end, you either:
    • buy the equipment for a small residual,
    • renew the lease, or
    • upgrade into new equipment and roll into a new lease.

Key points:

  • 100% financing is common – including delivery, install, training, and sometimes software.
  • Sales taxes are usually spread into the payments instead of paid up front.Henry Schein
  • Structures can be tailored: seasonal payments, lower payments during ramp-up, or higher final residuals to keep monthly cost down.

For a quick feel of what payments could look like, it’s worth playing with Mehmi’s online Calculator:
https://www.mehmigroup.com/calculator

What can you actually lease?

Most of what a small clinic or dental office needs can be leased:

  • Dental chairs, lights, cabinetry, and delivery units
  • Digital radiography (2D and 3D), CBCT, intra-oral scanners
  • Sterilization centres and autoclaves
  • Ultrasound, ECG, small imaging systems, monitors
  • Lab gear, compressors, vacuums, suction systems
  • Clinic IT hardware, servers, some software and practice-management systems
  • Fit-out items like select furniture, fixtures, and some leasehold improvements (depending on lender)

Mehmi keeps a broad and evolving view of what qualifies as Eligible Equipment:
https://www.mehmigroup.com/eligible-equipment

If you’re unsure whether a specific device, refurb package, or software module is financeable, that’s usually a 5-minute conversation with an underwriter, not a deal-killer.

Advantages of leasing for clinics and dental offices

The main reasons we often recommend leases first:

  • Cash flow protection – You keep cash for payroll, marketing, and emergencies while the equipment pays for itself over time. Clinics that lease often match payments to expected additional revenue from procedures, which smooths the impact on cash flow.Remington Medical+1
  • Technology risk management – Imaging, lasers, chair-side CAD/CAM, and software age quickly. Leasing helps you upgrade on a predictable cycle instead of being stuck with obsolete tech.
  • Potential tax benefits – Many leases are treated as operating costs, so payments are often deductible for income tax purposes (confirm with your accountant; details vary by structure).
  • Credit-friendly – For smaller deals, lenders usually focus on your personal credit, professional history, and basic bank statements—not full audited financials.

You can see how Mehmi positions these advantages on the Equipment Financing overview page:
https://www.mehmigroup.com/services/equipment-financing

When leasing might not be the best fit

Leasing isn’t perfect for every situation:

  • Very low-cost items that don’t move the needle on revenue may be better paid in cash.
  • If you know you’ll keep specific equipment for 15+ years with minimal obsolescence, you may want a lower-rate structure that behaves more like a straight term loan.
  • If your clinic’s credit is very weak and equipment value is low, some lenders might cap amounts or ask for more cash down than you’d like.

In those situations, we start looking at lines of credit, asset-based structures, or specialized working capital solutions instead.

Equipment lines of credit for staged build-outs and ongoing upgrades

If your project involves multiple phases—say, opening an additional treatment room now and adding imaging or a second location next year—an equipment line of credit (ELOC) can be more flexible than a series of one-off leases.

An Equipment Line of Credit gives you a pre-approved limit to draw from as you buy equipment over a period of time. You only pay on what you’ve drawn, and each draw is amortized over its own mini-term.

You can learn more here:
https://www.mehmigroup.com/services/equipment-financing/equipment-line-of-credit

When an equipment LOC beats a standard lease

An ELOC tends to work best when:

  • You’re renovating or expanding in stages and don’t yet know the exact timing of each purchase.
  • You want one underwriting process now, and simple drawdown approvals as quotes come in.
  • You expect to negotiate with multiple vendors and want financing ready regardless of which brand you choose.
  • You’re a growing practice that upgrades or adds chairs/labs every year—an evergreen LOC can streamline annual capex decisions.

From a risk perspective, lenders underwrite your clinic and expected equipment list up front, similar to leases, but allow draws over time within that framework.

Using existing equipment to fund new purchases: refinancing & sale-leaseback

If your clinic already owns equipment outright—or nearly outright—you can use that strength to fund the next round of upgrades.

