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Specialty Financing

Cannabis Extraction Equipment Financing

Cannabis Extraction Equipment financing for the Specialty industry. 3,840 monthly searches.

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Founder & Editor · Expertise: Equipment financing, Lender matching, Loan and lease structure
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Methodology
Sources: partner-lender program data + industry research Editorial standards: methodology Disclosures: advertising + lender relationships
$280,000
Typical price
range across configurations
7-14%
Good-credit APR
typical lender range
60-96 mo
Term length
10-year typical replace cycle

Cannabis Extraction Equipment financing covers loans, leases, and equipment finance agreements (EFAs) for businesses purchasing cannabis extraction equipment in the specialty category. Average asset price is about $280,000, with terms from 60 to 96 months and a typical replacement cycle of 10 years.

Qualifying requirements for Cannabis Extraction Equipment financing typically include a minimum FICO of 580+. Below we cover rates by credit tier, qualifying documentation, used-vs-new dynamics, Section 179 implications, and how to compare lenders on this category.

This hub covers:

  • Current rate ranges by credit tier, refreshed monthly
  • Qualifying requirements (FICO, time in business, monthly revenue, down payment)
  • Used vs new cannabis extraction equipment financing differences
  • An interactive calculator with three structures: loan, $1 buyout lease, FMV lease
  • Bad-credit programs (sub-650 FICO)
  • Section 179 implications for current-year tax planning
  • How to compare lenders for this category
Fast facts
Average asset price$280,000
Typical term length60 to 96 months
Replacement cycle10 years

How financing works for Cannabis Extraction Equipment

Loan

Borrow against the equipment. Own from day one. Standard amortization.

$1 Buyout Lease

Lease with $1 purchase option at term-end. Tax-favorable for Section 179.

FMV Lease

Lease with fair-market-value buyout. Lowest monthly payment; return or buy at residual.

EFA

Equipment Finance Agreement. Loan-like instrument, lien on the equipment, fixed payments.

See the universal guide on loan vs lease vs EFA vs $1 buyout for the full breakdown.

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Approval requirements

To qualify for Cannabis Extraction Equipment financing, expect lenders to look for: and % to % down.

Documentation checklist

  • Driver's license (or government ID)
  • Voided business check
  • Last 3 months of business bank statements
  • Last 2 years of business tax returns (for larger transactions)
  • Equipment quote or invoice from the seller

Used vs new Cannabis Extraction Equipment

Used Cannabis Extraction Equipment financing typically funds units up to 10 to 15 years old, with rates 1 to 3 points above new-equipment financing. Lenders pull valuation from industry sources (NADA, Iron Solutions, Mascus, or auction results).

Get a quote on used or new

Cannabis Extraction Equipment payment calculator

Should you lease or buy Cannabis Extraction Equipment?

For most buyers, financing-to-own wins when you want long-term equity in the asset, your tax position favors Section 179 depreciation, and the equipment holds value through the term. Leasing wins when you want the lowest monthly payment, plan to upgrade frequently, or need to preserve working capital.

Read the full lease-vs-buy breakdown, with side-by-side cost comparisons.

Section 179 and your Cannabis Extraction Equipment purchase

Section 179 lets you deduct the full purchase price of qualifying equipment in the year you put it into service (subject to annual limits). Most Cannabis Extraction Equipment qualifies. The 2026 §179 limit and deduction phase-out apply.

Read the universal Section 179 guide for current-year limits, eligibility rules, and the §179-vs-bonus-depreciation interaction.

What to know before financing cannabis extraction equipment

Where the financed amount comes from on cannabis extraction equipment

The funding statement on a cannabis extraction equipment 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 cannabis extraction equipment, base pricing typically runs $280K to $392K 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, on-site installation, calibration, and operator training can run 3 to 8 percent of base price. For medical and high-touch indoor equipment, the manufacturer commonly sends a representative on site for commissioning. Negotiate the inclusion of this service into the base price rather than as a separate add-on.

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.

Who actually finances cannabis extraction equipment

Our partner lenders see a wide range of buyer profiles on cannabis extraction equipment applications. The four below are the ones we route most often. Pricing, term, and down payment differ across them, but each profile has a viable path to financing if the application is structured correctly.

The contractor with a signed job

A buyer with an executed contract that the equipment will fulfill. Lenders sometimes use the contract as supporting documentation, particularly for newer businesses. Expect to share the contract value, term, and counterparty.

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 upgrade buyer

A business trading out a working unit for a newer model with capabilities the current unit lacks. The story for lenders is fine, but the math (selling the old unit, paying off any remaining lien, redirecting the payment) needs to work cleanly before the new loan funds.

