Semi Truck Financing: Owner-Operator Loans for New & Used Big Rigs

Semi Truck Financing: Owner-Operator Loans for New & Used Big Rigs

Semi Truck Financing: Owner-Operator Loans for New & Used Big Rigs

Becoming an owner-operator means running a business, not just driving a truck — and the financing decision you make on your rig is one of the most consequential business decisions you’ll face. A semi truck is both your largest asset and your primary revenue engine, which means the loan structure around it directly affects whether you can stay profitable when freight markets tighten.

Dimension Funding has been financing commercial trucks for over 40 years, working with owner-operators, small fleets, and transportation businesses across the country. With same-day approvals, an A+ BBB rating, and application-only financing up to $250,000, Dimension Funding offers a faster path to the cab than most traditional lenders.

How Much Does a Semi Truck Cost in 2026?

Knowing your financing target starts with a realistic picture of what trucks cost.

New Class 8 semi trucks typically run $120,000 to $180,000 for standard configurations, with premium specs pushing higher. According to the National Automobile Dealers Association (NADA), new heavy-duty truck sales declined roughly 9.9% at the end of 2024, which has kept quality used inventory available at more accessible price points. Used semis generally range from $40,000 to $90,000 depending on year, mileage, and condition — though late-model used trucks with documented service histories command prices toward the upper end of that range.

New vs. used: what changes in financing

New trucks qualify for the longest loan terms — up to 60 months through Dimension Funding — and come with manufacturer warranties that reduce maintenance risk over the loan period. Used trucks require less upfront capital and are often the entry point for first-time owner-operators, but lenders assess age, mileage, and condition more carefully as collateral. 

Used equipment that’s new to your business also qualifies for 100% bonus depreciation under current IRS rules, per IRS Publication 946 — a tax benefit that partially offsets the higher cost of newer equipment.

The Real Cost of Running a Semi Truck

Financing the truck is just the beginning. Understanding your full operating cost structure is what determines whether the monthly payment is manageable — or a problem waiting to happen.

According to the American Transportation Research Institute (ATRI), total operating costs averaged $2.26 per mile in 2024, with non-fuel costs at a record $1.779 per mile. The five biggest cost categories: driver compensation ($0.798/mile), fuel ($0.48/mile), truck and trailer payments ($0.39/mile), maintenance ($0.198/mile), and insurance ($0.102/mile).

Cost per mile vs. your loan payment

Your truck payment is locked in at signing — but it competes with every other line item in that $2.26/mile total. An owner-operator running 94,000 miles annually (the 2025 average, per ATBS) at $2.50/mile generates roughly $19,583/month in gross revenue. Fuel, insurance, maintenance, and compliance consume the majority of that — the loan payment has to fit within what’s left.

Financing Options for Owner-Operators

The right loan structure depends on your credit profile, business history, and whether you’re entering the industry for the first time or expanding an established operation.

Equipment financing

Equipment financing is the most direct path to truck ownership for owner-operators. The truck serves as collateral, which makes approval more accessible than unsecured business lending — particularly for operators with limited business history. Dimension Funding offers commercial truck financing and commercial trailer financing with terms up to 60 months, 100% financing on qualifying transactions, and application-only decisions up to $250,000 with no financial statements required.

SBA loans

SBA loan programs — particularly the SBA 7(a) — are available for owner-operators who qualify and can support larger financing needs, including multi-truck purchases. SBA loans offer longer repayment terms and favorable structures for established businesses, but involve more documentation and a longer approval timeline than equipment-specific financing.

Lease-to-own and lease structures

Some owner-operators enter the industry through carrier-sponsored lease-to-own programs, which offer lower upfront requirements while building toward ownership. These vary widely in total cost — reviewing the full contract before committing is essential, as total payments often exceed a direct purchase price.

What Lenders Look at for Owner-Operator Applications

Credit score matters, but semi truck lending involves a broader underwriting picture — especially for owner-operators where income is tied directly to the asset being financed.

Time in business and CDL experience both factor into lender decisions. Established operators with two or more years of documented history are in the strongest position. First-time owner-operators with a clean CDL record can still qualify but typically face higher down payment requirements. 

According to the Federal Reserve’s 2025 Small Business Credit Survey, businesses under two years old had a full-funding rate of just 28% compared to 57% for businesses with ten or more years of history — the truck as collateral partially offsets this gap for equipment-secured loans.

Cash flow and freight contracts

Lenders financing an income-producing asset want evidence that the asset will generate enough revenue to cover the payment. Bank statements, load history, freight contracts or broker relationships, and a coherent lane strategy all strengthen an owner-operator application. Operators who can demonstrate consistent loads — even through a dispatching service or carrier contract — are in a fundamentally stronger position than those relying entirely on spot market freight.

Down payments

Down payment expectations vary by credit profile, business history, and truck age. Borrowers with strong credit may qualify for low or no down payment financing on qualifying transactions. First-time operators or those with thinner credit files should budget for 10–20% down. The down payment reduces lender exposure relative to the truck’s value, which is especially relevant for used trucks where collateral value is harder to verify precisely.

The 2026 Freight Market: What It Means for Financing Decisions

Financing a semi truck in 2026 means entering a freight market that’s recovering but hasn’t fully rebounded — and lenders are aware of that context.

According to ACT Research, 2026 is a “supply-driven transition year” — capacity is tightening, rate floors are firming, and margins are gradually improving. FTR Transportation Intelligence forecasts spot rates up 3.6% and contract rates up 2.6%, though analysts describe this as a “marginless recovery” where conditions stabilize but margins remain thin.

What this means for your loan structure

In a low-margin environment, monthly payment size matters more than in boom periods. Financing a higher-priced new truck when a well-maintained used alternative exists may not be the right move if the payment strains cash flow during slow freight periods. The lower purchase price of used equipment — combined with 100% bonus depreciation — can make used financing the more capital-efficient entry point for operators focused on capturing upside as the market recovers.

Hidden Costs That Affect Owner-Operator Profitability

Experienced operators budget for these before they sign a truck loan. First-timers often discover them afterward.

Insurance for a new authority is one of the largest surprises. New CDL authorities typically pay 30–50% more than established carriers — running $900 to $1,600 per month in 2026, depending on record and cargo type. Compliance costs (DOT registration, IFTA fuel taxes, permits) add fixed monthly expenses on top of that. Factoring fees, if used to bridge 30–60 day broker payment cycles, typically cost 1.5% to 3% of gross revenue — a cost that compounds quickly on tight margins.

Financing Your Semi Truck with Dimension Funding

Dimension Funding finances both new and used Class 8 trucks, including semi tractors, and offers commercial trailer financing as a standalone product for operators who need to finance tractor and trailer separately. Most credit types are accepted, including first-time owner-operators and applicants who’ve been declined by traditional banks.

Contact Dimension Funding to walk through financing options based on your specific truck, operating profile, and timeline — same-day decisions are available on qualifying transactions.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I get semi truck financing as a first-time owner-operator? 

Yes. First-time owner-operators can qualify for equipment financing, though the terms are typically stricter than for established operators. Lenders look at CDL experience and driving record alongside credit — demonstrating clean commercial driving history and, ideally, a freight contract or dispatching arrangement significantly strengthens a startup application. Higher down payments are common for operators without established business history.

Do I need two years in business to qualify? 

Two years in business is a preferred benchmark for many lenders, but CDL experience and good credit can substitute for operating history in many cases. Equipment financing is generally more accessible for newer businesses than unsecured lending because the truck itself reduces lender risk as collateral.

What’s the difference between financing a new vs. used semi truck? 

New trucks qualify for longer loan terms, carry manufacturer warranties, and typically require less maintenance over the financing period. Used trucks cost less upfront but may require higher down payments, come with shorter loan terms, and carry more maintenance risk. Both new and used trucks qualify for Section 179 deductions and bonus depreciation under current IRS rules, provided the asset is placed in service during the tax year.

How much should I expect to put down on a semi truck loan? 

Down payment requirements vary by credit profile and business history. Borrowers with strong credit and established operating history may qualify for low or no down payment financing on qualifying transactions. First-time owner-operators or those with thinner credit should budget for 10–20% down. The truck’s age and condition also affect lender expectations — older used equipment typically requires more down than a late-model truck.

What does Dimension Funding finance besides the truck itself? 

Dimension Funding also offers commercial trailer financing for operators who need to finance a tractor and trailer independently or together. Equipment financing through Dimension Funding covers 100% of associated costs on qualifying transactions, including delivery and installation where applicable.

How does the 2026 freight market affect whether I should finance now?

The freight market is in a gradual recovery—rates are improving from multi-year lows, but margins remain thin. Operators who enter now with conservative financing (lower payments, adequate cash reserves, realistic projections) are better positioned than those who overextend expecting a rate surge. Financing the right truck at the right payment—not just the best truck—is the more defensible strategy in the current market.

Can I write off a financed semi truck on my taxes?

Yes. Section 179 allows businesses to deduct the full purchase price of qualifying equipment in the year it’s placed in service—up to $2,560,000 for 2026. The One Big Beautiful Bill Act of 2025 also restored 100% bonus depreciation for qualifying property placed in service after January 19, 2025, including used equipment new to your business. Consult a tax advisor to confirm how these apply to your situation.

Food Truck Financing in 2026: Startup Loans & Equipment Funding

Food Truck Financing in 2026: Startup Loans & Equipment Funding

Food Truck Financing in 2026: Startup Loans & Equipment Funding

Starting a food truck is one of the more accessible paths into the food service industry — but accessible doesn’t mean cheap. Total startup costs typically range from $50,000 to $250,000 depending on whether you buy new or used, what equipment your menu requires, and what your local permitting environment looks like. Knowing how to finance that investment strategically is what separates operators who launch well-capitalized from those who run out of runway before they find their footing.

Dimension Funding has provided commercial equipment financing for over 40 years, working with food service operators, entrepreneurs, and small business owners to fund truck purchases, kitchen equipment, and startup costs. With same-day approvals, an A+ BBB rating, and decades of experience as a vendor partner to restaurants, food trucks, and the culinary industry, Dimension Funding offers a faster path to funding than most traditional lenders — including food truck financing built around the specific needs of mobile food businesses.

How Big Is the Food Truck Industry in 2026?

Food trucks are no longer a niche concept. The U.S. food truck market is valued at approximately $1.16 billion in 2026 and is projected to reach $1.59 billion by 2031 at a 6.53% CAGR, according to Mordor Intelligence. Approximately 36,000 to 40,000 trucks operate nationwide, with the industry growing 6–8% annually, per PitStop’s 2026 food truck industry data.