Under Mehmi’s Refinancing or Sale Leaseback approach, the lender essentially buys your existing equipment and leases it back to you, freeing up cash today while you keep using the assets.
https://www.mehmigroup.com/services/equipment-financing/refinancing-sales-leaseback

When refinancing makes sense for clinics

Refinancing or sale-leaseback can be powerful when:

  • You paid cash for your last round of chairs or imaging, and now need cash for new technology, staff, or marketing.
  • You’re carrying a high-cost merchant cash advance or short-term loan taken during COVID or a rough patch, and want to move that balance into a longer, equipment-secured structure.
  • You’re buying a clinic from a retiring practitioner and want to unlock equity in their existing equipment as part of the deal.

Internally, lenders will look at:

  • Age, model, and condition of the equipment
  • Original invoices and proof of payment (for clear ownership)
  • Your current revenue and cash flow to confirm the new payment fits

For larger refinances and older assets, expect to provide recent bank statements and a short write-up explaining the reason for refinancing.

Business loan options when you’re also funding staff and working capital

Sometimes the equipment is only half the story. Opening or expanding a clinic usually also means hiring, training, marketing, and software changes. In those situations, combining equipment financing with a general-purpose business facility can make more sense than trying to cram everything into one lease.

Mehmi offers a suite of Business Loans that can complement dedicated equipment structures:
https://www.mehmigroup.com/services/business-loans

Working capital, term-style, and unsecured options

Key tools we see used by small clinics and dental practices:

Banks and crown lenders like BDC also provide term loans and working capital facilities that can be used alongside vendor or non-bank equipment financing.

When to mix loans with leases

Using both an equipment lease and a working capital or unsecured facility can make sense when:

  • The equipment itself will drive predictable revenue, but:
    • You also need to hire an associate,
    • Launch a new hygiene program, or
    • Rebrand and refresh your online presence.
  • You don’t want to push the lease term beyond what feels reasonable for the equipment’s useful life just to lower payment.

In other words: keep the equipment on an equipment lease, and use loans for soft costs and general growth.

How your clinic’s credit profile affects your options

Two clinics could want the same CBCT or laser and walk away with very different financing—because their underlying credit stories are different.

In practice, most lenders (including Mehmi’s funding partners) group applicants into broad “A / B / C” bands based on:

  • Time in business
  • Personal and business credit history
  • Bank statements and cash-flow stability
  • Existing debt load and any past delinquencies

For deals under $100,000, many funders will rely on a signed application, equipment details, and a concise summary of your business and experience. Over $100,000—and especially over $250,000—you should expect to provide financial statements and more detailed supporting documents.

For medical/dental/aesthetic transactions specifically, lenders also care about:

  • The owner’s professional background (doctor, nurse, dentist, aesthetician)
  • Relevant experience in the field
  • Licences, permits, and clinic capacity (treatment rooms, waiting area, etc.)

What happens if you’re “B” or “C” credit?

If your file includes lower scores, recent late payments, or a short operating history, you still have options—but the structure may shift:

  • Slightly higher rates and/or fees
  • Shorter terms or lower maximum amounts
  • More cash down (10–25% instead of 0–10%)
  • Additional documentation (3–6 months bank statements, proof of experience, personal net worth statement)

The key is to be upfront. A good advisor can often still secure an equipment lease if your story—and the clinic’s revenue potential—make sense.

Choosing the right partner: bank vs vendor vs independent lender

Most small clinics and dental offices see three paths:

  1. Your primary bank
  2. Vendor / manufacturer financing
  3. Independent lender or brokered solution (like Mehmi)

Each has strengths:

  • Banks often offer competitive rates, especially bundled with operating accounts or mortgage facilities, but can be slower and more document-heavy.RBC Royal Bank+2Bank of Canada+2
  • Vendor programs are convenient and sometimes advertised as “0%” or “interest-free,” though the cost is often baked into the equipment price or restrictions.
  • Independent specialists focus on flexible structures (seasonal, skip-pay, sale-leaseback, multi-lender comparisons) and may be more comfortable with B/C-credit or newer clinics.Services Financiers Affiliés+1

Mehmi’s own Equipment Financing and Vendor Program offering is built around that third path—matching clinics with an appropriate funder and structure rather than forcing everything into one product:
https://www.mehmigroup.com/services/equipment-financing
https://www.mehmigroup.com/services/vendor-program

Questions to ask any financing partner

Before you sign, ask:

  • What is the total cost of financing? (not just the rate—ask about all fees)
  • Is there a buyout option and how is the residual set?
  • Can I upgrade mid-term? What happens if I move or sell the clinic?
  • Are payments fixed or variable? With the Bank of Canada’s policy rate currently around 2.25% after recent cuts, variable-rate loans can change quickly over a 5–7 year period.Bank of Canada+2nesto.ca+2
  • Is there a personal guarantee? If so, on what terms?

