Where Cosmetic Damage shows up in the financing process
Most disputes between borrowers and lenders post-funding trace back to a term the borrower thought they understood but had not seen applied in their specific transaction. Cosmetic Damage is one of the concepts that surfaces often enough to be worth understanding in advance.
The general definition above is broadly accurate. The lender-specific application is where the variation shows up. When the term appears in your funding documents, treat the documents as the source of truth and read carefully.
When you will encounter cosmetic damage in practice
Three moments in the typical equipment financing transaction surface this concept. The application conversation, where the lender frames the deal. The signed funding documents, where the concept becomes contractual. The servicing relationship, where the borrower and lender interact through the loan term against the documented language.
If you are reading this glossary entry because the term showed up in a document or conversation, the practical next step is finding the term in your specific paperwork and reading the surrounding language carefully.
Where borrowers commonly get this wrong
Borrowers most often misread this term by treating it as boilerplate that follows market convention. In practice, lender-specific application varies enough that two transactions with the same labeled provision can produce different outcomes. Read your specific document language; do not assume convention.
Quick answers
Direct answers to the questions we hear most on cosmetic damage applications. Each answer is one we have given to a real buyer in the last quarter.
Can I get a tax deduction on a leased equipment?
Yes. Operating lease payments deduct fully as business expense in the year paid. Capital lease (EFA $1 buyout) structures get depreciation treatment, which often allows Section 179 immediate expensing. Talk to your tax preparer about the specific structure before signing.
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.
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.
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.
Can I pay off my equipment loan early?
Yes, but many equipment loans carry pre-payment penalties in the first 12 to 36 months. Standard structures range from 3 percent of the payoff in year one declining to zero by year three. Some loans are open pre-payment with no penalty. Read the contract before signing if early payoff is likely.
How much down payment is typical?
Standard programs run 0 to 10 percent down on new equipment for established businesses with prime credit. 5 to 20 percent down on used equipment. 15 to 30 percent on credit-challenged or startup applications. Fleet and replacement deals often qualify for zero down.
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 existing equipment loans in good standing with this lender
- Then Your application qualifies for relationship pricing. App-only programs often skip financials when you have a clean history with the lender.
- 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 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 Your business operates across multiple states
- Then Confirm where to file the UCC-1 (state of incorporation vs state of equipment location). Standard practice files in state of incorporation; check with counsel on edge cases.
- If You are buying equipment from a private seller
- Then Use a title services provider or escrow for the title transfer. The lender will not fund until title is clear; an escrow arrangement protects both buyer and seller during the title transfer window.
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.
Equipment lease ending with no clear plan
Lease structures require purchase, return, or renewal at end of term, typically with 60-90 day notice. Missing the notice deadline can trigger automatic renewal or fair-market-value buyout. Decide and communicate before the deadline.
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.
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.
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.
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.