How lenders evaluate a cannabis extraction equipment application

Underwriting on cannabis extraction equipment financing weights the borrower side first and the equipment side second. The borrower factors below carry the most influence on rate, term, and down payment. Knowing how each maps to your specific situation lets you put the application together so the strong parts stand out.

  • 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.
  • 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.
  • 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.

Diligence on cannabis extraction equipment: the items that matter

Equipment financing on cannabis extraction equipment 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.

  • Title or MSO clean. Title for titled equipment, manufacturer statement of origin (MSO) for new equipment that has not been titled yet. Check for prior liens, salvage history, and that the seller is the title holder.
  • 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.
  • 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.
  • 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.

Patterns to watch for on cannabis extraction equipment documents

Borrowers who run into trouble on cannabis extraction equipment financing almost never do so because of fraud or bad faith. They do so because something in the funding documents was different from what was discussed in conversation. The patterns below are the most common spots where that gap shows up.

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.

Late payment cascading fees

A 10-day late payment on an equipment loan typically triggers a late fee of 5 to 10 percent of the payment amount. Some contracts also trigger default interest, which jumps the rate by 4 to 6 points until the account cures. The dollar impact of a single missed payment can run into the hundreds.

EFA versus loan documentation differences

An Equipment Finance Agreement looks like a lease to a casual reader but behaves like a loan. Buyers who do not understand the structure sometimes try to apply lease-specific tax treatment to an EFA, or vice versa. Read the structure on the front page of the funding documents and confirm with your CPA before electing tax treatment.

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.

Quick answer

Cannabis Extraction Equipment 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 cannabis extraction equipment applications. Each answer is one we have given to a real buyer in the last quarter.

Can I add attachments to an existing equipment loan?
Sometimes, depending on the lender and the original loan structure. Adding to an existing loan typically requires a loan modification or amendment. More commonly, attachments finance as a separate transaction at standard equipment terms, sometimes at a modest premium over the original equipment rate.
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.
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.
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.
What documents do I need to apply?
Driver license, voided business check, last 3 months bank statements, and a quote or invoice for the equipment. App-only programs (under $150K typically) require this much. Full-financials programs add 2 years of business tax returns and a recent P&L.

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 cannabis extraction equipment deal includes the items below. Buyers who only budget for the purchase price often hit cash-flow surprise within the first 12 months.

  • Equipment purchase price. Base equipment price as quoted by the dealer. Negotiable, especially on used equipment and end-of-quarter new equipment.
  • Late payment fees and penalties. Late fees of 5 to 10 percent of payment if more than 10 days late. Default interest of 4 to 6 points may apply. Worth knowing before signing.
  • UCC-1 filing fees. $5 to $84 depending on state. Paid at filing; some lenders absorb, some pass to borrower.
  • End-of-term residual or buyout. Lease structures: fair market value buyout at term end (FMV lease) or stated residual amount (TRAC lease). Loan/EFA structures: $1 buyout or no buyout. Plan for this from day one on lease structures.
  • 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.
  • Operating consumables. Recurring costs not included in the equipment purchase: fuel, fluids, filters, tools, parts. Equipment-specific.
  • 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.
  • Personal property tax (where applicable). Annual personal property tax assessed by counties in many states. Runs 0.5 to 3 percent of assessed value annually.

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.

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.

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 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.

Personal guarantee called on default

Personal guarantee makes the principal personally liable for the debt if the business defaults. Working with the lender on workout or restructure is the preferable path. Personal bankruptcy is a real consequence of unresolved default with personal guarantee.

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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Common questions about Cannabis Extraction Equipment financing

How long does approval take?
Most applications return a decision within 1 to 3 business days. Soft-pull prequalification can return a same-day estimate.
Can I finance used cannabis extraction equipment?
Yes. Most lenders finance equipment up to 10 to 15 years old. Rates run 1 to 3 points above new-equipment financing.
What credit score do I need?
Minimum FICO of 580+ for partner lender programs. Higher scores get better rates and longer terms.
What documentation will the lender need?
Driver's license, voided business check, last 3 months of bank statements, last 2 years of tax returns for larger transactions, and the equipment quote.
Do you check personal credit or business credit?
Initial prequalification is a soft pull on personal credit (no score impact). The lender's formal approval may include a hard pull and business credit review at your consent.
How much down payment is required?
Typical down payment ranges from 0% to 20% depending on credit tier, equipment age, and lender. New equipment with excellent credit can go to 0% down.
E
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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