The average established food truck generates approximately $346,000 in annual revenue, according to foodtruckprofit.com’s 2026 statistics — and roughly 60% survive three or more years. The ones that fail are almost always undercapitalized, which is what makes proper financing at launch so important.

What Does It Actually Cost to Start a Food Truck?

Before you can finance a food truck, you need a realistic picture of what you’re financing. Startup costs are wider-ranging than most first-time operators expect.

The truck itself is the biggest line item. A new, fully outfitted food truck typically runs $75,000 to $200,000. A used truck can be acquired for $30,000 to $100,000, though budget an additional $5,000 to $15,000 for repairs or retrofits. Kitchen equipment adds $10,000 to $45,000 depending on your menu.

Permits, licensing, and working capital

Permitting costs catch most first-time operators off guard. According to the U.S. Chamber of Commerce Foundation’s Food Truck Nation study, the average food truck operator spends approximately $28,000 on regulatory requirements in the first year — though this varies dramatically by city. 

Working capital to cover the first 60–90 days of operations (food inventory, fuel, commissary fees, insurance) adds another $10,000 to $20,000. Most operators launching a full-time operation should budget a total of $100,000 to $150,000 to cover all costs and maintain an adequate cash buffer.

Financing Options for Food Truck Startups

No single loan type fits every situation. The right financing structure depends on your credit profile, business history, and how much you need to borrow.

Equipment financing

Equipment financing is the most accessible entry point for food truck startups because the truck itself serves as collateral. This reduces lender risk in ways that unsecured loans cannot — and translates directly into easier approval, including for newer businesses. 

Dimension Funding offers equipment financing with terms up to 60 months, 100% financing on qualifying transactions, and application-only decisions up to $250,000 with no financial statements required.

SBA loans

The Small Business Administration’s loan programs — particularly the SBA 7(a) and SBA Microloan — are well-suited for food truck startups that qualify. SBA 7(a) loans can go up to $5 million and offer longer repayment terms than most conventional equipment loans, making monthly payments more manageable for early-stage operators. 

SBA Microloans top out at $50,000 and are specifically designed for early-stage small businesses with limited credit history. The tradeoff: SBA loans involve more documentation and a longer approval timeline than equipment-specific financing.

Working capital loans

For operators who already own a truck but need funds for inventory, staff, marketing, or operational expenses, a working capital loan provides flexible short-term capital. 

Dimension Funding offers working capital loans with terms up to 24 months and repayment options on a daily, weekly, or monthly basis. These are particularly useful for bridging seasonal revenue gaps or covering an unexpected expense without disrupting operations.

What Lenders Look for in Food Truck Applications

Food truck lending involves the same core underwriting criteria as other equipment financing, with a few industry-specific considerations worth understanding.

Credit profile and time in business remain the primary factors. Startups under two years old face more scrutiny — the Federal Reserve’s 2025 Small Business Credit Survey found that businesses under two years old had a full-funding rate of just 28%, compared to 57% for businesses with ten or more years of history. Equipment financing partially offsets this disadvantage because the truck as collateral reduces lender exposure.

What else strengthens a food truck application

Two years in business is the preferred benchmark — but good credit can substitute for operating history for operators who don’t yet meet that threshold. A business plan with realistic revenue projections, a defined location strategy, and documented catering or event commitments all signal to lenders that the operator has thought through the business — not just the menu. 

For startups, demonstrating that you understand your cost structure (food cost percentages, permit requirements, commissary fees) matters as much as credit score.

New vs. Used Food Truck Financing

The new vs. used decision affects your loan amount, terms, and total cost of ownership — not just the purchase price.

New trucks qualify for the most favorable financing terms and longest repayment periods, and come with manufacturer warranties that reduce maintenance risk. Used trucks cost significantly less upfront, making them attractive for operators managing tight capital budgets. Lenders assess used trucks on age, mileage, equipment condition, and remaining useful life.

Tax treatment on food truck financing

Financing a food truck — new or used — opens up significant tax benefits. Under Section 179, businesses can deduct the full purchase price of qualifying equipment in the year it’s placed in service, per IRS Publication 946. For 2026, the deduction limit is $2,560,000. 

The One Big Beautiful Bill Act of 2025 also restored 100% bonus depreciation for qualifying property — including used equipment new to your business — placed in service after January 19, 2025. Consult a tax advisor to confirm how these deductions apply to your specific situation.

Hidden Costs to Budget for Before You Launch

The truck and equipment are the visible costs. These are the ones that surprise first-time operators.

Commissary fees run $300 to $1,200 per month in most cities. Insurance (general liability plus commercial auto) adds $2,000 to $6,000 annually. Fuel and propane run $200 to $800 per month, and maintenance should be budgeted at $200 to $800 monthly to avoid cash flow disruption from unexpected breakdowns. None of these appear in the loan amount — but all affect whether monthly payments stay manageable.

Financing Your Food Truck with Dimension Funding

Dimension Funding offers food truck financing for both startup and established operators, covering the truck purchase, kitchen equipment buildout, and associated costs in a single financing structure. Qualifying applicants can take advantage of no payments for 90 days (restrictions apply), giving new operators time to generate revenue before the first payment is due. Application-only financing is available up to $250,000 with no financial statements required, and most credit types are accepted — including first-time operators and applicants who’ve been declined by traditional banks.

Use the financing payment calculator on the food truck financing page to estimate monthly payments across 12, 24, 36, 48, and 60-month terms before you apply. Contact Dimension Funding to walk through financing options based on your specific truck, budget, and launch timeline — same-day decisions are available on qualifying transactions. 

Frequently Asked Questions

How much do I need to put down to finance a food truck? 

Down payment requirements vary by lender, credit profile, and whether the truck is new or used. Borrowers with strong credit may qualify for low or no down payment financing on qualifying transactions. First-time operators or those with limited business history should budget for 10–20% down. The truck itself serves as collateral, which often makes equipment financing more accessible than unsecured startup loans.

Can I get food truck financing as a startup with no revenue? 

Yes, though approval conditions are generally stricter for businesses under two years old. Equipment financing is typically more accessible for startups than conventional business loans because the truck reduces lender risk as collateral. Having a detailed business plan, a defined location strategy, and documented event or catering commitments strengthens a startup application.

What financing covers besides the truck itself? 

Equipment financing through Dimension Funding can cover 100% of associated costs on qualifying transactions — including kitchen equipment, installation, and buildout. Working capital loans can cover inventory, staffing, marketing, and operational expenses separately from the truck purchase.

Is an SBA loan better than equipment financing for a food truck? 

It depends on your situation. SBA loans offer longer terms and are well-suited for operators with solid credit and the patience for a more involved application process. Equipment financing approves faster — often same-day — requires less documentation, and uses the truck as collateral. Many operators use equipment financing for the truck and SBA microloans or working capital loans for operational startup costs.

What credit score do I need to finance a food truck? 

There’s no universal minimum. Dimension Funding accepts most credit types, including applicants who’ve been turned down by banks. Stronger credit profiles qualify for better terms and lower down payment requirements. Credit score is one factor among several — time in business, cash flow projections, and the asset being financed all factor into the decision.

Can I write off a financed food truck on my taxes? 

Yes. Section 179 allows businesses to deduct the full purchase price of qualifying equipment — including a financed food truck — in the year it’s placed in service, up to $2,560,000 for 2026. Bonus depreciation at 100% also applies to qualifying property placed in service after January 19, 2025, including used equipment new to your business. Work with a tax advisor to confirm eligibility and maximize your deductions.

What’s the survival rate for food trucks, and how does financing affect it? 

Approximately 60% of food trucks survive three or more years. Undercapitalization is consistently cited as the primary driver of early failure. Structuring financing to cover not just the truck but permits, equipment, working capital, and a cash buffer for the first 90 days significantly improves the odds of getting through the startup period intact.

Used Equipment Financing: How to Finance Pre-Owned Machinery & Trucks

Used Equipment Financing: How to Finance Pre-Owned Machinery & Trucks

Used Equipment Financing: How to Finance Pre-Owned Machinery & Trucks

A piece of equipment that sold new for $200,000 three years ago may be available used for $90,000 — and every dollar of that price difference can be financed. Used equipment financing lets businesses acquire functional, revenue-generating machinery and trucks at a fraction of the new cost, without waiting to accumulate capital. The question isn’t whether lenders will finance it. It’s how to structure the deal so it actually works in your favor.

Dimension Funding has been financing pre-owned commercial equipment for over 40 years — machinery, trucks, construction equipment, medical devices, and more — with same-day approvals and an A+ BBB rating. According to the Equipment Leasing & Finance Foundation’s 2024 Horizon Report, 82% of U.S. businesses used some form of financing to acquire equipment in 2023, with the industry reaching a record $1.34 trillion — used equipment financing is a mainstream capital strategy, not a fallback option.

Why Used Equipment Financing Makes Financial Sense

The financial case for buying used goes beyond the lower sticker price. New equipment, like a new vehicle, loses 20–40% of its value in the first year of ownership, according to equipment finance data compiled by SFS Lenders. By financing used equipment, you let the original owner absorb that initial depreciation hit. The asset you acquire has already passed through the steepest part of its depreciation curve — meaning it holds its value more predictably over the time you own it.

This matters for resale value and your balance sheet. Used equipment that has already worked through most of its IRS MACRS recovery period — 5 years for trucks and light equipment, 7 years for most machinery per IRS Publication 946 — has absorbed the bulk of its depreciation, giving the buyer a more stable asset and the lender more predictable collateral over the loan term.

How Lenders Underwrite Used Equipment

Lenders treat used equipment as a higher-risk asset than new, and loan terms reflect that. Understanding why helps you position your application more effectively.

The core issue is collateral. With new equipment, the lender has a clear, verified asset value at origination. With used equipment, value depends on age, mileage or hours, condition, and secondary market liquidity — variables that introduce uncertainty. Lenders price that uncertainty into the deal. 

According to SFS Lenders, used equipment loans typically carry rates 1–3 percentage points higher than comparable new equipment financing, reflecting depreciation risk and reduced collateral certainty.

Equipment age and mileage limits

Most lenders impose age caps that vary by equipment type — commonly 10 to 15 years, though some lenders go older for assets with strong secondary market demand and documented maintenance histories. Trucks and construction equipment with verified service records and moderate usage qualify more easily than high-hour machinery with unknown maintenance histories. Mileage or operational hours serve as a proxy for remaining useful life — the more remaining life, the stronger the collateral position.

Approval rates and what the data shows

Equipment financing consistently achieves higher approval rates than unsecured business loans, primarily because the asset serves as collateral — reducing lender risk in ways that unsecured credit cannot. 

According to the Federal Reserve’s 2025 Small Business Credit Survey, equipment and auto loans showed higher approval rates than general business loans among small employer firms. Business age remains one of the strongest approval predictors: firms under two years old had a full-funding rate of just 28%, compared to 57% for businesses with ten or more years of history.

