Inside the bridge inspection trucks invoice: what gets rolled in
Most surprises in bridge inspection trucks 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 bridge inspection trucks, base pricing typically runs $350K to $490K depending on configuration, year, hours, and condition.
Two units with similar model and mileage can price 15 percent apart depending on spec, axle configuration, and the title status at the time of sale.
Attachments, options, and add-ons.
Sleeper packages, axle configurations, lift gates, refrigeration units, and aftermarket installations show up as separate lines. Each is financeable. On a fleet purchase, the upfit configuration drives much of the total spread between two otherwise-identical units.
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, title, and registration.
On titled equipment, sales tax, title transfer, and registration fees roll into the financed amount and the lender pays them at closing. Plate fees and apportioned registrations for interstate use are separate and recur. The lender holds the title and you carry the registration; expect a 30 to 90 day window between funding and your physical title or plates.
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 bridge inspection trucks deals
Equipment financing is more buyer-driven than the rate sheets imply. Two applications for the same bridge inspection trucks 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 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 relocation buyer
A business moving operations to a new state or region and replacing equipment that does not move efficiently. Lenders see this fairly often in field services and construction. The application looks clean as long as the business operation continuity is documented.
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 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 factors that move the rate on bridge inspection trucks financing
When our partner lenders evaluate bridge inspection trucks, 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.
- 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.
- 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.
- 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.
- 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.
- 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.
What to confirm before signing on bridge inspection trucks
Our partner lenders fund based on what is on the bill of sale. The bill of sale is the seller representation, signed off by the buyer at delivery. Catching gaps between what was represented and what was delivered is a buyer responsibility. The items below are the ones we see signed past most often.
- 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.
- 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.
- 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.
- Hour or mileage reading verified. Photographed at signing, recorded in writing on the bill of sale, and matched to the seller representation. Hours and miles are the single biggest driver of asset value at term-end.
- Service history complete. Maintenance records back to first owner where possible. Gaps in service history reduce both lender comfort and resale value.
- 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.
The post-funding issues we see most on bridge inspection trucks
The patterns below are not unique to bridge inspection trucks. They are the standard places where equipment finance transactions surprise the borrower post-funding. Each is preventable at the application or document-review stage.
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.
Operating lease end-of-term costs
FMV and TRAC leases include end-of-term obligations that surprise inexperienced lessees: excess wear and tear charges, return logistics, mileage or hour overages, and the fair market value buyout calculation itself. None of these are inherently bad, but knowing the rules at lease signing prevents end-of-term disputes.
Insurance loss-payee language
The insurance policy must name the lender as loss payee for the full life of the loan. Verify the loss-payee language matches exactly what the lender requires (including their address and entity name). A mismatched loss payee often results in lender-placed insurance at three to five times open-market cost while the issue is resolved.
Vendor financing disguised as direct
Some equipment dealers present vendor-arranged financing as the only path, when independent equipment lenders would beat the rate by 1 to 3 points for the same borrower. Always get at least one independent quote before accepting dealer financing on a transaction over $50,000.
Quick answer
Bridge Inspection Trucks 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 bridge inspection trucks applications. Each answer is one we have given to a real buyer in the last quarter.
Does the equipment loan get reported to credit bureaus?
Most equipment loans report to business credit bureaus (D&B, Equifax Business, Experian Business). Personal guarantees may or may not report to personal credit bureaus depending on lender practice; this is an important question to ask if maintaining personal credit utilization is important.
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.
What is an app-only program?
App-only means the lender approves the deal based on a credit application without requiring full business financials. Typically capped at $150,000 to $250,000 transaction size depending on lender. Decisions are faster (often same-day) and documentation is minimal. Above the app-only threshold, full financials are required.
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.
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.
What is the minimum credit score for equipment financing?
There is no single minimum across the industry. Prime programs start at 720+. Mid-tier programs work down to 660. Specialty programs handle 580 to 640 with structured down payment and personal guarantee. Below 580 is rare but exists in narrow specialty programs.
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 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 plan to bundle attachments with the base equipment
- Then Get them all on a single bill of sale and single paper. Bundled financing typically costs 50 to 100 basis points less than financing the base unit and adding attachments separately.
- If You are a startup with strong principal credit and industry experience
- Then Apply to startup-specific programs that recognize principal credit and experience as substitutes for entity history. Expect higher down payment but a real path to approval.
- If You plan to cycle equipment every 36 to 48 months
- Then A true operating lease with FMV residual often beats loan or EFA structures. The lower payment over a shorter term, with return option at the end, fits the use case.
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.
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.
Lender becomes difficult to work with
Most equipment loans are assumable or assignable with lender consent. Refinancing to a different lender is the more common path. Document the issues clearly; the situation rarely improves and the alternatives exist.
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.
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.