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Founder & Editor · Expertise: Equipment financing, Lender matching, Loan and lease structure
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Sources: partner-lender program data + industry research Editorial standards: methodology Disclosures: advertising + lender relationships

New vs Used Equipment Financing

New vs Used Equipment Financing. Side-by-side comparison with cost analysis, tax implications, and when each wins.

Soft-pull, no credit impact 50+ partner lenders 24-72hr decisions $0 cost to apply

New and used equipment can both be financed, but the underwriting differs in age limits, advance rates, terms, and rates. Used equipment financing is widely available; some categories are easier than others depending on resale market depth.

Quick comparison

New equipment Used equipment
Max age financed 0 (new) Typically 10-15 years old at maturity (varies by category)
Advance rate (LTV) Up to 100% of cost 80-90% of appraised value (lower for older)
Term Full standard terms (60-84 months) Shorter; matched to remaining useful life
APR Standard tier rates +1-3 points over new
Section 179 / bonus depreciation Qualifies Qualifies (since 2018 bonus rules)
Required inspection Not typical Often required ($250-500)
Title status concerns Clear Confirm clear title, lien releases

How used equipment underwriting works

For used equipment, the lender focuses on three things beyond standard borrower underwriting:

  1. Equipment age at maturity. The lender wants the equipment to still be worth something at term-end. So they limit “age at maturity” rather than just “current age.” A 10-year-old truck financed over 60 months means the truck will be 15 at maturity. Some lenders won’t go past 10 at maturity; others will go to 15.
  2. Equipment valuation. Lenders pull value from industry sources: NADA Equipment Guide, Iron Solutions, Mascus, Ritchie Bros. auction results. They lend a percentage of that value (typically 80%).
  3. Inspection. For deals over $25K of used equipment, a qualified third-party inspection is often required. The inspector checks for hidden damage, hour-meter accuracy (vs maintenance records), structural issues, and mechanical condition.

Where new wins

  • Highest advance rate (often 100%)
  • Longest terms available
  • Best APR within your credit tier
  • Manufacturer warranty + sometimes OEM captive financing programs (0% APR offers)
  • No inspection needed
  • Tax deductions identical to used

Where used wins

  • Asset price. Used can be 30-70% of new cost. The financing rate difference is much smaller.
  • Total cost of ownership. A 3-year-old piece of equipment at 50% of new cost, with similar remaining useful life, beats new on TCO unless the OEM has a strong promotional offer.
  • Faster availability. No production lead times.
  • Specific items. If you want a specific make/model no longer produced, used is the only option.

Equipment categories where used financing is easy

  • Trucks and trailers (strong resale market, NADA values)
  • Construction equipment (Iron Solutions, Ritchie Bros. auctions)
  • Forklifts and material handling (Mascus values)
  • Heavy machinery (well-tracked resale)

Equipment categories where used is harder

  • Medical and dental (technology refresh; older equipment has thin resale market)
  • IT and computers (fast obsolescence)
  • Specialty / custom-built equipment (no comparable sales)
  • Equipment with known service-life issues at high hours/miles

The clear-title check

For used titled equipment, always confirm the seller has clear title and any prior lien is released. Pull a UCC search on the seller business. For private-party sales, this is essential. For dealer sales, less risk but still worth confirming.

See our used truck inspection checklist and used CNC inspection checklist for category-specific checks.

How borrowers actually choose between these

New equipment financing offers longest terms (60-84 months), lowest rates, and manufacturer captive promotional access. Used equipment financing typically shorter terms (48-60 months), modest rate premium, and limited captive access.

The financing economics typically favor new equipment proportionally less than the equipment cost difference favors used. Used equipment often makes economic sense despite financing differences.

Issues specific to new vs used equipment financing deals

These are not the standard equipment-finance pitfalls. They are the patterns we see on this exact equipment, in this exact market, that buyers without recent experience tend to miss.

Used equipment older than 5 years

Used equipment over 5 years old faces shorter terms and rate premium. Calculate total cost.

Authorized refurbished alternative

OEM-direct authorized refurbished equipment finances at near-new terms. Bridges new vs used economics.

Total cost of ownership

Used equipment cost savings vs new include maintenance costs, service path, and operational reliability.

How the IRS sees the two structures differently

Tax treatment is where the two structures separate most often, and the difference can outweigh rate and payment considerations depending on borrower circumstances. The provisions below cover the main divergences.

Bonus depreciation interaction

Bonus depreciation under IRC Section 168(k) applies to qualifying property and runs alongside Section 179. The two interact: Section 179 is taken first and is subject to taxable income limits, then bonus depreciation applies to the remainder. Most equipment buyers use both.

Lease accounting under ASC 842

Under ASC 842, most operating leases come onto the balance sheet as right-of-use assets and lease liabilities. The income statement treatment depends on lease classification. Talk to your CPA about how the structure of your equipment financing flows through the financials.

State conformity

States vary on whether they conform to federal Section 179 limits and bonus depreciation. A few states still cap Section 179 well below the federal amount or disallow bonus depreciation entirely. Your effective tax savings depend on both federal and state treatment.