Why specialized lenders matter more now

The Federal Reserve’s October 2025 Senior Loan Officer Opinion Survey reported that banks tightened standards on commercial and industrial loans to firms of all sizes through Q3 2025. For businesses seeking used equipment financing, this tightening means traditional bank channels are increasingly restrictive — making specialized equipment lenders a more practical path. Dimension Funding accepts most credit types, including applicants declined by conventional banks, with application-only decisions up to $250,000.

Used vs. New Equipment Financing: Key Differences

The financing terms for used equipment differ from new in several concrete ways.

 

New Equipment

Used Equipment

Typical loan terms

Up to 60–84 months

24–60 months (often shorter)

Down payment

Low or none (strong credit)

Often higher

Collateral risk

Lower

Higher

Depreciation curve

Steep early

Flatter, more predictable

Section 179 / bonus depreciation

Yes

Yes (new to your business)

Approval complexity

Standard

Equipment condition also assessed

One important note on tax treatment: used equipment qualifies for bonus depreciation under current IRS rules, provided the asset is new to your business. The One Big Beautiful Bill Act of 2025 restored 100% bonus depreciation for qualifying property placed in service after January 19, 2025 — this applies to used equipment as well as new, per IRS Publication 946.

Best Equipment Types to Finance Used

Not all used equipment is equal from a financing and ROI standpoint. Asset type affects lender appetite, loan terms, and long-term value retention.

Strong candidates for used financing

Construction equipment — excavators, bulldozers, graders, and cranes — holds value well in secondary markets and has a long useful life when maintained. These assets are widely financed used, with strong resale liquidity providing solid collateral. 

Commercial trucks (semi tractors, dump trucks, box trucks) are another strong category, as documented maintenance history and verifiable mileage give lenders clear data to underwrite against. Medical equipment — imaging systems, surgical devices, patient monitoring equipment — also retains value well and is routinely financed pre-owned.

Equipment to approach with more caution

Technology-heavy equipment (servers, certain automation systems) depreciates rapidly and may be difficult to finance at favorable terms beyond a few years of age. Equipment in compliance-heavy industries — where older models may no longer meet regulatory standards — can face reduced lender appetite as their operational window shortens. High-hour machinery with incomplete service records presents the highest risk to both lenders and buyers.

Hidden Costs to Account for Before You Finance

The purchase price and monthly payment tell only part of the story on used equipment. A complete financial picture includes what you’ll spend after the deal closes.

Maintenance and repair exposure

Used equipment typically comes without manufacturer warranty, shifting maintenance risk entirely to the buyer. Older machinery may require more frequent servicing, and parts availability can become an issue on discontinued models. Factoring in a realistic annual maintenance budget — and confirming parts availability — before financing is essential to avoid operating costs that undercut the savings from the lower purchase price.

Downtime risk

Revenue-generating equipment that’s out of service costs money in two directions simultaneously: repair costs plus lost productivity. This risk is highest with high-hour machinery or equipment with unknown maintenance histories. Requesting service records, commissioning an independent inspection, and reviewing usage logs significantly reduces this exposure before you commit.

When Used Equipment Financing Is the Right Play

Used financing fits cleanest in several recurring business scenarios.

Startups that need operational equipment but can’t justify new pricing benefit most directly — lower acquisition cost reduces monthly payment size when revenue is still building. Contractors and fleet operators expanding capacity frequently turn to used markets to scale faster than new equipment budgets allow. Volatile markets also favor used financing: lower capital at risk means less exposure if utilization drops.

When to Think Twice

Used financing isn’t always the right move. Equipment with known reliability issues in a specific model year warrants extra scrutiny. Industries where assets must meet current safety or emissions standards are another caution area — a truck about to require expensive compliance upgrades may cost more to operate than its financing savings justify. If an inspection reveals deferred maintenance, factor the full remediation cost into your total acquisition price before committing.

Financing Pre-Owned Equipment with Dimension Funding

Dimension Funding finances used commercial equipment across virtually every category — trucks, construction machinery, manufacturing equipment, medical devices, restaurant equipment, and more. Application-only financing is available up to $250,000 with no financial statements required, and most credit types are accepted, including applicants who’ve been declined by traditional banks.

The team at Dimension Funding can walk you through financing options based on your specific equipment, business profile, and timeline. Learn more about the company’s 40-year track record on the About Us page, or start an application — same-day decisions are available on qualifying transactions.

Frequently Asked Questions

How old can equipment be and still qualify for financing? 

Most lenders set age caps that vary by equipment type — commonly 10 to 15 years, though some go older for assets with strong secondary market demand and documented maintenance histories. Construction equipment and commercial trucks often qualify at older ages than technology or specialty equipment. The specific cap depends on the lender and the asset being financed.

Is it harder to get approved for used equipment than new? 

The process is similar but includes an additional layer: lenders assess the equipment itself as collateral alongside your credit and business profile. Factors like age, condition, mileage or hours, and secondary market liquidity all influence the decision. Having documentation — service records, inspection reports, purchase agreement — strengthens a used equipment application considerably.

Do I need a down payment to finance used equipment? 

Not always. Borrowers with strong credit and established business history may qualify for low or no down payment financing on qualifying transactions. Weaker credit or older equipment typically requires 10–20% down. Lenders use the down payment to manage loan-to-value exposure on assets that carry more depreciation risk than new equipment.

Can I use Section 179 or bonus depreciation on used equipment? 

Yes. Under the One Big Beautiful Bill Act of 2025, 100% bonus depreciation applies to qualified property placed in service after January 19, 2025 — including used equipment, provided it is new to your business. Section 179 also applies to used equipment purchases subject to annual deduction limits. Consult a tax advisor to confirm eligibility for your specific situation.

What documentation should I have ready before applying? 

For application-only financing up to $250,000, no financial statements are required — just a completed application and basic equipment information (year, make, model, condition, mileage or hours, purchase price). Larger transactions or thinner credit profiles may require bank statements or tax returns. Service records and an independent inspection report strengthen any used equipment application.

What types of used equipment does Dimension Funding finance? 

Dimension Funding finances virtually all categories of commercial equipment pre-owned, including semi trucks, dump trucks, box trucks, construction machinery, medical equipment, manufacturing equipment, and restaurant equipment. Coverage includes 100% of the purchase price on qualifying transactions, with terms up to 60 months.

Is used equipment financing a good option for startups? 

Yes, particularly for businesses in their first one to two years that need operational equipment but face higher down payment requirements. Used equipment’s lower purchase price reduces total financing need and monthly payment size — both of which matter most when revenue is still building. Dimension Funding accepts most credit types, including applicants with limited business history.

Equipment Leasing vs. Financing: Tax Benefits, Costs & When to Lease

Equipment Leasing vs. Financing: Tax Benefits, Costs & When to Lease

Equipment Leasing vs. Financing: Tax Benefits, Costs & When to Lease

The choice between equipment leasing and financing isn’t just about monthly payments — it’s a tax strategy decision that can shift thousands of dollars in your favor depending on how you structure it. Get it right and you’re maximizing write-offs, protecting cash flow, and aligning your payment structure to how long you’ll actually use the equipment.

Dimension Funding has helped businesses navigate this decision for over 40 years, providing both equipment lease financing and finance agreements across virtually every industry and equipment type. According to the Equipment Leasing and Finance Association (ELFA), more than 8 in 10 U.S. businesses use some form of financing or leasing when acquiring equipment.

Leasing vs. Financing: Quick Reference

Before getting into the tax mechanics, here’s how each option compares at a glance.

 

Equipment Financing

Equipment Leasing

Ownership

Own from day one

Lender retains ownership (true lease)

Monthly payment

Higher

Lower

Total cost

Lower long-term

Can be higher long-term

Section 179 eligible

Yes

Only if capital lease

Bonus depreciation

Yes

Only if capital lease

Lease payments deductible

No (interest only)

Yes (operating lease)

Balance sheet impact

Asset + liability

Off-balance sheet (operating lease)

Best for

Long-term use, tax optimization

Flexibility, short lifecycle equipment

How the IRS Classifies Leasing vs. Financing

This is where most businesses get tripped up — and where the biggest tax implications live.

According to the IRS, whether your agreement is a true lease or a conditional sales contract determines how you deduct it. True lease payments are deductible as rent. If the IRS considers the arrangement a conditional sale, you depreciate the cost instead — and lose the full payment deduction.

Operating lease vs. capital lease

An operating lease keeps payments off your balance sheet and lets you deduct them as a business operating expense each month. A capital lease is treated more like a purchase — the asset appears on your balance sheet and you recover costs through depreciation. The IRS looks at the economic substance of your agreement, not just what it’s called. If a “lease” includes a nominal end-of-term buyout or builds equity through payments, it may be reclassified as a purchase.

How Section 179 Changes the Math

This is the section most competitors skip — and it fundamentally changes the leasing vs. financing calculation.

When you finance equipment, you own it, which means you can elect to expense the full purchase price in the year it’s placed in service using Section 179. For 2025, the deduction limit is $2,500,000 (phase-out at $4,000,000). For 2026, those figures rise to $2,560,000 and $4,090,000, per IRS Publication 946.

Finance equipment and still write off 100% in year one

Here’s what surprises many business owners: you can finance equipment and still take the full Section 179 deduction in year one. You don’t need to pay cash — you just need to own the asset and place it in service during the tax year. A business financing $200,000 in equipment can potentially write off the entire amount while spreading the actual cash outlay over 36 to 60 months.

Section 179 and leasing

With a true operating lease, Section 179 doesn’t apply because you don’t own the equipment. If the lease is structured as a capital lease — where ownership effectively transfers at term end — Section 179 may apply. Lease type and specific terms determine eligibility, which is another reason the operating vs. capital distinction matters in practice.

Bonus Depreciation: The Additional Layer

The One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA) of 2025 restored 100% bonus depreciation for qualified property acquired and placed in service after January 19, 2025 — covering both new and used equipment, as long as it’s new to your business, per IRS Form 4562 instructions.

IRS rules require Section 179 to be applied first, then bonus depreciation on any remaining eligible basis. Used together, these two deductions allow many businesses to write off 100% of qualifying equipment costs in year one. A business in a 35% tax bracket financing $100,000 in equipment could reduce its tax bill by $35,000 immediately — while spreading the actual loan payment over several years, according to U.S. Bank’s equipment tax guidance.

Why Leasing Feels Cheaper — But Often Isn’t

Lower monthly payments are the most visible advantage of leasing, and they’re real. But lower payments don’t equal lower total cost.

