Where Seasonal Payment 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. Seasonal Payment 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 seasonal payment 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 seasonal payment applications. Each answer is one we have given to a real buyer in the last quarter.
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.
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.
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 refinance an equipment loan?
Yes. Equipment refinancing is common when rates have dropped meaningfully since the original loan, when the equipment has built equity supporting cash-out, or when the original lender relationship has issues. Standard equipment refi is similar to a new equipment loan with the existing equipment as collateral.
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 a 600 FICO?
Yes. Programs exist for credit profiles below prime, typically requiring 10 to 25 percent down, a personal guarantee, and sometimes a contract or invoice supporting the use. Rates run 4 to 8 points above prime, and term length often caps at 48 months instead of 60 or 72.
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 seasonal payment deal includes the items below. Buyers who only budget for the purchase price often hit cash-flow surprise within the first 12 months.
- Operating consumables. Recurring costs not included in the equipment purchase: fuel, fluids, filters, tools, parts. Equipment-specific.
- Installation and commissioning. Site preparation, electrical, plumbing, leveling, calibration, and operational commissioning. Runs 5 to 25 percent of equipment price depending on equipment category.
- 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.
- Documentation and dealer fees. Lender doc fee runs $150 to $1,500. Dealer doc fee varies. Both may roll into financed amount or pay at signing.
- 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.
- Equipment purchase price. Base equipment price as quoted by the dealer. Negotiable, especially on used equipment and end-of-quarter new equipment.
- 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.
Equipment serial number does not match UCC filing
Identify the error (dealer substitution, lender filing error, etc.) and resolve before subsequent financing. The UCC needs to match the actual collateral for enforceability. Lender amendment of the UCC handles this in most cases.
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.
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.
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.
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.