What you actually finance when you buy scrubbers (industrial)
Three quotes for the same scrubbers (industrial) can come back with three different numbers, and the gap is rarely the equipment itself. The gap is what each dealer rolls in, what each lender treats as cost-of-deal, and what shows up as separate paper at funding. Knowing the line items in advance tells you what you are actually negotiating.
Base equipment. The unit itself, in the configuration the seller is offering.
For scrubbers (industrial), base pricing typically runs $48K to $67K 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.
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.
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.
The buyer profiles we see most on scrubbers (industrial) deals
Equipment financing is more buyer-driven than the rate sheets imply. Two applications for the same scrubbers (industrial) at the same price can land at meaningfully different rates because of where the buyer sits on the four profiles below. Knowing where you fit lets you frame the application to its strongest reading.
The contractor adding owned equipment
A business that has historically rented adding equipment to its own book to reduce rental spend. Lenders look favorably on this story because the rental cost is documented and the math is transparent. The conversion from rent to own is one of the cleanest financing applications.
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 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 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 factors that move the rate on scrubbers (industrial) financing
When our partner lenders evaluate scrubbers (industrial), they price the borrower against five factors that have stable weights across the industry. The equipment itself is the easier part of the file. The borrower factors below are where the actual underwriting happens.
- 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.
- Use of equipment. Will the asset generate revenue immediately, will it replace an existing producing asset, or is it additive capacity. Revenue-replacement deals close most easily.
- Time in business. The single most weighted factor for most equipment lenders. Two years in business opens up the full program menu. Under one year narrows the lender pool and often requires larger down payment.
- Bank statement analysis. Three to twelve months of business bank statements. Lenders look at average daily balance, monthly deposit count, NSF activity, and overall cash flow stability. This is where seasonal businesses get fairly priced if they have the records.
- 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.
Before you sign on scrubbers (industrial): 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.
- 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.
- Engine and powertrain test. Cold start, warm operation, load test if applicable. Diesel equipment in particular masks issues at warm-running temperature that surface on cold start.
- 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.
- Service history complete. Maintenance records back to first owner where possible. Gaps in service history reduce both lender comfort and resale 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.
- Manufacturer warranty status. On used equipment, confirm what is left of the original manufacturer warranty. Some warranties transfer with title and continue; others are tied to the original owner. The remaining warranty has dollar value and should factor into the purchase price.
Where scrubbers (industrial) 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.
Co-borrower vs guarantor distinction
Some lenders require a co-borrower on the loan rather than a guarantor. The legal and tax implications differ materially. A co-borrower has direct payment obligation; a guarantor only steps in if the primary defaults. Make sure your funding documents reflect the role you intended to play, especially if multiple owners are involved.
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.
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.
UCC blanket lien
A standard equipment loan creates a UCC-1 filing against the specific equipment. Some lenders file a blanket UCC against all business assets, which limits your ability to add other financing later without subordination agreements. Read the security agreement before signing.
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 You have a signed customer contract that the equipment will fulfill
- Then Include the contract in the application. Contract-backed equipment finance typically prices 50 to 150 basis points better than capacity-build financing on equivalent credit.
- 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 Your equipment is part of a larger build-out project
- Then Get bundled financing across the full project (equipment + infrastructure + integration) on single paper when possible. Bundled programs typically beat piecemeal financing on rate and approval probability.
- If You are buying equipment that will be sub-rented or leased to others
- Then Confirm at application. Sub-rental changes underwriting analysis (revenue stability, asset risk) and may require a different program than owner-account use.
- If You are buying used equipment over 7 years old
- Then Plan for shorter financing terms (36 to 48 months instead of 60 to 72) and higher rates. Authorized refurbished equipment from OEM-direct programs sometimes qualifies for new-equivalent terms.
Timeline expectations
What actually happens day-by-day, from application to equipment in service. Most buyers underestimate one or two of these steps; knowing them up front prevents surprises.
Title transfer on titled equipment
1 to 4 weeks
Title transfer through state DMV adds weeks to closing on titled equipment. Out-of-state transfers run on the longer end. Title escrow accelerates this in many cases.
Decision to document signing
1 to 3 business days
Borrower review and signing of credit documents and personal guarantee. Most delays here are borrower-side rather than lender-side.
Equipment delivery and inspection
1 day to 16 weeks
Wide range depending on equipment type. In-stock equipment delivers in days. Custom-configured manufacturing equipment runs 8-16 weeks. Imported equipment runs 12-24 weeks.
Application submission to decision
24 hours to 5 business days
App-only programs decision same-day or next-day. Full-financials programs run 3-5 business days as the file moves through credit, then operations.
Full underwriting on complex deals
5 to 10 business days
Larger transactions ($500K+) or specialty deals (medical imaging, aerospace, mining) often require deeper underwriting. Plan funding date 2-3 weeks out for these.
CARB compliance verification (California)
1 to 5 business days
California off-road diesel equipment requires CARB compliance verification. The DOORS database lookup is same-day; full compliance certification for transferred equipment runs days.
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 scrubbers (industrial) deal includes the items below. Buyers who only budget for the purchase price often hit cash-flow surprise within the first 12 months.
- Operating consumables. Recurring costs not included in the equipment purchase: fuel, fluids, filters, tools, parts. Equipment-specific.
- 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.
- 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.
- Sales or use tax. State and local sales tax on the equipment. Rolls into financed amount in most states. Manufacturing and qualifying exemptions reduce or eliminate this in many states.
- Installation and commissioning. Site preparation, electrical, plumbing, leveling, calibration, and operational commissioning. Runs 5 to 25 percent of equipment price depending on equipment category.
- Documentation and dealer fees. Lender doc fee runs $150 to $1,500. Dealer doc fee varies. Both may roll into financed amount or pay at signing.
- Storage and security infrastructure. Indoor storage, security systems, and theft-prevention measures. Particularly important for landscape, construction, and small equipment frequently stored outdoors and at job sites.