With an operating lease, you pay for the use of the equipment over the term — then return it with nothing to show for it. With financing, each payment builds ownership in an asset that may carry meaningful resale value at the end of the term. When total cost of ownership is calculated over five to ten years, financing frequently comes out ahead for long-lifecycle equipment.

Hidden lease costs to watch for

Excess usage penalties, early termination clauses, and maintenance requirements can quietly raise the true cost of a lease. Reading the full agreement — not just the monthly payment figure — is essential before signing.

When Leasing Is the Smarter Move

Leasing isn’t the inferior option — it’s the right option in specific situations.

Technology and equipment that becomes obsolete within three to five years is a strong candidate for leasing. The ability to return and upgrade at lease end avoids the problem of owning outdated assets. Startups conserving cash, seasonal businesses with variable revenue, and businesses wanting to keep debt off their balance sheet for lending or investor purposes also tend to benefit from leasing over financing.

When Financing Wins

For most businesses acquiring long-life, revenue-generating equipment, financing is the stronger choice when total cost and tax impact are both factored in.

Heavy equipment, commercial trucks, medical equipment, and manufacturing machinery — assets with useful lives of seven to fifteen years or more — make strong financing candidates. Add Section 179 and bonus depreciation, and profitable businesses can offset a substantial portion of first-year cost through tax savings while building an owned asset on the balance sheet.

Dimension Funding accepts most credit types and offers application-only financing up to $250,000 with no financial statements required — same-day approvals on qualifying transactions. For businesses with strong equipment needs and imperfect credit, this provides a path to ownership that repeated lease cycles don’t. Learn more on the About Us page.

The Right Structure Depends on Your Situation

The lease vs. finance decision comes down to three variables: how long you’ll use the equipment, what your current taxable income looks like, and how much you value flexibility versus ownership.

Profitable businesses with long equipment lifecycles and high taxable income almost always benefit more from financing — Section 179 and bonus depreciation turn a multi-year capital expenditure into a significant first-year tax event. Businesses prioritizing cash preservation or short equipment cycles often find leasing the better fit.

The team at Dimension Funding can walk through both options based on your equipment type, business profile, and financing goals. Reach out to explore which structure works best — same-day decisions are available on qualifying transactions.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is equipment leasing tax deductible? 

Yes, but the deduction depends on lease type. Payments under a true operating lease are fully deductible as a business operating expense in the year they’re paid. With a capital lease, only the interest portion is deductible — the asset must be depreciated over time, similar to purchased equipment.

Can I use Section 179 if I finance equipment instead of paying cash? 

Yes. Section 179 requires ownership, not cash payment. A business that finances equipment can still elect to deduct the full purchase price in the year the equipment is placed in service — up to $2,500,000 for 2025 and $2,560,000 for 2026 per IRS Publication 946.

What is bonus depreciation and how does it work with Section 179? 

Bonus depreciation allows businesses to immediately deduct a large percentage of a qualifying asset’s cost in the year it’s placed in service. For property placed in service after January 19, 2025, the allowance was restored to 100% under the OBBBA. Section 179 is applied first, with bonus depreciation covering any remaining eligible basis.

What’s the difference between an operating lease and a capital lease? 

An operating lease is a true rental — you deduct monthly payments as operating expenses and return the equipment at term end. A capital lease is treated more like a purchase: the asset appears on your balance sheet, costs are recovered through depreciation, and Section 179 may apply depending on the agreement’s terms.

Does leasing always cost less per month than financing? 

Lease payments are typically lower because you’re financing the use of the equipment, not its full value. However, at lease end you own nothing — while a financed asset may still carry significant resale value. Total cost of ownership over five to ten years often favors financing for long-lifecycle equipment.

What types of businesses benefit most from equipment financing? 

Businesses with high taxable income benefit most, since Section 179 and bonus depreciation create the largest immediate tax impact. Industries with long-lifecycle assets — construction, manufacturing, transportation, and healthcare — also tend to favor financing. Startups and cash-constrained businesses often find leasing a better fit until revenue stabilizes.

How does Dimension Funding approach the lease vs. finance decision? 

Dimension Funding offers both equipment lease financing and finance agreements, structured around your specific equipment type, term preferences, and business profile. Application-only financing is available up to $250,000 with no financial statements required, and most credit types are accepted. The contact team can walk through options before you apply.

Commercial Truck Financing: Semi, Box & Dump Truck Loans

Commercial Truck Financing: Semi, Box & Dump Truck Loans

Commercial Truck Financing: Semi, Box & Dump Truck Loans

Every freight load that reaches a warehouse, construction site, or retail shelf got there on a truck — and most of those trucks were financed. With new semi trucks priced between $150,000 and $200,000, and used box trucks running $40,000 to $80,000, commercial truck financing isn’t a workaround for operators who can’t pay cash. It’s how the trucking industry functions.

Dimension Funding has provided commercial equipment financing for over 40 years, working with owner-operators, fleet owners, and transportation businesses across the country to structure loans and leases for semi trucks, box trucks, dump trucks, and commercial trailers. Same-day approvals, an A+ BBB rating, and fully electronic documentation make the process faster than most operators expect.

How Much Do Commercial Trucks Cost?

Pricing varies significantly by truck type, and knowing the numbers upfront helps you plan how much financing you’ll need.

New Class 8 semi trucks typically range from $150,000 to $200,000 or more depending on configuration and manufacturer. Used semis generally fall between $50,000 and $130,000, though tighter inventory has kept used prices elevated. According to the National Automobile Dealers Association (NADA), new commercial truck sales declined approximately 4.8% at the end of 2024, with heavy-duty trucks down roughly 9.9% — pushing more buyers toward the used market.

Box truck pricing

Box trucks used for last-mile delivery and local distribution run between $30,000 and $80,000 for used units and up to $100,000 or more for new.

Dump truck pricing

Dump truck pricing spans a wide range. A used single-axle unit may start around $40,000, while a new tri-axle configuration built for heavy construction can exceed $150,000.

Semi vs. Box vs. Dump Truck Financing: What Changes by Truck Type

These three categories look different to lenders — understanding the distinctions helps you set realistic expectations before applying.

Semi trucks (Class 8)

Semi trucks represent the highest financing amounts and typically the most underwriting scrutiny. Lenders evaluate load history, freight contracts, and time in business alongside credit. The sector has also faced rising delinquency rates in recent years, according to Equipment Finance News, which has prompted tighter conditions on long-haul applications. Borrowers with documented contracts and established operating history are in the strongest position.

Box trucks

Box trucks are generally considered lower risk due to more predictable, localized revenue — last-mile delivery, moving companies, medical supply logistics. Approval rates are often stronger here, particularly for businesses with one to two years of operating history.

Dump trucks

Dump truck financing is closest to construction equipment lending in how lenders assess it. Revenue is project-based and seasonal, so lenders look for evidence of active contracts or a stable client base. The asset holds its value reasonably well, which works in the borrower’s favor as collateral.

Loan vs. Lease vs. Lease-Purchase

Most commercial truck financing falls into one of three structures, each suited to different business situations.

Structure

Ownership

Best For

Equipment loan

Own from day one

Operators keeping the truck long-term

True lease

Return, buy, or roll at end of term

Businesses that cycle equipment regularly

Lease-purchase

Option to own at end of contract

Startups and first-time owner-operators

An equipment loan gives you a fixed monthly payment and full ownership at the end of the term. A true lease lowers your monthly payment because you’re financing the use of the truck, not its full value. A lease-purchase is common in carrier-sponsored programs — you lease with a purchase option, sometimes with a portion of payments applied toward ownership. Review total cost of ownership carefully before committing.

Dimension Funding offers both commercial truck financing and commercial trailer financing through lease and finance agreement structures, with terms up to 60 months and 100% financing on qualifying transactions.

What Lenders Actually Look At Beyond Credit Score

Credit score matters, but it’s rarely the only factor that determines approval or terms for commercial truck financing.

Time in business

Startups and first-year operators face more scrutiny and typically higher down payment requirements — often 10–20% or more — because there’s no documented revenue history to underwrite against. Operators with two or more years in business are generally in a stronger position.

Cash flow and contracts

Lenders evaluate bank statements or tax returns to confirm monthly revenue comfortably exceeds the projected loan payment after accounting for fuel, insurance, and maintenance. Active freight contracts or a documented book of business significantly strengthens an application.

Equipment age and mileage

Most lenders cap financing on trucks beyond a certain age (commonly 10–15 years) or above defined mileage thresholds. Used equipment financing is available, but terms reflect the additional depreciation risk. Trucks with documented maintenance histories and moderate mileage qualify for the most favorable terms.

Down Payments and Loan Terms

Down payment expectations vary based on credit profile, business history, and truck type, but these benchmarks help with planning.

Borrowers with strong credit and established history may qualify for low or no down payment financing on qualifying transactions. Newer operators or those with credit challenges should budget for 10–20% down. Loan terms typically run 24 to 60 months — longer terms lower monthly payments but increase total financing cost over the life of the loan.

How the Approval Process Works

One of the most common questions operators ask is how fast they can get approved. Dimension Funding offers same-day approvals on qualifying applications, using DocuSign for fully electronic documentation — no branch visits, no weeks-long wait.

For application-only financing up to $250,000, no financial statements are required. Larger transactions may require business tax returns or bank statements depending on the deal structure. To prepare a strong application, have the truck details (year, make, model, mileage, purchase price) and basic business information ready before you start.

New vs. Used Truck Financing

The current market creates a distinct dynamic for buyers considering new versus used equipment.

New Class 8 truck sales declined nearly 10% at the end of 2024 according to NADA data, driving more buyers toward used inventory — and keeping used prices firm. Used truck financing is widely available, but terms depend heavily on the truck’s age, mileage, and condition. A newer used semi with a clean service history finances very differently from a high-mileage unit with unknown maintenance records.

Total cost of ownership matters

For buyers deciding between new and used, the financing math often favors newer equipment when total cost of ownership is considered. Lower maintenance costs, better fuel efficiency, and longer usable life can offset the higher monthly payment — a calculus worth running before assuming used is the cheaper option.

Equipment Financing Demand in the Trucking Sector

Truck financing doesn’t happen in a vacuum — it reflects broader business investment trends worth understanding.

According to the Equipment Leasing and Finance Association (ELFA), U.S. business borrowing for equipment rose approximately 5.9% year-over-year as of December 2025, signaling sustained demand across transportation and logistics. The global commercial vehicle financing market is valued at over $120 billion and projected to grow at a 6.8% compound annual growth rate through 2030, according to Mordor Intelligence. Trucking moves approximately 72% of U.S. freight, according to Geotab’s trucking industry data — financing is the infrastructure that keeps fleets moving.

