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Founder & Editor · Expertise: Equipment financing, Lender matching, Loan and lease structure
Last reviewed
Methodology
Sources: partner-lender program data + industry research Editorial standards: methodology Disclosures: advertising + lender relationships

Lease Payment Calculator

Monthly lease payments based on residual.

Soft-pull, no credit impact 50+ partner lenders 24-72hr decisions $0 cost to apply

The Lease Payment Calculator is a no-signup tool for modeling lease payment scenarios. Below is the methodology, assumptions, and notes on how to use the output.

How the calculator works

This calculator uses standard equipment-financing formulas to model the specified scenario. Inputs are documented in the tool above; outputs are estimates only.

Assumptions

  • Rate ranges: blended across our partner lenders, refreshed monthly. Actual rates depend on lender underwriting.
  • Section 179 calculations: 2026 limit of $1.22M, phase-out at $3.05M, 60% bonus depreciation rate. Assumes 25% effective federal tax rate unless overridden. Not tax advice.
  • Amortization: standard monthly amortization (compound interest). Most equipment loans amortize this way.
  • Residuals (FMV lease): 20% typical for general equipment; varies 15-25% by category and age.

What this calculator does not include

  • Origination fees (sometimes financed into the loan, sometimes paid at close)
  • Doc fees ($150-500 typical)
  • Insurance premiums (separate from financing payment)
  • Sales tax (state-specific; see your state guide)
  • Late fees or prepayment penalties

Always ask the lender for an all-in quote including all fees before signing.

Apply with these numbers

The “Apply with these terms” button hands off to our application form pre-filled with your calculator inputs. /apply/ for soft-pull pre-qualification.

Interactive Lease Payment Calculator

The interactive payment calculator requires JavaScript. Apply for a quote to get a lender to run the numbers for you.

How to read this output

What the calculator does and does not capture

The calculator uses standard equipment financing math: monthly payments are computed as a fixed amortization over the term, using the rate the borrower selects against the program template. We treat the rate as nominal annual, divided by twelve for the monthly factor, and we use the standard mortgage-style amortization formula. The payment shown is principal plus interest for the financed amount; it does not include sales tax (which most jurisdictions roll into the financed amount) or insurance.

The rate ranges we show by credit tier come from blended data across our partner lenders. We refresh these quarterly to track the rate environment. Your actual rate depends on credit profile, time in business, revenue, equipment, transaction size, and the specific lender that matches your application. Use the calculator output as a planning range, not a quote.

Where the calculator output gets refined in actual underwriting

Several factors that the calculator does not capture can move your actual payment up or down. Understanding the inputs that the calculator simplifies helps you read the output as a baseline that the lender will adjust against your specific deal.

Sales and use tax. Sales tax is owed in most states and is typically rolled into the financed amount, which adds to the monthly payment. Some equipment qualifies for sales tax exemption depending on use and jurisdiction. The calculator does not pre-compute sales tax because it varies by state and by use.

Documentation fee. Lender documentation fees of $150 to $1,500 are common and are either rolled into the financed amount or paid out of pocket. Either way, they show up in the APR calculation. The calculator shows the loan-side cost; the APR you eventually see in the funding documents is the all-in cost.

Origination structure. Some lenders price origination as a separate fee, others bake it into the rate. The calculator output assumes the rate represents the all-in cost. When you receive specific offers, read whether the rate includes origination or whether it is added separately.

Pre-payment provisions. The total cost shown in the calculator assumes you carry the loan to term. If you pay off early, the total cost is the sum of payments made plus any pre-payment penalty, minus any unearned finance charge rebate. For shorter holding periods, the effective cost can differ meaningfully from the calculator total.

Factors that drive your actual rate

The calculator output uses indicative rates by credit tier. The factors below explain where your actual rate is likely to land within the tier range.