The cash flow shape of each structure

Cash flow on equipment financing follows a predictable pattern by structure. Loans amortize evenly with the borrower building equity each month. $1 buyout leases behave identically to loans for cash flow purposes. FMV leases have lower payments mid-term but require a balloon decision at term end. Operating leases shift costs to expense and avoid term-end obligations.

Match the structure cash flow to the equipment cash flow generation. Equipment that produces revenue evenly through its life pairs well with even amortization. Equipment with seasonal or front-loaded revenue may pair better with a lower-payment structure that allows other reserves to build.

Why the same lender quotes the two differently

Borrowers shopping the same deal across multiple lenders sometimes see one structure priced better at one lender and the other structure priced better at another. The five factors below explain most of the spread.

  • 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.
  • 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.
  • 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.
  • 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.
  • 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.

Common surprises after funding

Pre-payment penalties

Equipment loans often carry pre-payment penalties for the first 12 to 36 months of the term. Standard structures range from 3 percent of the payoff in year one declining to zero by year three, to a flat fee of $500 to $2,000. If you expect to refinance or pay the loan off early, understand the penalty math before signing.

Tax exemption not claimed at funding

If your equipment qualifies for a sales-tax exemption (manufacturing, agriculture, certain non-profit uses), the exemption certificate must be submitted at the time of the purchase to apply. Submitting it after the fact often means filing for a refund with the state, which takes months. Confirm the exemption status before signing.

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.

Frequently asked when choosing between the two

What if the equipment cost on the invoice is higher than what we discussed?
Tell us before signing. Lenders fund up to the loan amount approved. If the invoice exceeds approval, you either bring additional cash to close the gap or request a re-underwrite at the higher amount.
Are the rates fixed for the loan term?
Most equipment loans and leases are fixed rate for the full term. Variable-rate equipment financing exists for certain larger transactions but is uncommon under $500,000.
What is the difference between rate and APR on the disclosure?
Rate is the interest rate before fees. APR includes the rate plus mandatory fees (doc fee, origination, certain insurance) expressed as an annualized cost. APR is what you want to compare across offers, not the rate.
What if I want to upgrade the equipment mid-term?
You sell or trade out of the current equipment, pay off the existing loan from sale proceeds (plus any difference), and finance the upgrade. Some lenders streamline this through trade-up programs, especially within their portfolio of customers.
What is a "soft pull" vs "hard pull" on credit?
A soft pull is a credit inquiry that does not impact your score. We use soft pulls at prequalification so you can see indicative rates without credit hit. A hard pull is recorded on your credit report and typically reduces your score by a small amount. Hard pulls happen at the formal application stage with your consent.

Quick answers

Direct answers to the questions we hear most on new vs used equipment financing applications. Each answer is one we have given to a real buyer in the last quarter.

Does a soft-pull pre-qualification affect my credit score?
No. A soft pull does not affect your credit score. The hard pull happens at final underwriting if you accept the lender match. That is the only inquiry that posts to bureaus.
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.
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.
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.
What is an EFA loan?
An Equipment Finance Agreement (EFA) is a structured equipment loan with a $1 buyout at the end of term. Functionally identical to a loan for tax purposes (you depreciate and own the equipment), but documented as a finance agreement. Most common structure for buyers planning to keep equipment past the financing term.
What happens if I miss a payment?
A 10-day late payment typically triggers a late fee of 5 to 10 percent of the payment amount. Some contracts also trigger default interest, jumping the rate by 4 to 6 points until the account cures. Repeated late payments can trigger acceleration of the balance and equipment repossession.

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 access to manufacturer captive promotional financing
Then Compare carefully against bank/independent lender rates. Captive promotions sometimes look better on stated rate but include adjustments (lower discount, required service bundles) that change the net economics.
If You expect to pay the loan off within 12 months
Then Check the pre-payment penalty before signing. Standard structures penalize early payoff in year one. Open pre-payment loans cost slightly more in stated rate but eliminate the penalty.
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 expect rate environment to improve in the next 12 to 18 months
Then Consider open pre-payment structures or a shorter term you can refinance later. The trade-off is the upfront cost; the refinance option becomes valuable if rates drop 100+ basis points.
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.

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.

Placed-in-service date documentation
Same-day as commissioning
For Section 179 and depreciation purposes, the placed-in-service date is when the equipment is delivered, installed, and operationally ready. Document this date carefully for tax purposes.
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.
UCC-1 filing and search
Filing: same-day. Search: 1-2 business days
UCC-1 financing statement files electronically same-day in most states. Pre-funding UCC search to confirm no existing liens runs 1-2 business days.
Soft-pull pre-qualification turnaround
1 to 4 hours during business hours
Soft-pull pre-qualification surfaces lender matches and indicative rates within hours, without affecting credit score.
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.
Apportioned plate registration (trucking)
2 to 4 weeks
New-authority trucking operators need apportioned plates before crossing state lines. Plan this into the funding timeline; temporary trip permits bridge the gap at higher per-state cost.

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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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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