If the answers are vague or avoid the small print, that’s a signal to slow down.

Practical steps to get ready for a new equipment acquisition

The fastest approvals we see are for clinics that do a bit of homework up front. You don’t need a 40-page business plan—but you do want a clear story and basic numbers.

Build a simple payback and cash-flow view

Before you apply, sketch out:

  • Equipment cost – All-in, including install, training, and any facility prep.
  • Revenue impact
    • Extra procedures per week
    • Average fee per procedure
    • Realistic utilization (don’t assume 100% booked)
  • Operating cost changes – Consumables, staff time, maintenance.

From there, estimate:

  • Monthly payment (use the Mehmi Calculator as a starting point)
    https://www.mehmigroup.com/calculator
  • Extra monthly gross profit from the new equipment
  • Payback period (how many months until the equipment “pays for itself”)

If the added profit comfortably exceeds the lease payment, your file gets easier to approve—and you personally sleep better.

Have your documents ready

For most small medical and dental deals, lenders will usually want:

  • Completed credit application (including email and corporate details)
  • Equipment quote or vendor invoice with make/model/year and full specs
  • Copy of your licence and brief CV or summary of professional experience
  • Void cheque and basic bank information
  • For larger deals, recent financial statements and/or bank statements

If you’re not sure where your clinic fits, Mehmi’s FAQ and About Us pages are useful starting points, and you can always talk directly to the team:

Anonymous case study: solo dentist upgrading to digital imaging

A solo dentist in a suburban Ontario practice wanted to move from film X-rays to a full digital suite: sensors, a small CBCT unit, and upgraded sterilization. The total project, including electrical work and cabinetry adjustments, quoted at $185,000 plus tax.

The challenge:

  • She had recently renovated the waiting area with cash.
  • The clinic was profitable but carried a small COVID-era term loan at a relatively high rate.
  • She wanted to avoid tying up more of her personal savings.

Step 1 – Structure the equipment lease
Working with an independent lender, she arranged a 72-month equipment lease for the new imaging and sterilization gear:

  • 0% cash down (vendor discounts covered the initial soft costs)
  • Fixed monthly payments aligned with expected hygiene and implant case growth
  • A small end-of-term buyout to keep options open

Step 2 – Refinance existing equipment
At the same time, they completed a sale-leaseback on older but still valuable assets:

  • Two existing chairs and a compressor were appraised and financed for $60,000
  • Proceeds were used to pay out the high-rate loan and create a modest cash buffer

Step 3 – Add working capital support
Finally, the lender arranged a working capital loan for $40,000 over 36 months to cover:

  • Staff training on the new imaging workflow
  • Website refresh and local marketing around new services
  • A small cushion for any production dips during the changeover

Within 9–12 months:

  • The clinic saw a meaningful uptick in case acceptance for restorative and implant work.
  • Monthly gross profit from the new services more than covered the combined lease and loan payments.
  • The dentist retained her personal savings and improved her overall debt structure.

This type of blended solution—equipment lease + sale-leaseback + working capital—is typical of what Mehmi can arrange for growing clinics without requiring them to choose between technology and liquidity.

FAQ: Financing new medical and dental equipment in Canada

1. How do small clinics qualify for equipment leasing in Canada?
Most funders look at your professional experience, personal credit, time in business, and basic financials. For deals under $100,000, you can often be approved with a signed application, equipment quote, and a short summary of your clinic, plus credit checks and sometimes recent bank statements. Over $100,000, expect to provide financial statements and more supporting documents.