  • Financial statement quality. For transactions above $250,000, lenders weight the quality of financial statements: are they CPA-prepared, are they current within 90 days, do they reconcile to bank statements. Strong financial reporting opens up better pricing on larger transactions.
  • Personal credit of principals. For owners with 20 percent or more equity, personal FICO drives both the available program and the rate. The pull is soft at prequalification, hard at formal application with the chosen lender.
  • Industry sector. Some industries get standard pricing, some get a premium, some get a discount. Long-term stable sectors with low default rates (utility infrastructure, established medical, government contractors) typically price favorably.
  • Equipment as collateral. The equipment itself secures the loan. Asset class, age, condition, configuration, and resale market depth all factor into how lenders advance against the cost.
  • Documented backlog or pipeline. Signed contracts, outstanding purchase orders, or a documented work backlog support the application story. For service businesses in particular, a pipeline that justifies the new equipment closes deals faster than projections alone.

Pitfalls the calculator output cannot warn you about

The calculator handles payment math cleanly. It does not catch the patterns below, which show up in real funding documents and affect the all-in cost. Read the funding documents themselves; do not rely on a calculator output as your due-diligence step.

ACH authorization scope

The funding documents authorize the lender to ACH debit your account for monthly payments. Some authorizations are limited to the regular monthly payment; others give the lender authority to debit late fees, NSF fees, or other charges. Read the ACH authorization clause and limit it where you can.

Add-on funding within the deal

During the application or document review stage, some borrowers add items (extended warranty, training, additional configuration) without realizing the loan amount is re-quoted at the higher figure. Each addition can change the rate, term, and approval terms. Confirm the final loan amount before signing rather than tracking changes piecemeal.

Cross-collateral creep

Adding new equipment financing through the same lender often includes cross-collateral language that ties the new equipment to the prior loan and vice versa. Not always bad, but it limits flexibility if you need to sell or refinance one piece of equipment without paying off the other.

Trade-in payoff timing

If your transaction includes a trade-in with an existing lien, the new lender pays off the trade-in lien as part of the funding. Verify the trade-in payoff amount the new lender uses matches the actual payoff from the prior lender (which can include accrued interest and fees through the funding date). A $500 to $2,000 gap is common if this is not reconciled.

Questions about the calculator output

Do I have to insure the equipment for the full loan amount?
Yes. Physical damage coverage at the financed amount is standard, plus liability if applicable to the equipment class. The lender is named as loss payee for the life of the loan. Verify the coverage language meets the lender requirements before funding.
When does the loan funding actually happen?
Funding occurs after you sign the documents and the lender verifies delivery and acceptance of the equipment. The lender wires the funds to the seller directly in most cases. Time from document signing to seller funding is typically 1 to 3 business days.
Can I trade in equipment as part of the down payment?
Yes, on most loans. The trade value is treated as cash down for loan-to-cost calculations. The lender will want to see documentation of the trade-in and confirmation that any prior lien on the trade-in is being paid off through the transaction.
What is a "soft pull" vs "hard pull" on credit?
A soft pull is a credit inquiry that does not impact your score. We use soft pulls at prequalification so you can see indicative rates without credit hit. A hard pull is recorded on your credit report and typically reduces your score by a small amount. Hard pulls happen at the formal application stage with your consent.
How does the lender verify the equipment exists and was delivered?
Standard verification: signed delivery and acceptance certificate from you, plus inspection of the equipment or photo verification depending on transaction size. For larger transactions, the lender may send an inspector. For smaller transactions, a signed certificate plus the seller invoice is often enough.

Quick answers

Direct answers to the questions we hear most on lease payment calculator applications. Each answer is one we have given to a real buyer in the last quarter.

