# Red Flags in an Equipment Financing Offer

Canonical URL: https://fundmyequipment.com/learn/red-flags-equipment-financing-offer/
Last modified: 2026-05-29T19:39:17+00:00
Type: efin_guide

## Summary

Red Flags in an Equipment Financing Offer. Comprehensive guide.

## Content

Most equipment financing offers are legitimate, but a few patterns reliably indicate a bad deal or outright fraud. Here are the red flags to watch for, and what they mean.

1. Factor rate instead of APR
What it looks like: "Get $50,000 in financing for a 1.30 factor rate." Meaning you pay back $65,000 total.
Why it is a red flag: Factor rates obscure the true cost. A 1.30 factor over 12 months is roughly 50% APR. Reputable equipment lenders quote APR. Merchant cash advance providers and sub-sub-prime lenders use factor rates because the APR equivalent would scare buyers.
What to ask: "What is the equivalent APR?" If they will not tell you, the deal is much more expensive than it appears.

2. Upfront fees before approval
What it looks like: "Pay a $500 application fee and we will get your loan approved." Or "Wire $2,500 to lock your rate."
Why it is a red flag: Reputable lenders do not charge upfront fees. Fees are paid at closing, financed into the loan, or deducted from proceeds. Any request for an upfront wire is almost always a scam.
What to do: Refuse. Report to the FTC and your state attorney general.

3. Guaranteed approval / no credit check
What it looks like: "100% approval rate! No credit check! Bad credit OK!"
Why it is a red flag: No legitimate lender approves 100% of applicants. Every lender underwrites. "No credit check" usually means the offer is structured as a merchant cash advance or revenue-based financing at 60-150% APR equivalent, not equipment financing.
What is real: sub-prime equipment financing exists (down to ~580 FICO), but it has actual credit checks, underwriting, and APR-quoted pricing.

4. Vague or missing documentation
What it looks like: A loan agreement that omits the APR, the total finance charge, the total of payments, or the rebate method for prepayment.
Why it is a red flag: Federal Truth in Lending Act (for consumer loans) and most state laws require these disclosures. Equipment financing for businesses is not always covered by TILA but reputable lenders disclose all the same numbers.
What to ask for: A clear quote showing APR, total finance charge, total of payments, fee schedule, prepayment terms, and default consequences. Get it in writing before signing.

5. "Sign now, terms come later"
What it looks like: Closing pressure to sign documents before the final terms are documented. "Just sign the e-sign envelope; we will email you the final agreement after."
Why it is a red flag: You have to read every term before signing. Once signed, modifications require lender consent and may cost you fees.
What to do: Ask for the complete document set. Read every page. Ask about any clauses you do not understand. Reputable lenders welcome this.

6. Hidden "bad-boy" or absolute personal guarantee carve-outs
What it looks like: A non-recourse loan that has personal-guarantee carve-outs for "any failure to perform any obligation" (which is essentially everything).
Why it is a red flag: Bad-boy carve-outs should be narrow (fraud, environmental violations, voluntary bankruptcy) not broad. Read the carve-out language carefully.

7. Surprise additional fees at closing
What it looks like: Your quote said "$2,000 origination" and the closing statement shows $2,000 origination plus a $500 "underwriting fee" plus a $250 "title processing fee" plus a $300 "compliance fee."
Why it is a red flag: Padding the fee stack at closing is a common abuse. Get a complete fee schedule before signing the quote.

8. Pressure tactics about "expiring rates"
What it looks like: "This rate is only good until end of day." "You have to sign now or we go to underwriting all over."
Why it is a red flag: Rates do change with market conditions but rarely intraday. Pressure to sign right now is a sales tactic, not a real time constraint. Take 24 hours to review.

9. Cross-collateralization clauses you did not expect
What it looks like: A clause that gives the lender a UCC blanket lien on all your business assets, not just the equipment you are financing.
Why it is a red flag: Cross-collateralization makes it harder to get future financing because future lenders see existing blanket liens. Sometimes warranted on sub-prime deals; other times unnecessary padding.
What to ask: "Is the UCC specific to this equipment, or blanket on all business assets?" Negotiate for specific where possible.

10. Requesting your business banking login
What it looks like: "We need to verify your bank account directly; please provide your online banking username and password."
Why it is a red flag: Reputable lenders verify bank deposits via bank statements (PDF) or via secure third-party services (Plaid, Yodlee) that use a one-time authorization link. They never ask for your username and password directly.

What a legitimate offer looks like

Clearly quoted APR (not factor rate)
Complete fee schedule before signing
Full document set provided for review
No upfront fees before closing
Real underwriting (soft pull for pre-qual, hard pull for funding with consent)
Specific collateral, not surprise blanket liens
Bank verification via PDF statements or secure services
Time to read and ask questions


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