Where the financed amount comes from on ac recharge/recovery machines
The funding statement on a ac recharge/recovery machines deal looks different from the dealer quote. The dealer quote highlights the equipment and configuration. The funding statement breaks out every dollar the lender is financing, in the order the lender lists them. Reading both side by side at signing is the discipline that prevents post-funding surprise.
Base equipment. The unit itself, in the configuration the seller is offering.
For ac recharge/recovery machines, base pricing typically runs $5K to $6K depending on configuration, year, hours, and condition.
Two machines with identical model numbers can price 25 percent apart based on hours, attachments installed, and the condition of wear items at the time of sale.
Attachments, options, and add-ons.
Buckets, thumbs, couplers, undercarriage upgrades, and operator-station options show up as separate lines on the bill of sale. Each is financeable. Attachments alone can add 10 to 25 percent to a base machine price; specify which attachments are included in the financed transaction and which are buyer-supplied.
Delivery, setup, and training.
Delivery and setup typically add 1 to 4 percent of base price; training, where the dealer or manufacturer sends a representative on site, runs $1,500 to $5,000. Both are financeable and both are negotiable.
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.
Powertrain and full-machine warranties on heavy equipment range from $1,500 to $15,000 depending on hour limits and term. Worth bundling when parts and labor exposure on the asset class is high. Decide before signing whether to roll the warranty in.
Four ac recharge/recovery machines borrowers we route every week
The profile of the buyer matters as much as the equipment when underwriters price a ac recharge/recovery machines 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 acquisition buyer
A business buying an existing operation that includes equipment. Some lenders treat this as a business loan, others as straight equipment financing. The split matters for both rate and what documents the lender will ask for.
The grant-leveraged buyer
A business with a grant award, set-aside, or rebate that covers part of the equipment cost. The lender funds the remainder. The grant documentation goes into the file at application; timing of the grant disbursement versus loan funding is the detail that determines structure.
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.
The post-restructure operator
A business that has been through a workout, settlement, or bankruptcy in the last 24 to 60 months. Programs exist with the right lender, usually at higher rate, with larger down payment, and tied to a personal guarantee from a principal with current clean credit.
Inside the underwriter view of a ac recharge/recovery machines deal
If you want to understand why two ac recharge/recovery machines deals at identical price land at different rates, the answer is in the five borrower factors below. Lender pricing on the equipment side is reasonably standardized. Lender pricing on the borrower side has real spread.
- Owner background and depth. Years of related industry experience, prior ownership of similar equipment, and any documented success operating the asset class affect underwriting. New entrants to a class price differently from established operators expanding within their lane.
- 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.
- 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.
- Existing debt service. Lenders look at total monthly debt obligations against cash flow. Adding a new payment that pushes the debt service coverage ratio below 1.20 typically requires additional support or a larger down payment.
- 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.
Before you sign on ac recharge/recovery machines: what to verify
Lenders fund off the bill of sale and the seller representation. If the equipment shows up different from what is documented, the loan still funded and the discrepancy is yours to resolve. The walk below catches the issues before signing, when negotiation is still open and the cost of a fix is the seller side.
- 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.
- Hydraulics and ancillary systems. Full range of motion on every hydraulic function, no leaks, smooth operation, no chatter or pump whine. Hydraulic repairs on heavy equipment run into five figures fast.
- Wear items documented. Tires, tracks, undercarriage, cutting edges, brakes. Photograph and note remaining life. These are the items that will need replacement first and that buyers under-budget for.
- Recall and campaign status. Manufacturer recalls and service campaigns sometimes go uncompleted on used equipment. Verify outstanding recalls before purchase; some are mandatory and prevent the equipment from being registered or operated in certain jurisdictions until completed.
- Hours-meter or odometer history. Beyond the current reading, confirm the historical pattern of use. A unit with 4,000 hours from regular daily use is different from a unit with 4,000 hours from intermittent project work. Service records, when available, document the use pattern.
- Service history complete. Maintenance records back to first owner where possible. Gaps in service history reduce both lender comfort and resale value.
Where ac recharge/recovery machines 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.
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.
Title processing timeline
For titled equipment, the lender holds the original title and you operate under a temporary registration until the state DMV processes the title transfer. Timelines vary from two weeks to three months by state. If the equipment needs to be on the road immediately, ask the lender about expedited processing or temporary trip permits at the time of funding.
Acceptance-letter timing
The lender funds against your signed acceptance of the equipment. If the equipment arrives missing items, damaged, or not matching the bill of sale, do not sign the acceptance until the seller addresses the issue. Once acceptance is signed, the seller is funded and your leverage to resolve is dramatically reduced.
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.
Quick answer
AC Recharge/Recovery Machines 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 ac recharge/recovery machines applications. Each answer is one we have given to a real buyer in the last quarter.
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 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.
What is the difference between a captive lender and a bank?
Captive lenders are manufacturer finance arms (CAT Financial, John Deere Financial, etc.) that finance their own equipment. They often offer promotional rates and longer terms. Banks finance any equipment but typically at standard market rates with more conservative underwriting and longer approval cycles.
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.
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.
Can I finance equipment under my LLC?
Yes, and most equipment financing is done through business entities (LLC, S-corp, C-corp). The principal personal guarantee makes the credit profile of the LLC owners relevant. Single-member LLCs underwrite similarly to sole proprietorships.
Cost stack: what total ownership actually includes
The equipment purchase price is one line on the financed amount. The actual cost of ownership over the life of a ac recharge/recovery machines deal includes the items below. Buyers who only budget for the purchase price often hit cash-flow surprise within the first 12 months.
- Installation and commissioning. Site preparation, electrical, plumbing, leveling, calibration, and operational commissioning. Runs 5 to 25 percent of equipment price depending on equipment category.
- Pre-payment penalties. Standard early-payoff penalty: 3 percent of payoff in year one declining to zero by year three. Or flat fee of $500 to $2,000. Varies by lender.
- Equipment purchase price. Base equipment price as quoted by the dealer. Negotiable, especially on used equipment and end-of-quarter new equipment.
- Operator training. Manufacturer-provided or third-party operator training. Runs $1,500 to $25,000 depending on equipment complexity. OSHA-compliant training required on many categories.
- Insurance premiums. Commercial equipment insurance with lender named as loss payee. Annual premiums run 1 to 5 percent of equipment value depending on coverage and equipment category.
- UCC-1 filing fees. $5 to $84 depending on state. Paid at filing; some lenders absorb, some pass to borrower.
- Tooling and accessories. Cutting tools, attachments, fixtures, and accessories specific to the equipment. Often quoted separately from base equipment. Can run 10 to 40 percent of equipment cost.
- Software licenses. CAM, design, control, and operational software. Often subscription-based with annual renewal. Can run $5,000 to $50,000+ per seat depending on equipment category.
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.
Business ownership change during loan term
Most equipment loans are personally guaranteed and assumable with lender consent during ownership change. The new owner submits an application similar to the original; the lender reviews and either consents or requires payoff.
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.
Equipment lien still showing after loan payoff
Lender is required to terminate the UCC-1 within a defined window after payoff (varies by state). If termination has not occurred, request a UCC termination statement from the lender. Borrower can sometimes file UCC termination directly if lender is unresponsive.
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.