Getting the Right Financing Structure for Your Fleet

A commercial truck is a revenue-generating asset, and the financing around it should be treated as a business decision, not just a credit application. Whether you’re acquiring your first semi, adding a dump truck to a growing construction operation, or expanding a box truck fleet, structure matters.

The team at Dimension Funding works with operators across truck types and credit profiles to find financing that fits both the asset and the business behind it. Reach out to explore your options or start an application — same-day decisions are available on qualifying transactions.

Frequently Asked Questions

What credit score do I need to finance a commercial truck? 

There’s no universal minimum, and lenders vary in their requirements. Dimension Funding accepts most credit types, including applicants who’ve been turned down by traditional banks. Stronger credit profiles generally qualify for better terms and lower down payment requirements, but credit history is one factor among several — time in business, cash flow, and the asset itself all play a role in the decision.

Can I get commercial truck financing as a startup or first-time owner-operator? 

Yes, though startups typically face stricter conditions than established operators. Lenders often require higher down payments — sometimes 15–20% or more — for businesses under two years old due to the absence of operating history. First-time owner-operators should come prepared with evidence of freight contracts or committed loads and a realistic view of projected monthly revenue versus operating costs.

What’s the difference between an equipment loan and a lease for a commercial truck? 

An equipment loan gives you ownership from day one — you make fixed payments and own the truck outright at the end of the term. A lease finances the use of the truck rather than its full value, resulting in lower monthly payments, with options to return, purchase, or roll into a new agreement at term end. Loans tend to suit operators keeping the truck long-term; leases work better for businesses that prefer to cycle equipment.

How long are typical commercial truck loan terms? 

Terms generally range from 24 to 60 months. Longer terms reduce your monthly payment but increase the total amount paid over the life of the loan. The right term depends on cash flow needs, the truck’s expected working life, and how your financing is structured.

Does Dimension Funding finance used commercial trucks? 

Yes. Dimension Funding finances both new and used commercial trucks, including semis, box trucks, dump trucks, and trailers. Terms for used equipment depend on the truck’s age, mileage, and condition. Trucks with documented maintenance histories and moderate mileage generally qualify for the most favorable used financing terms.

What is application-only financing and when does it apply? 

Application-only financing means no financial statements are required — the decision is based on the credit application alone. Dimension Funding offers application-only equipment financing up to $250,000, which covers many box truck, dump truck, and used semi transactions. Larger deals may require additional documentation such as bank statements or business tax returns.

Can I finance a trailer alongside a truck purchase? 

Yes. Dimension Funding offers commercial trailer financing as a standalone product, which means you can finance a tractor and trailer independently or structure them together. Trailers are typically financed on similar terms to trucks — up to 60-month terms, application-only up to qualifying amounts — and can often be processed alongside a truck application.

Medical Equipment Financing for Practices & Hospitals: Same-Day Approval

Medical Equipment Financing for Practices & Hospitals: Same-Day Approval

Medical Equipment Financing for Practices & Hospitals: Same-Day Approval

If your dental practice is replacing a CBCT scanner that has run past its support window, or your imaging center upgrading from a 1.5T to a 3T MRI, or your veterinary clinic is looking to add ultrasound capability for the first time, then you know that the gap between modern medical equipment costs and what most practices keep in reserves can be stark. A 1.5T MRI scanner runs upwards of $1 million new, with installation and shielding adding 10 to 20 percent to project cost.

Medical equipment financing is the standard route practices use to acquire diagnostic and treatment tech without utterly gutting their working capital. For over 40 years, Dimension Funding has provided loans across the medical category. 

Dimension Funding writes equipment loans across the medical category. If you have a manufacturer quote on your desk, send it over. Application-only approval can come back the same business day, with financing structured around the equipment before installation gets scheduled. 

What Counts as Medical Equipment for Financing Purposes

If a piece of equipment is built for a clinical setting and carries a meaningful price tag, it almost certainly qualifies for financing.

  • Imaging hardware such as MRI, CT, PET scanners, X-ray suites, ultrasound, mammography. Any equipment that does the looking.
  • Surgical equipment: Operating tables, surgical lighting rigs, robotic systems, endoscopy towers. 
  • Diagnostics: Lab analyzers running blood panels through the night, ECGs, EEGs, sleep study setups, etc,.
  • Dental: CBCT units, intraoral scanners, the chairs themselves, sterilization equipment that keeps your practice legal.
  • Aesthetic devices: Lasers and body contouring machines. 
  • Patient care: Hospital beds, infusion pumps, ventilators, etc.,
  • Ophthalmology: OCT machines, phoropters, surgical lasers tuned for the eye.

Soft costs around the equipment generally finance alongside it. That is, installation, shielding for imaging suites, training, software licenses, extended service contracts can all be part of the financed amount. We can help fund the whole project rather than just the unit on the invoice

How Same-Day Approval Works for Medical Practices

Application-only financing applies to medical equipment up to a defined ticket size for established practices, meaning the application itself plus a credit pull is enough to get to a yes or no. Established here means two or more years of operation, a clean credit history, and a practice that looks like it has been running rather than starting. For a practice in that range, a same-day yes is a reasonable expectation on qualifying applications.

Larger transactions ask for a bit more. Three to six months of bank statements, a recent profit and loss statement, and tax returns for the bigger files, particularly when the financing is tied to practice acquisition or a full fit-out for a new location. 

The added documentation is not an intentionally bureaucratic hurdle so much as the natural shape of a larger commitment. Timelines stretch from same-day on application-only deals to a few business days once the file is fully documented.

If your equipment quote is in hand, send it over whenever it is ready. Apply online for a same-day decision, or reach out directly if you want to walk through documentation before submitting. 

Equipment Categories & Differences in Financing Approaches 

When we evaluate surgical tools and capital instruments, we aren’t just looking at the price tag; we’re looking at procedural volume

Technology obsolescence also often happens at a much faster rate than physical wear. That’s why we don’t build financing around how long a machine lasts, but rather how it fits into your reimbursement cycles.

We also understand industrial context. For example, dental equipment has a tight resale market and predictable depreciation curves, which makes underwriting more standardized. Aesthetic devices depreciate fastest because they compete on patent-protected technology cycles, and terms are often shorter to match the expected daily wear-and-tear of a spa.

Documentation Requirements by Practice Size

Solo practitioner versus group practice versus hospital documentation flows. 

What gets requested:

Application-only thresholds at the lower end. Bank statements and recent P&L over a defined transaction size. Tax returns and full financial review for practice acquisition financing. Practice valuation documents for transactions tied to ownership transfer.

Reference how this differs from general business equipment financing. Internal link: /equipment-financing-companies/.

Reach Out

For practices evaluating medical equipment acquisition, Dimension Funding finances diagnostic imaging, surgical, dental, and patient care equipment, with same-day approval available on qualifying applications. Send the equipment quote whenever it is ready, and a financing structure can come back the same business day.

Apply for medical equipment financing or get in touch directly to walk through what makes sense for your specific equipment and practice setup.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can a new practice qualify for medical equipment financing? 

Practices in their first two years of operation can qualify for medical equipment financing, though documentation requirements typically increase compared to established practices. Personal guarantees, a more thorough credit review, and supporting financials carry more weight in startup applications. Some lenders also weight prior practice experience for first-time owners.

What medical equipment qualifies for Section 179 deduction? 

New and used medical equipment placed in service during the tax year qualifies for Section 179, with deduction limits set annually by the IRS. Eligible categories include imaging, surgical, diagnostic, and dental equipment when used predominantly for business purposes. Verify current limits with a tax advisor, as the cap adjusts each year.

How long are typical medical equipment financing terms? 

Terms generally run from 24 to 84 months depending on equipment type and useful life. Imaging and surgical equipment often qualify for terms on the longer end because of extended useful life, while aesthetic devices typically finance over shorter terms tied to faster technology cycles.

Does financing cover installation and software? 

Yes, soft costs including installation, shielding for imaging suites, training, software, and extended service contracts can be wrapped into the financed amount when bundled with the equipment purchase. This is one of the practical reasons financing wins over staged cash payments for larger fit-outs.

Is used medical equipment eligible for financing? 

Used medical equipment qualifies for financing when sourced from authorized dealers or vetted resellers. Age caps vary by category, with imaging equipment often accepted up to 10 years and dental chairs accepted up to 15. The technology cycle in the category drives the cap more than calendar age.

Restaurant Equipment Financing: Commercial Kitchen Loans $10K–$500K

Restaurant Equipment Financing: Commercial Kitchen Loans $10K–$500K

Restaurant Equipment Financing: Commercial Kitchen Loans $10K–$500K

Outfitting a commercial kitchen can cost anywhere from $50,000 to over $500,000 — before a single plate leaves the pass. For most restaurant owners, paying that upfront isn’t an option, which is why equipment financing has become the standard model for acquiring commercial kitchen equipment across the industry. Dimension Funding has worked with restaurants, food-service businesses, and hospitality operators across the United States for over 40 years, providing financing from $10,000 to well beyond $500,000 for virtually every category of commercial kitchen equipment.

The global commercial kitchen equipment market was valued at approximately $98 billion in 2024 and is projected to reach $149 billion by 2030, according to Grand View Research — driven by restaurant expansion, cloud kitchen growth, and rising food delivery demand.

Why Restaurant Equipment Financing Is Essential

Restaurants operate on tight margins, with labor, food costs, and rent consuming most of available cash. A single commercial oven can run $10,000 to $30,000, a walk-in refrigerator $5,000 to $15,000, and a full kitchen buildout can easily exceed $150,000. Financing converts those large capital expenditures into fixed monthly payments, keeping working capital available for the costs that keep the business running day to day.

According to Lightspeed, opening a restaurant requires simultaneous spending across commercial space, kitchen equipment, technology, licenses, and operational infrastructure — making efficient capital allocation critical from day one. For operators managing multiple cost centers at once, financing equipment is often the most practical way to get a kitchen production-ready without depleting reserves.

Ghost Kitchens and Delivery-First Operations

The rise of ghost kitchens, food trucks, and delivery-only restaurants has expanded demand for equipment financing beyond traditional full-service dining. Shelf Trend’s analysis of the small restaurant equipment market notes that ghost kitchen startup costs range from $20,000 to $500,000 — a range that maps directly onto equipment financing programs and makes financing a natural fit for this growing segment. Food truck operators face similar dynamics, with equipment costs for a fully outfitted truck commonly running $50,000 to $150,000.

What Commercial Kitchen Equipment Actually Costs

Kitchen equipment costs vary significantly based on restaurant size, concept, and volume. According to Avanti Corporate, building a commercial kitchen typically costs between $40,000 and $200,000, with full-service and high-volume operations pushing well beyond that range.

