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Glossary
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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

Bookout

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Definition

Bookout is A lender's confirmation document showing the actual equipment values from a recognized valuation source.

Bookout (or “book-out”) is a document showing the wholesale and/or retail value of a specific piece of equipment based on a recognized industry valuation source (NADA Commercial Truck Guide, Iron Solutions, Mascus, Black Book, etc.). Lenders use bookouts to verify the equipment value claimed in the application.

How bookouts work

  1. Lender or broker pulls the bookout from the valuation source
  2. The bookout shows: equipment make, model, year, configuration, and resulting wholesale and retail values
  3. Lender compares bookout values to the application’s stated equipment cost
  4. If bookout value is below cost: lender may reduce advance rate, increase down payment, or decline
  5. If bookout value is above cost: borrower is buying below market; lender may proceed at standard terms

Common bookout sources

  • NADA Commercial Truck Guide: Class 6-8 trucks, trailers
  • NADA Marine: commercial and recreational marine
  • Iron Solutions: heavy construction equipment, agricultural equipment
  • Mascus: construction, agricultural, transport (global, used heavily for European-source equipment)
  • Black Book: commercial vehicles
  • Ritchie Bros. auction results: recent comparable sales (most current data)
  • OEM published prices: new equipment list prices
  • Manheim Commercial: commercial vehicle wholesale values

What bookouts include

  • Make, model, model year
  • Standard configuration values
  • Adjustments for: hours/miles, options/upgrades, condition class
  • Wholesale value (what a dealer would pay)
  • Retail value (what an end-user would pay)
  • Trade-in value (sometimes)

For borrowers

Before applying, run an informal bookout yourself to know where you stand:

  • NADA online calculator (free preview for most categories)
  • Ritchie Bros. recent sold results (open data)
  • Mascus search

If the equipment you’re buying is priced significantly above bookout, expect the lender to question the valuation or limit financing. Negotiate with the seller, or be prepared with a larger down payment.

What this means in practice

Why Bookout matters in equipment financing

Borrowers encounter Bookout at one or more specific moments in the financing process: at application, at funding, during the loan term, or at term end. Understanding what the term actually means at the moment it appears prevents the gap between assumption and documentation that drives most post-funding disputes.

The treatment of Bookout can vary by lender, by structure, and by the specific equipment class being financed. The definition above covers the common usage. When the term appears in your specific transaction documents, read the surrounding paragraph for the lender-specific application and ask the lender or broker to walk through any clauses you are not certain about.

Common context where this comes up

The term shows up in three places in most equipment financing transactions. First, at the application stage, where the lender uses the concept to assess the deal. Second, in the funding documents, where it appears as a specific provision tied to the lender obligations or the borrower obligations. Third, at term end or in the event of restructure or refinance, where the term governs how the deal unwinds.

Knowing where the term shows up in your specific paperwork is the practical step that protects you. The funding documents are the source of truth: application materials and verbal conversations with the lender do not override what the signed documents say.

Common misconceptions about bookout

Two patterns of confusion come up regularly around this term. The first is mixing it with a related concept that carries a different practical effect. The second is assuming the lender treatment is standard across the market when it is actually lender-specific. Both are easy to verify in advance: ask the lender or broker to walk through how the concept applies in your deal, and ask for the relevant section of the funding documents to be flagged at signing.

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.
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.
Refinancing existing equipment loan
2 to 4 weeks
Refinancing requires payoff of existing loan, UCC release from prior lender, and funding of new loan. The UCC release coordination drives most of the timing.
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.
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.
Lease end-of-term decision deadline
60 to 90 days before term end
Most lease structures require notice of intent (purchase, return, or renew) 60-90 days before term end. Missing the deadline can trigger automatic renewal or other default consequences.

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

  • 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.
  • UCC-1 filing fees. $5 to $84 depending on state. Paid at filing; some lenders absorb, some pass to borrower.
  • 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.
  • 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.
  • Installation and commissioning. Site preparation, electrical, plumbing, leveling, calibration, and operational commissioning. Runs 5 to 25 percent of equipment price depending on equipment category.
  • 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.
  • Equipment purchase price. Base equipment price as quoted by the dealer. Negotiable, especially on used equipment and end-of-quarter new equipment.
  • 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.

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.

Borrower cash flow stress mid-term

Contact the lender BEFORE missing a payment. Most lenders work with borrowers in temporary stress through extension, deferral, or restructure. Missed payments without contact trigger default mechanics that limit options.

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.

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.

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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