Commercial Equipment Financing & Sale-Leaseback: Unlocking Capital From Your Heavy Assets

For manufacturing, logistics, construction, and agricultural businesses, equipment is not just a tool — it’s a balance sheet asset that can be actively leveraged to fund growth. Equipment financing puts new machinery to work without draining cash reserves. Equipment sale-leaseback unlocks the dormant capital sitting in machinery you already own free-and-clear. Both strategies are underused by business owners who don’t realize how much capital their equipment represents.

Commercial Equipment Financing: How It Works

Equipment financing is a secured loan or lease where the equipment itself serves as collateral. Because the lender can repossess and liquidate the asset in the event of default, credit requirements are more flexible than unsecured business loans — and rates reflect this lower risk.

Equipment Loan vs. Equipment Lease

FeatureEquipment LoanEquipment Lease (Finance Lease)
OwnershipYou own the equipmentLessor owns; you have use rights
Balance SheetAsset + liability appear on B/SOperating lease stays off B/S (under certain structures)
Tax TreatmentSection 179 deduction + depreciationLease payments deductible as operating expense
Down Payment0% – 20%Often $0 (first/last payment)
End of TermYou own the asset free-and-clearBuyout option ($1 or FMV) or return
Best ForLong-life assets (10+ year useful life)Technology or assets with high obsolescence risk

Equipment Financing Rates and Terms

Equipment financing is one of the most competitively priced forms of business lending. Key variables that drive your rate:

  • Equipment type and age: New equipment from an authorized dealer gets the best rates. Used equipment over 10 years old is harder to finance and commands higher rates.
  • Equipment resale value: Lenders think about liquidation. Yellow iron (construction equipment), semi-trucks, and CNC machinery have strong secondary markets. Custom or highly specialized equipment is harder to finance.
  • Borrower credit profile: 650+ FICO is the general threshold; 700+ gets competitive rates. Strong business financials matter more than personal credit for larger loans.
  • Loan-to-Value: Most lenders will advance 80%–100% of the equipment’s purchase price or book value.

Current market rates for equipment financing range from approximately 6% to 15% APR, with term lengths of 36 to 84 months. Best-credit borrowers buying new, easily liquidated equipment will approach the low end of that range.

Industries and Equipment Types

IndustryCommon Equipment FinancedTypical Loan Size
ConstructionExcavators, cranes, loaders, graders$250K – $5M
ManufacturingCNC machinery, presses, lathes, conveyors$100K – $10M
Trucking/LogisticsSemi-trucks, trailers, refrigerated units$80K – $3M
AgricultureCombines, tractors, irrigation systems$100K – $2M
HealthcareMRI machines, surgical robots, imaging systems$500K – $20M
Restaurant/Food ServiceCommercial ovens, refrigeration, processing lines$50K – $1M

Equipment Sale-Leaseback: Monetizing What You Already Own

A sale-leaseback is a transaction in which you sell equipment you own to a finance company and then immediately lease it back. From an operational perspective, nothing changes — you continue using the same equipment. From a financial perspective, you’ve just converted a hard asset into working capital.

How a Sale-Leaseback Is Structured

  • Step 1 — Appraisal: The finance company appraises your equipment’s fair market value (FMV). This is the basis for the transaction — you will receive a percentage of FMV (typically 80%–100%).
  • Step 2 — Sale: You sell the equipment to the lender/lessor at the agreed value. The purchase price is wired to your account.
  • Step 3 — Leaseback: Simultaneously, you execute a lease agreement to continue using the equipment. Monthly payments are structured over the lease term (typically 24–60 months).
  • Step 4 — End of Lease: At lease end, you typically have a buyout option at a nominal amount ($1 to $10 or fair market value) or you can return/replace the equipment.

Sale-Leaseback: Real-World Applications

Construction Company Unlocking Equipment Equity

A mid-size general contractor owns $3 million in heavy equipment (excavators, graders, articulated trucks) free-and-clear. They have a contract opportunity that requires $1.2 million in bonding and working capital. Rather than taking on high-cost business debt, they execute a sale-leaseback of $1.5 million of equipment, receive the cash at closing, and structure monthly lease payments that replace the prior ownership with essentially zero economic change to operations — at a cost of approximately 8%–10% APR.

Manufacturing Company Funding Expansion

A precision machining company owns three CNC machining centers valued at $800,000. They need capital to purchase a fourth machine and hire two operators to win a new contract. They sale-leaseback the existing three machines for $700,000, use $400,000 to purchase the fourth machine (also structured as a finance lease), and retain $300,000 as working capital buffer — funding the growth without equity dilution or traditional bank debt.

Sale-Leaseback vs. Equipment Loan: Which Is Right for You?

ScenarioBetter Option
Buying new equipmentEquipment loan or finance lease
Own equipment free-and-clear; need capitalSale-leaseback
Want to preserve bank credit linesEquipment financing (off-bank-line)
Tax-motivated (operating expense vs. depreciation)Lease structure
Older equipment (10+ years)Sale-leaseback may be limited; consult appraiser
Want to own asset at endLoan with $1 buyout option

Tax Considerations for Equipment Financing and Sale-Leasebacks

The tax treatment of equipment capital is one of the most impactful planning levers available to business owners. Consult your CPA on the following:

  • Section 179 Expensing: Allows businesses to immediately deduct the full purchase price of qualifying equipment in the year of acquisition (up to $1.16 million for tax year 2024). Applies to equipment loans and finance leases with a $1 buyout.
  • Bonus Depreciation: 100% bonus depreciation for new equipment has been phased down; 60% applies in 2024, continuing to decrease. Still significant for large purchases.
  • Sale-Leaseback Tax Treatment: The sale portion may generate a taxable gain if equipment has been depreciated below FMV. Lease payments are deductible as operating expenses. Net tax impact varies — model this before executing.

For businesses in the 21%+ effective tax rate bracket, the tax deductibility of lease payments can meaningfully reduce the after-tax cost of equipment capital.

How to Apply for Equipment Financing

Equipment financing has one of the most streamlined application processes in commercial lending. For most loans under $500,000, lenders can approve on the basis of:

  • Completed 1-page application
  • Last 3–6 months of business bank statements
  • Equipment quote or invoice (for new equipment) or current appraisal (for used/sale-leaseback)

Loans above $500,000 or complex sale-leaseback transactions typically require 2 years of business financials, a current equipment appraisal, and occasionally a site visit.

Lender Tribune works with equipment finance companies and sale-leaseback providers across all major industries. Whether you’re buying $100,000 in restaurant equipment or executing a $5 million CNC machinery sale-leaseback, submit your scenario for same-day quotes.

Back to top button

Sign In

Register

Reset Password

Please enter your username or email address, you will receive a link to create a new password via email.