Your Kitchen Center’s cost breakdown provides a useful framework by restaurant size:

Restaurant Size

Typical Equipment Investment

Small restaurant

$50,000 – $150,000

Medium restaurant

$150,000 – $250,000

Large / high-volume kitchen

$250,000 – $500,000+

These ranges align directly with the $10K–$500K financing window most restaurant equipment lenders operate within — and explain why financing is the standard approach rather than the exception.

What Equipment You Can Finance

Most restaurant equipment financing programs cover virtually every category of commercial kitchen equipment. Dimension Funding finances all major equipment types, including:

  • Cooking equipment: commercial ovens, ranges, grills, fryers, steamers
  • Refrigeration: walk-in coolers, freezers, ice machines, refrigerated prep tables
  • Food prep and service: mixers, slicers, dishwashers, stainless workstations
  • Front-of-house: POS systems, dining furniture, display cases
  • Technology: energy-efficient appliances, automated cooking systems, kitchen management software

Financing covers both new and used equipment, and Dimension Funding covers 100% of associated costs including delivery and installation — not just the base equipment price.

Modern Equipment Restaurants Are Financing

Energy-efficient and connected appliances are an increasingly common financing target. According to Technavio’s commercial kitchen equipment market analysis, smart ovens, energy-efficient fryers, and automated cooking systems are gaining adoption as restaurants look to reduce operating costs and improve kitchen throughput.

For growing restaurants and franchise operations, financing these upgrades preserves cash while delivering the operational efficiency gains that justify the investment.

Restaurant Equipment Loans vs. Leasing

The two primary financing structures for restaurant equipment are loans and leases, and the right choice depends on how long the operator plans to use the equipment and their cash-flow priorities.

With an equipment loan, the restaurant owns the equipment outright once the loan is paid off. Monthly payments are higher than a lease, but the business builds equity in an asset that may hold value for 10 to 15 years — commercial refrigeration, prep equipment, and cooking lines all fall into this category. For restaurants with stable revenue and a long-term location commitment, ownership is typically the stronger financial decision.

When Leasing Makes Sense for Restaurants

Equipment leasing offers lower monthly payments and more flexibility at term end — the operator can return the equipment, renew, or purchase it. Leasing is a stronger fit for technology-driven equipment that evolves quickly, such as POS systems, kitchen display systems, and energy-management appliances, where owning outdated hardware can become a cost rather than an asset.

For restaurants prioritizing cash-flow flexibility — particularly newer operations or those expanding to a second location — leasing can free up capital for the marketing, staffing, and inventory costs that drive revenue in the early stages.

Financing Options: $10K–$500K Programs

Restaurant equipment financing is available across a range of loan sizes and structures. Dimension Funding offers application-only approval up to $250,000, meaning operators in that range can secure financing without financial statements. For larger buildouts and multi-unit acquisitions, financing is available up to $10M+ with terms up to 60 months.

The food-service equipment market is projected to reach $74.4 billion globally by 2035, reflecting sustained demand from restaurant growth, hospitality expansion, and the ongoing modernization of commercial kitchens. As Future Market Insights notes, the restaurant equipment market alone is expected to grow from $4.8 billion in 2025 to $10.2 billion by 2035 — driven by new openings, franchise expansion, and kitchen modernization.

Requirements to Qualify for Equipment Financing

Lenders typically evaluate credit profile, business revenue, time in business, and the value of the equipment being financed. Because the equipment serves as collateral, qualification requirements are generally more accessible than for unsecured business loans — making equipment financing one of the more attainable funding options for restaurant operators at various stages of growth. This collateral-backed structure also means lenders can move faster, which matters when a kitchen buildout is on a tight timeline.

Dimension Funding accepts most credit types and offers same-day approvals, with funding available same day or the next business day. Startups and newer operations can qualify, though options narrow with limited operating history.

Can New Restaurants Get Financed?

Yes — newer operations can qualify for equipment financing, particularly because the collateral-backed structure reduces lender risk. Operators with strong personal credit and a clear business plan are generally in a good position to secure approval even without years of revenue history behind them.

The Right Partner for Your Kitchen Build

Commercial kitchen financing isn’t a transaction — it’s a decision that affects cash flow, tax strategy, and operational capacity for years. Dimension Funding brings over 40 years of experience working with restaurants and food-service businesses, offering same-day approvals, 100% cost coverage, and financing from $10,000 to well beyond $500,000.

Whether you’re equipping a first location, expanding to a second, or modernizing an existing kitchen, the team at Dimension Funding can walk through your options — from loan structure to repayment terms — with no pressure and no commitment required.

Frequently Asked Questions

How does restaurant equipment financing work? 

Restaurant equipment financing allows operators to purchase commercial kitchen equipment through a loan or lease rather than paying the full cost upfront. The equipment typically serves as collateral, repayment terms run 24 to 60 months, and the operator either owns the equipment at payoff or returns it at the end of a lease term.

What credit score is needed for restaurant equipment loans? 

Credit requirements vary by lender. Dimension Funding accepts most credit types and offers application-only approval up to $250,000. Operators with stronger credit profiles generally have access to a broader range of financing structures and term lengths.

Can startups finance commercial kitchen equipment? 

Yes. Because the equipment serves as collateral, newer restaurants have a better chance of qualifying for equipment financing than for unsecured loans. Strong personal credit and a clear business plan improve approval odds significantly for first-time operators.

What equipment can be financed for a restaurant? 

Most commercial kitchen equipment qualifies — including ovens, ranges, fryers, refrigeration systems, ice machines, dishwashers, POS systems, prep tables, and dining furniture. Dimension Funding finances both new and used equipment and covers 100% of associated costs, including delivery and installation.

Are used restaurant equipment purchases financeable? 

Yes. Most lenders, including Dimension Funding, finance both new and used commercial kitchen equipment. The age, condition, and resale value of the equipment factor into underwriting, but used equipment is routinely financed across all major kitchen categories.

What terms are typical for commercial kitchen equipment loans? 

Repayment terms for restaurant equipment financing typically run 24 to 60 months with fixed monthly payments. Dimension Funding offers terms up to 60 months, allowing operators to align repayment with their revenue cycles and cash-flow patterns.

Is leasing restaurant equipment better than buying? 

It depends on the equipment type and the operator’s cash-flow priorities. Loans are generally better for long-lived kitchen equipment that will stay in service for many years. Leasing offers lower monthly payments and more flexibility — a stronger fit for technology-driven equipment or operators in early growth stages who need to preserve working capital.

Construction Equipment Financing: Fund Excavators, Dozers & Machinery

Construction Equipment Financing: Fund Excavators, Dozers & Machinery

Construction Equipment Financing: Fund Excavators, Dozers & Machinery

A single excavator can run $100,000 to $500,000 — and most contractors need more than one. Paying cash for a full equipment fleet isn’t realistic for the majority of small and midsize construction companies, which is why equipment financing has become the standard model for acquiring machinery in the industry. 

Dimension Funding has worked with construction businesses across the United States for over 40 years, providing financing for excavators, boom trucks, construction vehicles, and virtually every other category of commercial construction equipment.

What Construction Equipment Financing Is

Construction equipment financing allows contractors to purchase or lease heavy machinery while paying for it over time rather than in a lump sum. The equipment itself typically serves as collateral, which is a key reason approval rates for equipment loans are higher than for most other business lending categories — lenders carry a recoverable asset even in a default scenario.

Financing can cover the full cost of acquisition, including shipping, installation, and associated soft costs depending on the lender. Dimension Funding covers 100% of these costs, with application-only approval up to $250,000 and financing available up to $10M+.

Why Contractors Finance Equipment Instead of Buying Outright

Construction projects frequently face cash-flow constraints — labor and materials costs hit before client payments arrive, leaving working capital stretched thin. Tying up hundreds of thousands of dollars in equipment purchases compounds that problem significantly.

Financing allows contractors to deploy equipment on revenue-generating projects immediately while spreading the acquisition cost over the asset’s productive life. According to Reuters, U.S. companies increased equipment financing borrowing by approximately 5.7% year-over-year — a signal that businesses across sectors are consistently choosing financing over outright purchase.

Rising Equipment Costs Make Financing Essential

Construction machinery prices have increased steadily, driven by manufacturing input costs, supply chain pressures, and demand tied to infrastructure investment. Federal Reserve economic data tracks the rising cost of construction machinery — including excavators and cranes — highlighting how much capital contractors now need just to stay equipped for standard project types.

Financing converts what would be a large, one-time capital outlay into a predictable monthly payment, making it easier for contractors to bid on larger projects without overextending their cash position.

Equipment You Can Finance

Most construction financing programs cover a broad range of heavy machinery. According to Allied Market Research, the primary equipment categories used in construction include:

Dimension Funding finances all of these categories, as well as boom trucks and construction vehicles, covering both new and used equipment.

Why Earthmoving Equipment Receives the Most Financing

Earthmoving machines — excavators, bulldozers, graders, and loaders — represent the largest financed equipment category in construction, per Research and Markets. These machines are required at nearly every stage of a construction project: site preparation, trenching, grading, road building, and infrastructure development.

Because they’re both essential and expensive, earthmoving equipment is where financing has the most immediate impact on a contractor’s ability to take on and complete projects.

Equipment Loans vs. Leasing for Construction Machinery

The two primary financing structures for construction equipment are loans and leases, and the right choice depends on how long a contractor plans to use the machinery and how they want to manage the balance sheet.

With an equipment loan, the contractor owns the machine outright once the loan is repaid. Loan payments are higher than lease payments, but the business builds equity in a long-lived asset — and for construction machinery that can remain productive for 10 to 20 years, ownership typically delivers stronger long-term value.

When Leasing Makes Sense for Contractors

Equipment leasing offers lower monthly payments and more flexibility at the end of the term — the contractor can return the equipment, renew, or purchase it. Leasing works well for machinery that may become outdated, for contractors who need equipment for a specific project cycle, or for businesses that prioritize cash-flow flexibility over ownership.

Industry data cited by Research and Markets shows that loans represent the largest segment of construction equipment financing, as most contractors prefer building equity in machines they use repeatedly across projects.

Qualification Requirements for Construction Equipment Financing

Lenders evaluate several factors when reviewing a construction equipment financing application. The most common criteria include business revenue, time in business, credit profile, and the value and condition of the equipment being financed.

Because the machinery serves as collateral, equipment financing is generally easier to qualify for than unsecured business loans. Dimension Funding accepts most credit types and offers application-only approval up to $250,000, meaning many contractors can secure financing without providing financial statements.

Can Startup Contractors Get Financed?

Newer construction businesses can qualify for equipment financing, though options narrow with limited operating history. The collateral-backed nature of equipment loans makes lenders more willing to work with younger businesses compared to other loan categories. Contractors with strong personal credit and a clear project pipeline are generally in a better position to secure approval.