2. Is it better to lease or buy dental equipment?
Leasing is usually better if you want to preserve cash, keep up with technology, and potentially deduct payments as operating expenses. Buying with cash can make sense when you have surplus capital and expect to keep the equipment for a very long time with little risk of obsolescence. Many Canadian dentists use a mix: lease tech that changes quickly (imaging, CAD/CAM) and consider buying long-life items like cabinetry.

3. Can I finance used medical or dental equipment?
Yes—many lenders will finance used equipment, especially well-known brands with clear resale value. They’ll focus on age, condition, and proper documentation: original invoices, proof of payment, and clear registration or serial information. For older assets or private sales, you may see more conservative terms or require inspection.

4. How long can you finance dental or clinic equipment for?
Typical terms range from 24 to 84 months, depending on the equipment type, cost, and your clinic’s profile. High-tech imaging and software often sit in the 60–72 month range; more durable assets may go longer. The key is to align the term with the realistic period you’ll use the equipment to avoid paying long after it’s obsolete.

5. Can a new clinic with limited credit history still finance equipment?
New clinics can still get equipment financing as long as the owner has relevant experience (e.g., dentist, physician, nurse, aesthetician), a reasonable personal credit profile, and a clear plan. Lenders may ask for more cash down, proof of contracts or patient base, and sometimes personal bank statements. Dedicated healthcare lenders and partners like Mehmi often have specific programs for start-ups.

6. Are equipment lease payments tax-deductible for Canadian clinics?
In many cases, yes. Lease payments for business equipment are often treated as deductible operating expenses, meaning you can write them off against practice income. Some lenders also structure leases so you don’t have to finance GST/HST up front, which improves cash flow.Henry Schein+1 Always confirm the specific treatment with your accountant, as rules depend on lease type and your overall tax situation.

Internal links used

  1. Equipment Leases – https://www.mehmigroup.com/services/equipment-financing/equipment-leases
  2. Equipment Line of Credit – https://www.mehmigroup.com/services/equipment-financing/equipment-line-of-credit
  3. Equipment Financing overview – https://www.mehmigroup.com/services/equipment-financing
  4. Refinancing or Sales Leaseback – https://www.mehmigroup.com/services/equipment-financing/refinancing-sales-leaseback
  5. Eligible Equipment – https://www.mehmigroup.com/eligible-equipment
  6. Business Loans overview – https://www.mehmigroup.com/services/business-loans
  7. Working Capital Loan – https://www.mehmigroup.com/services/business-loans/working-capital-loan
  8. Unsecured Loan – https://www.mehmigroup.com/services/business-loans/unsecured-loan
  9. Line of Credit – https://www.mehmigroup.com/services/business-loans/line-of-credit
  10. Vendor Program – https://www.mehmigroup.com/services/vendor-program
  11. Calculator – https://www.mehmigroup.com/calculator
  12. FAQ – https://www.mehmigroup.com/faq
  13. About Us – https://www.mehmigroup.com/about-us
  14. Contact Us – https://www.mehmigroup.com/contact-us

External citations used

  1. Canadian Dental Association – estimates of licensed dentists and dental offices in Canada.Canadian Dental Association+1
  2. Tempfind & Sierra Dental – updated statistics on number of dentists and dental offices, and sector growth.Tempfind+1
  3. StatCan study on COVID-19’s impact and recovery in the Canadian dental industry.Statistics Canada
  4. Remington Medical, Medline, Henry Schein, and other providers on benefits of medical equipment leasing for clinics (cash-flow, tech refresh, tax treatment).Soluco+3Remington Medical+3Medline Canada+3
  5. Soluco and Fincap on dental/medical equipment leasing structures and eligibility.Soluco+2Fincap Financial Group+2
  6. Bank of Canada policy rate and recent rate cuts, plus explainer resources.WOWA+3Bank of Canada+3nesto.ca+3
  7. BDC and Swoop resources on small business loans, term loans, and unsecured financing.

Communiquez avec nous !
En savoir plus sur notre politique de confidentialité.
Merci ! Votre soumission a bien été reçue !
Oups ! Quelque chose s'est mal passé lors de la soumission du formulaire.

Conçu pour les entreprises. Soutenu par l'expérience.