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Equipment Financing for Small Businesses: Rates, Requirements & Process

SC
Sarah Chen

Senior Business Finance Advisor

8 min read

February 20, 2025

Equipment financing lets you acquire the tools your business needs without depleting cash reserves. Here's how it works and how to get the best deal.

How Equipment Financing Works

Equipment financing allows businesses to purchase equipment using the equipment itself as collateral. The lender typically funds 80-100% of the equipment cost, and you repay over a fixed term (usually 2-7 years) while using the equipment. At the end of the term, you own the equipment outright. This structure makes equipment financing one of the most accessible forms of business credit — even for businesses with limited history or imperfect credit — because the lender\'s risk is backed by a tangible asset they can recover if you default.

Equipment Financing vs. Equipment Leasing

Financing (a loan) results in ownership — you build equity in the equipment with each payment and own it free and clear at payoff. Leasing is essentially a rental agreement — you make payments for the use of the equipment but typically don\'t own it at the end of the lease (though many leases have a purchase option). The right choice depends on: how long the equipment will be useful, whether technology obsolescence is a concern, your tax situation (leases can be 100% expensed vs. depreciated with loans), and whether ownership matters for collateral or resale value.

Current Equipment Financing Rates

Equipment financing rates in 2025 range from approximately 5-7% APR for bank equipment loans to 8-18% APR for non-bank commercial lenders. SBA 504 loans, which can be used for major equipment, offer rates tied to U.S. Treasury rates — currently in the 6-8% range for 10-year terms. Online equipment financing lenders typically charge 10-25% APR for smaller amounts or less-established businesses.

What Equipment Qualifies?

Virtually any tangible business asset qualifies: commercial kitchen equipment, construction machinery, medical and dental equipment, manufacturing machinery, vehicles and trucks, technology hardware, agricultural equipment, and fitness equipment. Software and other intangibles generally do not qualify. The equipment must be for business use and have a verifiable market value.

Documentation Required

Equipment financing typically requires less documentation than unsecured loans. Most lenders require: equipment quote or invoice, 3-6 months of business bank statements, basic business information (EIN, address, time in business), and personal information for a credit check. For amounts over $150,000, expect to also provide business tax returns and financial statements.

Section 179 Tax Deduction

One significant advantage of equipment financing is the Section 179 tax deduction, which allows businesses to deduct the full purchase price of qualifying equipment in the year of purchase rather than depreciating it over time. In 2025, the Section 179 deduction limit is $1,160,000. This means a $100,000 equipment purchase can reduce your taxable income by $100,000 in year one — significantly reducing the net cost of the acquisition. Consult your tax advisor about how this applies to your specific situation.

Approvd connects businesses with equipment lenders across industries. Explore equipment financing options with no impact to your credit score. Use our loan calculator to model your payments.

Frequently Asked Questions

What types of equipment can be financed?

Almost any business equipment qualifies: manufacturing machinery, commercial kitchen equipment, medical and dental equipment, construction equipment (excavators, cranes), vehicles (trucks, vans, forklifts), technology (servers, workstations), office furniture, and agricultural equipment. The key requirement is that the equipment must be used for business purposes and have identifiable resale value as collateral.

Should I lease or finance equipment?

Finance (buy) when the equipment has a long useful life, won't become obsolete quickly, and you want to build equity. Lease when the equipment becomes outdated frequently (technology, vehicles), when you want lower monthly payments, or when preserving capital is critical. A $1 buyout lease (capital lease) is essentially the same as financing. An operating lease is better for equipment you expect to return and upgrade at term end.

How long are typical equipment loan terms?

Equipment loan terms typically range from 2 to 7 years, with the term roughly aligned to the equipment's useful life. A truck might get a 5-year term; a commercial oven might get 7 years; a computer system might only get 3 years. Longer terms mean lower monthly payments but more total interest paid. Match the term to how long you expect to use the equipment productively.

Can a startup get equipment financing?

Yes — equipment financing is one of the most accessible products for startups because the equipment itself serves as collateral. Many equipment lenders will approve startups with strong personal credit (650+) even with no business history. The equipment reduces the lender's risk — if you default, they repossess the equipment. This makes equipment financing significantly more accessible than working capital or business term loans for new businesses.

What interest rates should I expect on equipment financing?

Equipment financing rates typically range from 4% to 30% APR depending on credit score, time in business, and equipment type. Well-qualified borrowers (700+ credit, 2+ years in business) can get rates of 5–8% through banks or SBA. Online equipment lenders charge 8–20%. Newer businesses or lower credit scores see rates of 15–30%. Always compare the total cost of financing (not just the monthly payment) across multiple lenders before deciding.

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