How Infrastructure Investment Is Driving Equipment Demand

Infrastructure spending at the federal and state level continues to push construction activity — and with it, demand for the heavy equipment that makes large-scale projects possible. Yahoo Finance’s construction equipment industry report points to government construction programs and infrastructure expansion as primary drivers of sustained equipment demand.

Urbanization trends are compounding this further. According to PR Newswire’s analysis of the construction equipment market, earthmoving machinery forms the backbone of construction operations worldwide, and demand is expected to grow steadily at approximately 6% annually through the next decade.

For contractors, this environment creates both opportunity and pressure — more project volume is available, but so is competition for the equipment needed to pursue it.

Choose a Financing Partner That Knows Construction

Construction equipment financing isn’t a generic transaction — the machinery is expensive, the projects are time-sensitive, and the financing structure needs to match how contractors actually get paid. Dimension Funding brings over 40 years of experience financing construction equipment across the United States, with same-day approvals, terms up to 60 months, and coverage of 100% of equipment costs including shipping and installation.

Whether you’re financing a single excavator or building out a full equipment fleet, the team at Dimension Funding can walk you through your options with no pressure and no commitment required.

Frequently Asked Questions

How does construction equipment financing work? 

Construction equipment financing allows contractors to purchase or lease heavy machinery through a loan or lease rather than paying the full cost upfront. The equipment serves as collateral, repayment terms typically run 24 to 60 months, and the contractor either owns the equipment at payoff or returns it at the end of a lease term.

What credit score is needed to finance heavy equipment? 

Credit requirements vary by lender. Dimension Funding accepts most credit types and offers application-only approval up to $250,000. Contractors with stronger credit profiles will generally have access to a broader range of financing structures and term lengths.

Can startups finance excavators or bulldozers? 

Yes, though options are more limited for businesses with less than two years of operating history. Because the equipment itself serves as collateral, newer businesses have a better chance of qualifying for equipment financing than for unsecured loans. Strong personal credit and a clear project pipeline improve approval odds significantly.

What down payment is required for construction equipment financing? 

Down payment requirements vary by lender and deal structure. Some programs — including certain options through Dimension Funding — require no down payment, while others may require 10% to 20%, depending on the borrower’s credit profile and the equipment being financed.

What terms are typical for heavy equipment loans? 

Repayment terms for construction equipment financing typically range from 24 to 60 months. Dimension Funding offers terms up to 60 months with fixed monthly payments, allowing contractors to align repayment with their project revenue cycles.

Can used construction equipment be financed? 

Yes. Most lenders, including Dimension Funding, finance both new and used construction equipment. The age, condition, and resale value of the equipment will factor into the lender’s underwriting, but used machinery is commonly financed across all major equipment categories.

Is leasing construction equipment better than financing? 

It depends on how long the contractor plans to use the equipment and their cash-flow priorities. Loans are generally better for long-lived machinery that will stay in service for many years. Leasing offers lower monthly payments and more flexibility, making it a stronger fit for project-specific equipment needs or businesses prioritizing cash-flow management.

If you want to upgrade your tasting room or winery equipment, financing from Dimension can help. Turn a large, upfront cost into monthly payments over the lifetime of the equipment. Financing winery equipment can expand your business while maintaining your cash flow. 

Equipment Loans vs. Leases: Which Financing Option Saves Money?

Equipment Loans vs. Leases: Which Financing Option Saves Money?

Equipment Loans vs. Leases: Which Financing Option Saves Money?

The difference between an equipment loan and an equipment lease can mean thousands of dollars over the life of an asset — and the wrong choice can quietly drain cash flow, inflate your tax burden, or leave you stuck with equipment you no longer need. Dimension Funding works with businesses across virtually every industry to structure financing that fits their actual situation, not a one-size-fits-all product.

What Is Equipment Financing?

Equipment financing is a broad term covering any arrangement that allows a business to acquire equipment without paying the full purchase price upfront. According to the Equipment Leasing and Finance Association (ELFA), approximately 82% of U.S. companies finance or lease equipment rather than buying outright — making this the standard approach across industries from construction to healthcare. The two primary structures are equipment loans and equipment leases, and they differ fundamentally in one thing: ownership.

Equipment Loans Explained

An equipment loan works like most secured business loans. A lender — such as Dimension Funding — provides capital to purchase the equipment, and the business repays the loan in fixed monthly installments over an agreed term. Once the loan is paid off, the business owns the equipment outright with no further obligations.

The equipment itself serves as collateral, which is a key reason equipment loans carry higher approval rates than most other business lending products. Loan terms typically run 24 to 60 months, and many lenders — including Dimension Funding — cover 100% of associated costs like shipping, installation, and maintenance rather than just the base purchase price.

Who Equipment Loans Work Best For

Equipment loans make the most financial sense when a business plans to use the equipment for most or all of its useful life. Long-lived assets — construction machinery, medical imaging devices, industrial production equipment — tend to favor ownership because the total cost of financing is lower than paying lease payments indefinitely.

Loans also make sense when the business wants to modify, customize, or eventually resell the equipment, since ownership places no restrictions on use or disposition.

Equipment Leases Explained

An equipment lease is closer to a rental agreement. The business uses the equipment for a fixed term — typically 24 to 60 months — and either returns it, renews the lease, or purchases it at the end. The lender retains ownership throughout the lease term, which changes both the cash-flow profile and the tax treatment compared to a loan.

Lease payments are generally lower than loan payments on the same equipment because the business is paying for usage rather than full ownership, as outlined in ELFA’s equipment finance industry research. This makes leasing an attractive option for businesses managing tight cash flow or financing assets with short functional lifespans.

Lease Types: Operating vs. Capital

Not all leases work the same way on paper. An operating lease is treated as an ongoing expense — payments run through the income statement each period, and the asset never appears on the balance sheet. A capital (or finance) lease is structured more like a loan — the asset and corresponding liability both show up on the balance sheet, and the business typically gains ownership at the end.

The distinction matters for accounting, financial ratios, and how lenders view your balance sheet when you apply for other financing.

Equipment Loan vs. Lease: Key Differences

Factor

Equipment Loan

Equipment Lease

Ownership

Business owns at payoff

Lender retains ownership

Monthly Payments

Higher

Lower

Upfront Costs

May require down payment

Little to no upfront cost

Equipment Upgrades

Business responsible

Easier to upgrade at term end

Balance Sheet Impact

Asset + liability recorded

Operating lease stays off balance sheet

Best For

Long-lived assets

Fast-depreciating or tech-heavy assets

Customization

Unrestricted

Subject to lease terms

Which Option Saves More Money Long-Term?

Over a long enough horizon, equipment loans almost always cost less than leasing the same asset. When you lease, you pay for the equipment continuously — and if you renew at term end, the cumulative payments can far exceed what ownership would have cost. With a loan, payments stop once the balance is cleared, and the business retains an asset with residual value.

The exception is technology. Equipment that becomes obsolete quickly — servers, diagnostic software, certain medical devices — may cost more to own than to lease, because ownership locks you into hardware that may be functionally outdated before the loan is paid off. Leasing in these cases preserves the ability to upgrade on a predictable cycle.

Cash-Flow Considerations

For businesses where working capital is a constraint, the lower monthly payments of a lease can outweigh the long-term cost advantage of a loan. Startups, seasonal businesses, and rapidly scaling operations often prioritize cash-flow flexibility over total cost — and for those businesses, leasing can be the more practical short-term choice.

Tax Benefits of Loans vs. Leases

Tax treatment is often what tips the decision for businesses with a clear accounting strategy. The IRS treats loans and leases differently: lease payments on a true operating lease are generally deductible as ordinary business expenses in the year paid, while equipment purchases financed through a loan are recovered through depreciation deductions over the asset’s useful life.

According to SMB Compass, operating lease payments are typically fully deductible, giving businesses a predictable annual deduction tied directly to their payments.

Section 179 and Bonus Depreciation

For businesses that finance equipment purchases through a loan, Section 179 of the IRS Tax Code allows a deduction of up to $2.5 million of qualifying equipment in the tax year the asset is placed in service — meaning businesses can write off the full cost immediately rather than depreciating it over several years. U.S. Bank’s analysis of Section 179 notes that this immediate expensing benefit can significantly reduce taxable income in capital-intensive years.

Financed equipment also qualifies for interest deductions and standard depreciation schedules, as outlined by the IRS depreciation guidelines. The combination of Section 179, bonus depreciation, and interest deductions makes loan financing particularly attractive for businesses making large equipment purchases in profitable years.

Depreciation Recapture

One often-overlooked advantage of leasing is that it avoids depreciation recapture risk. When a business sells financed equipment after claiming depreciation deductions, the IRS may require recapture of some deductions as ordinary income. 

The IRS guidance on depreciation recapture notes that when a business sells financed equipment after claiming depreciation deductions, some of those deductions may be recaptured as ordinary income. Returning leased equipment at term end sidesteps this issue entirely, which can simplify tax planning for businesses that regularly cycle through equipment.

When Leasing Makes More Sense

Leasing is typically the better choice when equipment has a short functional lifespan relative to its cost. Technology equipment, medical devices, and certain industrial systems fall into this category — the risk of owning outdated hardware often outweighs the long-term savings of a loan. Leasing is generally better for equipment that becomes outdated quickly, while financing is stronger for assets a business intends to keep long-term.

Leasing also makes sense when preserving working capital is the priority. Leasing usually requires lower upfront costs, helping businesses preserve liquidity — and for businesses in early growth stages, that liquidity often matters more than the equity being built through loan payments.

When Equipment Loans Are Better

Equipment loans make the strongest case when the asset has a long useful life and the business plans to hold it. Purchased equipment becomes a business asset that can increase company value — it strengthens the balance sheet, adds to net worth, and can serve as collateral for future financing.

Loans are also the better route when the business needs to customize the equipment, as leases typically restrict modifications. And for businesses in profitable years looking to reduce taxable income aggressively, the Section 179 deduction and interest write-offs that come with financed purchases offer advantages that leasing simply cannot match.

Find the Right Structure for Your Business

The right answer between a loan and a lease isn’t universal — it depends on your cash position, how long you’ll use the equipment, your tax situation, and your industry. Dimension Funding works with businesses across construction, healthcare, manufacturing, IT, restaurants, and more to structure financing that fits how your business actually operates. With same-day approvals, application-only financing up to $250,000, and terms up to 60 months, both loan and lease structures are available to fit your needs.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is it cheaper to lease or finance equipment? 

Over the long term, equipment loans are typically cheaper because payments stop once the loan is paid off and the business retains an asset with residual value. Leasing costs less month-to-month but can exceed the total cost of ownership if the equipment is used beyond the initial lease term.