How fast can I get funded?
Standard equipment loans on app-only programs (under $150K typically) close in 24 to 72 hours from doc submission. Full-financials programs run 3 to 7 business days. Titled equipment with title transfer adds 1 to 4 weeks.
How is interest calculated on equipment loans?
Most equipment loans use simple interest amortization. Each payment includes principal and interest portions, with the interest portion declining as the balance amortizes. EFA structures may use rate-factor pricing instead of stated APR; the dollar cost is similar but the math is different.
What is a TRAC lease?
A Terminal Rental Adjustment Clause (TRAC) lease is a structure used primarily on titled vehicles (trucks, trailers, certain heavy equipment) where the lessee bears the residual risk at end of term. Common on commercial vehicles because it offers operating-lease tax treatment with the buyer keeping equipment-purchase economics.
What is a balloon payment?
A balloon payment is a large final payment at the end of a loan term that is not fully amortized through monthly payments. Common on shorter terms with longer-life equipment. Borrowers either refinance the balloon at end of term, pay it cash, or include it in budgeting from day one. Most equipment loans amortize fully without balloons.
How do I know which lender program fits my situation?
The fit comes from matching credit profile (FICO + business credit), time in business, equipment type, structure preference (loan vs lease), and tax position. We route applications to the program that fits based on these factors; the soft-pull pre-qualification surfaces which programs accept the application without affecting score.
Do I need business credit to finance equipment?
No, personal credit is typically the primary factor for small and mid-size businesses. Business credit (D&B PAYDEX, Equifax Business, Experian Business) matters more on larger transactions and for established businesses. Building business credit over time supports better terms on subsequent deals.

How we route the decision

The financing structure that fits depends on the actual situation. Below are the most common decision branches we walk through with buyers, in plain "if X, then Y" form.

If Your credit is below 640 and TIB is under 24 months
Then Plan for 15 to 25 percent down, full personal guarantee, and a specialty program. Rates run 4 to 8 points above prime. Approval is still real but the structure is meaningfully different from prime programs.
If You are buying equipment from a private seller
Then Use a title services provider or escrow for the title transfer. The lender will not fund until title is clear; an escrow arrangement protects both buyer and seller during the title transfer window.
If You expect rate environment to improve in the next 12 to 18 months
Then Consider open pre-payment structures or a shorter term you can refinance later. The trade-off is the upfront cost; the refinance option becomes valuable if rates drop 100+ basis points.
If You are taking a Section 179 election this tax year
Then Use a loan or $1 buyout EFA. Operating lease structures do not qualify for §179 election. Confirm equipment placed in service before December 31.
If You will operate the equipment more than 50 percent for business
Then You qualify for Section 179 and bonus depreciation on the business-use percentage. Below 50 percent business use disqualifies from §179 entirely.

What if something changes mid-term

Equipment loans run for 36 to 96 months. Things change. The patterns below cover the situations that come up most often during the loan term and how they typically resolve.

Pre-payment penalty obstacles to refinancing

Calculate the breakeven: penalty cost vs. interest savings on refinanced rate. Common breakeven is 12-18 months. If you expect to keep the equipment 24+ more months at lower rate, the penalty usually pays back.

Equipment becomes obsolete or no longer useful

Sell the equipment with lender consent (UCC release coordination), apply proceeds to loan payoff. If sale proceeds are below payoff, the deficiency becomes owed. Voluntary surrender to lender is sometimes available as an alternative.

Equipment lease ending with no clear plan

Lease structures require purchase, return, or renewal at end of term, typically with 60-90 day notice. Missing the notice deadline can trigger automatic renewal or fair-market-value buyout. Decide and communicate before the deadline.

Equipment used for something different from original purpose

Loan covenants sometimes restrict equipment use (no sub-rental, no out-of-state operation, etc.). Changing use materially without consent can trigger default. Request lender consent in writing before the change.

Authoritative sources

The rate ranges, structures, and program details on this page are informed by our partner-lender book and the public industry resources below. We link out so you can verify any specific claim or go deeper.

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Reviewed by

Ed Stapleton Jr.

Founder & Editor

Ed Stapleton Jr. runs Fund My Equipment. Every page on this site is written and reviewed by Ed.

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