Construction Equipment Financing in Georgia
Soft-pull pre-qualification. No credit impact. Decisions in 24-72 hours.
Financing construction equipment in Georgia starts with the same three-minute application we run everywhere, and most deals land between $30,000 to $400,000 on 36 to 72 months terms. What changes by state is the wrapper: GA sales-tax treatment, where the UCC-1 gets filed, and how the state handles Section 179, all covered below. What doesn't change is the program grid behind the approval.
Rate ranges for construction equipment financing in Georgia
The ranges below are our standard program-grid rates, refreshed quarterly. Your actual rate depends on credit profile, time in business, revenue, equipment, transaction size, and structure choice.
| Credit profile | APR range | Term length | Down payment |
|---|---|---|---|
| Excellent (720+) | 6.9% – 9.9% | 60-84 mo | 0%-10% |
| Good (680-719) | 9.9% – 13.9% | 48-72 mo | 5%-15% |
| Fair (640-679) | 13.9% – 17.9% | 36-60 mo | 10%-20% |
| Challenged (<640) | 17.9% – 24.9% | 24-48 mo | 15%-30% |
Most construction deals we fund in Georgia land between $30,000 to $400,000 on terms of 36 to 72 months. Heavy iron routinely runs 10+ years, so terms can stretch without outliving the asset.
Georgia-specific details on construction financing
Georgia's state sales-tax base rate is 4 percent (local additions vary), and on most deals the tax rolls into the financed amount rather than coming out of pocket. The UCC-1 securing the equipment gets filed with the Clerk of Superior Court (county-level, centrally indexed), and we handle that filing at funding.
Georgia conforms to federal Section 179, so the deduction works the same on your state return as your federal one. For the deeper state-level walkthrough, exemptions, titled-equipment handling, and filing mechanics, see our Georgia state guide.
About construction equipment financing
Construction deals carry their own fingerprint: typical tickets of $30,000 to $400,000, terms of 36 to 72 months, and the fact that heavy iron routinely runs 10+ years, so terms can stretch without outliving the asset. Some units in this category are titled and some are not, which changes the closing paperwork deal by deal. For the full breakdown by equipment type, see our construction hub.
Common construction financing use cases in Georgia
The buyer mix we see for construction equipment financing in Georgia falls into a few recognizable shapes. Each use case has a typical structure, a typical down payment expectation, and a typical approval timeline. Knowing where your deal fits before you apply lets you frame the application to its strongest reading.
- On-site work in growing metros. Operators with steady commercial or municipal contracts run their construction equipment 30+ hours per week through peak season in Georgia. Rate, term, and structure all key off operating-hours expectations and the planned replacement cycle.
- Specialty configurations and attachments. Premium construction configurations, attachment-heavy packages, or specialty modifications. We finance the package on a single paper when itemized correctly on the bill of sale.
- Replacement-cycle purchases. Established construction operators cycling out aging units for newer, more efficient equipment. These deals close fast because we already have the operator profile pattern, clean credit, established revenue, predictable use case.
The buyer profiles we approve most on construction equipment
Three borrower profiles cover the majority of construction financing applications we approve in Georgia. Pricing, term length, and down payment requirements all shift across them, even when the underlying equipment is identical. The framing of the application matters as much as the equipment itself.
Credit-recovery applicant
Recent bankruptcy, tax lien, or sub-650 FICO buying construction equipment. Our specialty programs run higher rate but the path exists, strong revenue, time in business, and substantial down payment offset the score.
Mid-stage growing business (2-5 years)
Trading cleanly, expanding the construction equipment base. Pricing tier between standard prime and mid-market; often qualifies for app-only with a soft-pull pre-qualification. The most common path for fleet additions in Georgia.
Established operator (5+ years)
Profitable financials, prime credit, predictable revenue. This is the construction buyer who accesses our best app-only pricing with no full-financials review under $250K, 24-72 hour decisions, 1-3 day funding from signed docs.
Structure choice: loan, EFA, or lease
For Georgia buyers: Most construction buyers keep machines past year three, which favors a $1 buyout EFA over an FMV lease. Georgia conforms to federal Section 179, so the deduction works the same on your state return as your federal one.
Equipment loan
Traditional secured loan. You own the construction equipment from day one; we hold a UCC-1 filing until payoff. Standard depreciation treatment for taxes, with common terms of 36-84 months depending on useful life. The best fit for Georgia buyers planning to keep the equipment past the financing term.
$1 buyout EFA
Equipment Finance Agreement structured as a loan with a $1 purchase option at end of term. Functionally identical to a loan for tax and ownership purposes; documentation is slightly simpler and faster to close. The most common structure on app-only construction financing under $250K in Georgia.
Fair-market-value (FMV) lease
True operating lease on construction equipment. Payments deduct fully as business expense; at end of term you can purchase at fair market value, return the equipment, or extend. Best fit for Georgia operators cycling equipment every 36-48 months or when operating-lease tax treatment matters.
Common pitfalls on construction financing
The patterns below show up regularly on construction equipment financing transactions across Georgia. Catching any of them at the application or document-review stage saves real money and avoids post-funding disputes.
Operating leases don't qualify for Section 179. If §179 is part of the tax plan on your construction purchase, structure as a loan or $1 buyout EFA, and coordinate with your tax preparer before electing.
Section 179 requires the construction equipment placed in service by December 31 of the tax year. Delivery without commissioning doesn't count for some equipment classes. Document the placed-in-service date carefully.
How a deal moves through us
Three-minute application, soft-pull pre-qualification with no FICO impact, decision in 24-72 hours on standard files. The full step-by-step, what we look at, what an offer includes, what a decline looks like, is on our process page.
Frequently asked questions
How much down payment is typical?
Do you finance used construction equipment?
Can a startup or first-time buyer finance construction equipment in Georgia?
How big are typical construction financing deals in Georgia?
Does sales tax get financed on construction equipment in Georgia?
Other equipment financing in Georgia
construction equipment financing in other states
Ready to apply for construction equipment financing in Georgia?
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