Inside the mower conditioners invoice: what gets rolled in
Most surprises in mower conditioners financing trace back to the line items between the equipment quote and the funded amount. The lender is funding what is on the bill of sale plus a defined set of allowable additions. The buyer often signs without reading which additions are in or out.
Base equipment. The unit itself, in the configuration the seller is offering.
For mower conditioners, base pricing typically runs $65K to $91K depending on configuration, year, hours, and condition.
Attachments, options, and add-ons.
Buyer-selected items show up on the invoice as separate lines. These are financeable in nearly every case. The decision is whether to roll them into the loan principal or pay them out of pocket at delivery.
Delivery, setup, and training.
For equipment that ships from a distant dealer to a remote job site, delivery and rigging can add 2 to 5 percent of base price. On mower conditioners specifically, mobilization to the work site after delivery is the buyer responsibility unless negotiated otherwise.
Sales tax and use tax.
Sales or use tax is owed in most states and typically rolls into the financed amount; the lender remits it at closing. State conformity rules vary, and a few states offer manufacturing or production exemptions that change the math. Confirm the tax line with the seller before signing rather than discovering it at funding.
Extended warranty, service contract, and consumables.
Optional but common. Pricing typically runs $1,000 to $10,000 depending on equipment cost and coverage. Financeable. Decide whether to roll the warranty in before you sign the funding documents, not after.
Four mower conditioners borrowers we route every week
The profile of the buyer matters as much as the equipment when underwriters price a mower conditioners deal. The four profiles below cover roughly 80 percent of the applications we route. Each has a typical structure, a typical down payment expectation, and a typical lender match.
The growing operator
A two-year-old business with two existing units and a third on order to chase the next contract. We see this profile most often in trades, fleet, and field services. Lenders weigh the equipment as collateral, then look at revenue trajectory and time in business. Most growing operators qualify for standard programs at fair-to-good credit.
The capacity-doubling buyer
An operator adding a second shift, a second line, or duplicate equipment to meet existing demand. Cleanest story to underwrite because the demand is already documented in the historical revenue. Loan term often matches the equipment useful life rather than being shortened against perceived risk.
The contract-backed buyer
A business with a signed contract or purchase order requiring the equipment to fulfill. The contract supports the file for newer businesses; lenders sometimes structure the loan term to match the contract term. Counterparty quality matters here.
The seasonal operator
A business with revenue that concentrates in certain months. Lenders price this risk by either requesting larger down payments, asking for proof of working capital reserves, or structuring seasonal payment skips that match the revenue pattern.
What underwriting weighs on mower conditioners deals
The five factors below drive most of the rate variance we see across mower conditioners applications. Lenders weigh them in roughly this order and price the deal off the combination. Your application is a story the underwriter reads against these five factors.
- Geographic operating territory. Where the equipment will operate matters. Some lenders prefer single-state operation; others price interstate or cross-border use differently. The lender match changes if the equipment will operate outside the home state regularly.
- 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.
- 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.
- 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.
- Business credit profile. D&B Paydex, Experian Intelliscore, and trade references from current vendors. Stronger business credit reduces personal-guarantee scope and improves the rate.
Diligence on mower conditioners: the items that matter
Equipment financing on mower conditioners closes cleanly when the pre-purchase walk catches the items below. When it does not, the issues surface post-funding, and the lender owns nothing of the resolution. Read the seller representation against the items below before signing.
- Software and license transfer. For equipment with embedded software (modern control systems, telematics, diagnostic), confirm the software licenses transfer to the new owner. Some manufacturer software is tied to original-purchaser-only; the second-hand owner can lose access to telematics, fault-code reading, or update streams.
- Pre-funding photo set. Take a comprehensive photo set of the equipment at the time of purchase signing: serial number, hour meter, condition of major systems, attachments, and any documented damage. This photo set goes into your records and into the lender file if requested.
- Operator manuals and documentation. Get the operator manual, service manual, and any parts catalog at the time of purchase. Replacements are sometimes available from the manufacturer but slow and expensive. Documentation is part of the asset value.
- Inspection by independent third party. For used equipment over $50,000, an independent mechanical inspection runs $300 to $800 and surfaces issues a walk-around will not catch. Lenders often require this for used equipment above a threshold.
- Comparable sales data. Pricing checked against recent comparable sales from auction sites, dealer listings, and trade publications. A unit priced 15 percent above market signals either a premium configuration or a seller hoping the buyer does not check.
- Electrical and instrument cluster. All gauges working, all warning lights cycling correctly on key-on, no fault codes stored in the ECU. Modern equipment with electronic controls is expensive to diagnose if anything is wrong.
Where mower conditioners deals go sideways post-funding
Every one of the issues below is documented on the funding paperwork. The buyer signed off on each. The buyer surprise comes from the gap between what the dealer said in conversation and what the documents actually say. Read the documents at signing rather than after.