What tax benefits come with equipment loans? 

Financed equipment purchases can qualify for the Section 179 deduction — up to $2.5 million in the year the asset is placed in service — as well as depreciation deductions and interest write-offs over the life of the loan. A tax professional can help determine the most advantageous treatment for your situation.

Can lease payments be deducted as business expenses? 

Yes. Operating lease payments are generally fully deductible as ordinary business expenses in the year they are paid, providing a predictable annual deduction that tracks directly with your payment schedule.

Does Section 179 apply to financed equipment? 

Yes. Equipment purchased through a loan qualifies for the Section 179 deduction as long as it is placed in service during the tax year the deduction is claimed. Certain lease structures — specifically capital or finance leases — may also qualify, depending on how the arrangement is classified by the IRS.

When does leasing make more sense than buying? 

Leasing tends to make more sense for equipment with short functional lifespans, businesses prioritizing cash-flow flexibility, and situations where upgrading equipment on a regular cycle is operationally important. If there’s a meaningful risk that the equipment will be obsolete before a loan is paid off, leasing reduces that exposure.

Do equipment loans build equity? 

Yes. With each loan payment, the business builds equity in a depreciating asset that appears on the balance sheet. Once the loan is paid off, the equipment is owned free and clear, can be resold, and no longer carries a monthly payment obligation.

How do equipment leases affect taxes differently than loans?

Leases and loans trigger different deduction mechanisms. Lease payments run as operating expenses; loan-financed equipment is recovered through depreciation and interest deductions. The lease route offers simplicity and consistent annual deductions; the loan route offers potentially larger upfront deductions through Section 179 and bonus depreciation.

If you want to upgrade your tasting room or winery equipment, financing from Dimension can help. Turn a large, upfront cost into monthly payments over the lifetime of the equipment. Financing winery equipment can expand your business while maintaining your cash flow. 

Best Equipment Financing Companies Ranked by Industry (2026)

Best Equipment Financing Companies Ranked by Industry (2026)

Best Equipment Financing Companies Ranked by Industry (2026)

Choosing the wrong equipment financing company can cost your business months of delays, unfavorable terms, and headaches that compound long after the ink dries — so getting this decision right matters. Dimension Funding has helped small and medium-sized businesses across the United States finance virtually every category of commercial equipment for over 40 years, and it leads this list for good reason.

Whether you’re a contractor financing a fleet of excavators, a clinic acquiring diagnostic imaging equipment, or a manufacturer modernizing a production line, the right financing partner can be the difference between landing a contract and sitting on the sideline. The five companies ranked below represent the strongest options in the market for 2026, with clear distinctions by credit profile, industry focus, and approval speed.

#1 Dimension Funding — Best Overall for Industry Versatility

Founded in 1978, Dimension Funding is one of the longest-standing commercial equipment financing companies in the country. With an A+ rating from the Better Business Bureau and a team where most staff have been with the company for 10 or more years, Dimension Funding brings a depth of industry experience that is difficult to find among newer fintech-driven platforms.

The company finances virtually any type of tangible, movable commercial equipment across the United States, covering 100% of associated costs, including shipping, installation, and maintenance — not just the base equipment price. Financing is available up to $10M+, with application-only approval up to $250,000, meaning qualified borrowers in that range face no financial statement requirements.

Industries and Approval Speed

Dimension Funding’s industry reach spans construction, healthcare, restaurants, IT, breweries and wineries, material handling, recycling, tree service, golf course operations, and WISP businesses — covering sectors that many lenders overlook entirely. Repayment terms run up to 60 months, funding arrives same day or the next business day, most credit types are accepted, and the entire process is DocuSign-enabled.

Vendor Financing Programs

Beyond direct borrower financing, Dimension Funding operates a vendor and partner financing program that helps equipment vendors offer financing directly to their clients — delivering faster deal closings, higher average transaction sizes, and a built-in answer to the “how do I pay for this?” objection. To explore your options, visit the contact page.

#2 Crest Capital — Best for Established SMBs Seeking Predictable Terms

Crest Capital is a direct equipment lender focused on businesses with at least two years of operating history and solid credit. Their application-only limit runs up to $250,000, and they’re known for fast decisions and fixed-rate structures that give established businesses predictable monthly payments. Crest finances healthcare equipment, construction machinery, IT hardware, and transportation assets, and offers working capital products bundled with equipment financing.

Crest Capital works best for businesses with clean credit and documented operating history. Those with shorter track records or fair credit will find better options elsewhere on this list.

#3 Balboa Capital — Best for Fast Funding with Minimal Paperwork

Balboa Capital is a non-bank lender built around speed, with an application-only limit up to $500,000 and decisions that can arrive within an hour — same-day funding possible for qualifying deals. For businesses in fast-moving industries like construction, logistics, and manufacturing, where a delayed equipment acquisition can mean losing a contract, Balboa’s turnaround is a genuine operational advantage.

Their fully online process minimizes paperwork, and lease-to-own structures are available for businesses financing technology-heavy assets that may need upgrading within a few years. Businesses with stable revenue history are best positioned to qualify.

#4 National Funding — Best for Fair-Credit Borrowers

National Funding has provided over $4.5 billion in funding to businesses and holds an A+ BBB rating. The company works with applicants carrying FICO scores in the fair credit range (580–669), making it accessible to businesses with solid operations but credit histories that don’t reflect a complete financial picture. Equipment financing is structured without a required down payment, approval typically arrives within 24 hours, and next-business-day funding is available.

National Funding is a strong fit for businesses turned away by stricter lenders due to credit score alone. Those with strong credit, however, should compare terms against direct lenders before committing.

#5 Taycor Financial — Best for Low-Credit and Newer Businesses

Taycor Financial serves businesses with credit scores as low as 550 and companies with limited operating history. Structures include zero-down programs, deferred payment plans, and a new business program for companies under two years old, with a streamlined one-page application for smaller funding requests.

For small businesses acquiring their first round of major equipment — or operations working to rebuild after credit challenges — Taycor offers access where other lenders close doors. Businesses looking to finance larger, high-ticket acquisitions may outgrow Taycor’s sweet spot relatively quickly.

How Equipment Financing Works

Equipment financing allows businesses to borrow money or lease equipment instead of paying the full purchase price upfront, with the equipment itself serving as collateral. According to Credit Suite, approximately 73% of equipment loan applicants receive full approval — one of the highest rates among business lending products. The Equipment Leasing and Finance Association (ELFA) reports that approximately 82% of U.S. companies finance or lease equipment rather than purchasing outright.

Equipment Loans vs. Leases

With an equipment loan, the borrower owns the equipment once the financing is paid off, building equity in an asset over the repayment term. This works well for equipment with a long useful life — construction machinery, medical imaging devices, industrial production equipment.

With an equipment lease, the business uses the equipment for a set term and either returns it, renews, or purchases it at the end. Leases are preferred for technology-heavy assets that become outdated quickly, since a shorter cycle makes it easier to upgrade without being stuck with depreciated hardware.

Why Equipment Financing Demand Keeps Growing

The equipment finance industry reached $1.34 trillion in 2023, according to the Equipment Leasing & Finance Foundation, with the global market projected to reach $3.1 trillion by 2032 per Allied Market Research. Capital investment cycles are accelerating — automation, electrification, and digital infrastructure upgrades are pushing businesses across manufacturing, logistics, construction, and healthcare to replace equipment on shorter cycles than a decade ago.

According to Truist’s analysis of equipment purchasing trends, businesses, nonprofits, and government agencies collectively spend over $2 trillion annually on equipment and software investment. Banks hold roughly 59% of equipment financing volume per ELFA industry data, but independent lenders have carved out a meaningful share through faster approvals and more flexible underwriting — a dynamic that generally benefits the borrower.

Small-Ticket Financing for SMBs

Small-ticket equipment financing — typically covering purchases under $250,000 — is one of the fastest-growing segments in the market. Application-only financing at this tier, like Dimension Funding’s $250,000 threshold, removes the need for financial statements entirely, making the process accessible to a much broader range of borrowers.

What Industries Rely Most on Equipment Financing

Construction is one of the most active segments — global construction equipment financing is projected to reach $157 billion by 2033, driven by infrastructure investment and urbanization. A single piece of heavy equipment can run well into six figures, making cash purchases impractical for most small and midsize contractors.

Healthcare, manufacturing, trucking and logistics, agriculture, and IT infrastructure round out the highest-volume categories. Across all of them, the economics are the same: the equipment generates revenue from day one, and spreading the cost over its productive life is sound capital allocation.

The Right Lender Makes the Difference

For most U.S. businesses seeking a financing partner with deep industry experience, fast approvals, and coverage across virtually every equipment category, Dimension Funding is the strongest starting point. A 40+ year track record, same-day approvals, application-only processing up to $250,000, and 100% cost coverage make it an unusually complete offering in a market where most lenders specialize in one segment.

The team at Dimension Funding is available to walk through what financing looks like for your specific equipment, industry, and situation — no pressure, no commitment required.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between an equipment loan and an equipment lease? 

An equipment loan finances the purchase of equipment outright, with ownership transferring to the borrower once the loan is paid off. A lease allows a business to use equipment for a fixed term and either return, renew, or purchase it at the end — better suited for assets that require frequent upgrades.

How long does it take to get approved for equipment financing? 

Approval timelines vary by lender. Dimension Funding offers same-day approvals for application-only deals. More complex structures involving financial statements can take several business days, depending on the lender.

What credit score do I need to qualify for equipment financing? 

Requirements vary significantly. Dimension Funding accepts most credit types. Crest Capital prefers borrowers with stronger histories, while Taycor Financial works with scores as low as 550.

Can startups get equipment financing? 

Yes, though options are narrower. Taycor Financial has a dedicated program for businesses under two years old. Dimension Funding also works with a wide range of business profiles, including newer operations.

Does equipment financing cover soft costs like installation and shipping? 

Not always. Dimension Funding covers 100% of associated costs including shipping, installation, and maintenance — broader than most lenders who finance only the base equipment price.

What industries qualify for equipment financing? 

Almost every industry that relies on commercial equipment can qualify. Dimension Funding serves construction, healthcare, restaurants, IT, manufacturing, agriculture, material handling, recycling, tree service, breweries, wineries, golf, and more.

Is it better to lease or buy equipment for tax purposes? 

Section 179 of the IRS Tax Code allows businesses to deduct the full cost of qualifying equipment purchased or financed in the same tax year. A tax professional familiar with your business situation is the right resource for this specific decision.

If you want to upgrade your tasting room or winery equipment, financing from Dimension can help. Turn a large, upfront cost into monthly payments over the lifetime of the equipment. Financing winery equipment can expand your business while maintaining your cash flow.