Fleet vs single-unit pricing
When financing more than one unit, ask whether the lender treats it as a fleet transaction (often with better pricing) versus separate single-unit transactions. The difference can be 50 to 150 basis points on a multi-unit deal. Some lenders default to single-unit treatment unless the borrower asks for fleet structure.
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.
Doc fee surprises
Lender documentation fees range from $150 on the low end to $1,500 or more on larger transactions. These are disclosed in the funding documents but easy to skim past. Ask up front what the doc fee is, and whether it is being added to the financed amount or paid out of pocket at funding.
Personal guarantee scope
On most equipment loans under $250,000, owners with 20 percent or more equity sign personal guarantees. Read the guarantee language. Some guarantees are limited to the specific loan; others are continuing and cover any future borrowing from the same lender. Limit the guarantee to the specific transaction when possible.
Quick answer
Mower Conditioners financing typically prices at 7-12% APR for prime credit (720+ FICO) and 11-17% for fair-to-challenged credit (600-679). Standard terms run 36-72 months with 0-15% down. Approvals close in 24-72 hours on app-only programs (typically under $150K) and 3-7 business days on full-financials deals. Required documents: driver license, voided business check, last 3 months bank statements, and the equipment quote.
Quick answers
Direct answers to the questions we hear most on mower conditioners applications. Each answer is one we have given to a real buyer in the last quarter.
What is the typical APR on equipment financing?
Standard prime credit equipment financing runs 7 to 11 percent APR depending on equipment type, term length, and lender. Mid-tier credit runs 9 to 13 percent. Specialty programs for credit-challenged or startup borrowers run 12 to 18 percent. Manufacturer captive promotional financing can run 0 to 6 percent.
Can I get a tax deduction on a leased equipment?
Yes. Operating lease payments deduct fully as business expense in the year paid. Capital lease (EFA $1 buyout) structures get depreciation treatment, which often allows Section 179 immediate expensing. Talk to your tax preparer about the specific structure before signing.
Can I finance equipment with no time in business?
Yes, through startup-specific programs. These require strong principal credit (typically 700+ FICO), verifiable industry experience, and larger down payments (15 to 25 percent). New-authority trucking, first-time shop owners, and new medical practices all have dedicated startup programs.
Can a startup business finance equipment?
Yes. Startup programs underwrite principal credit and industry experience as substitutes for entity history. Expect 15 to 25 percent down, full personal guarantee, and sometimes a signed customer contract. Programs exist for new-authority trucking, first-time shop owners, and pre-revenue medical practices.
Can equipment financing affect my ability to get other loans?
Yes, in two ways: the UCC filing is a public record affecting subsequent lender review, and the monthly payment becomes a fixed obligation affecting debt service coverage ratios. Blanket UCC liens (rather than specific equipment UCC) can specifically limit subsequent financing capacity.
How much down payment is typical?
Standard programs run 0 to 10 percent down on new equipment for established businesses with prime credit. 5 to 20 percent down on used equipment. 15 to 30 percent on credit-challenged or startup applications. Fleet and replacement deals often qualify for zero down.
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 equipment will be operated by a hired driver or operator
- Then Document the operator certification status in advance. Some lenders require proof of OSHA training, CDL, or industry-specific certification before funding on certain equipment categories.
- If You are planning a Section 179 election close to year-end
- Then Confirm placed-in-service date can be hit before December 31. Equipment ordered but not delivered/commissioned does not qualify for current-year §179, regardless of payment status.
- If You plan to keep the equipment past the financing term
- Then Use a loan or $1 buyout EFA structure. Operating lease and FMV lease structures cost more on a keep-past-term basis because of the residual buyout.
- 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.
- If Your business operates across multiple states
- Then Confirm where to file the UCC-1 (state of incorporation vs state of equipment location). Standard practice files in state of incorporation; check with counsel on edge cases.
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.
Equipment damage during the loan term
Insurance proceeds pay off the loan balance or fund replacement equipment with lender consent. The loan does not cancel automatically with the equipment loss; coordination with lender is required.
Equipment serial number does not match UCC filing
Identify the error (dealer substitution, lender filing error, etc.) and resolve before subsequent financing. The UCC needs to match the actual collateral for enforceability. Lender amendment of the UCC handles this in most cases.
Borrower discovers equipment was misrepresented at sale
The lender funded based on the bill of sale, not the equipment condition. Disputes between buyer and seller after funding are between those parties. The loan obligation continues regardless. Independent pre-purchase inspection prevents most of these situations.
Borrower cash flow stress mid-term
Contact the lender BEFORE missing a payment. Most lenders work with borrowers in temporary stress through extension, deferral, or restructure. Missed payments without contact trigger default mechanics that limit options.
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.