Chassis Age & Condition
Year, make, model, mileage, maintenance condition, title status, and expected remaining service life may affect how a used truck is evaluated.
Explore potential financing options for eligible used bucket trucks serving utility, telecom, tree-service, signage, and field-service work. Lenders may review the truck’s age, mileage, boom condition, maintenance history, seller documents, available cash down, and the overall business profile.
Bring the truck listing, aerial-equipment details, service records, and seller information into the financing conversation early.
MTM Financing is a broker that helps buyers explore potential financing options with third-party lenders. Financing availability, credit decisions, rates, terms, equipment eligibility, and down-payment requirements are determined by lenders after review of the applicant, business, truck, seller, and transaction structure.
Different bucket trucks are built for different jobs—from utilities and construction to maintenance and heavy lifting.
Features a straight extendable boom designed for maximum vertical reach with simple operation and efficiency.
Typical Price Range $75,000 – $160,000Jointed boom sections allow movement around obstacles, making it ideal for complex job sites and confined spaces.
Typical Price Range $85,000 – $180,000Built with insulated booms and buckets to protect operators working near live electrical systems.
Typical Price Range $90,000 – $220,000A versatile combo unit that pairs a lifting boom with a worker bucket. Used for jobs requiring both elevated access and lifting capability in one truck.
Typical Price Range $110,000 – $280,000+Used bucket truck financing is usually evaluated as a complete equipment purchase. The chassis, aerial system, records, seller, and buyer profile can all shape which lender options may be available.
Year, make, model, mileage, maintenance condition, title status, and expected remaining service life may affect how a used truck is evaluated.
The aerial unit, working height, boom manufacturer, hydraulic system, insulation classification, body configuration, and visible condition can all matter.
Available maintenance records, dielectric tests, annual inspections, repair documentation, and known issues can help clarify the asset’s condition.
Dealer or private-seller details, invoice quality, down payment, credit profile, business activity, and intended work may shape potential financing paths.
A clean listing and complete equipment information do not guarantee approval, but they can help lenders understand the purchase more quickly and determine whether the truck fits their program guidelines.
MTM Financing is a broker, not a lender. Lenders determine equipment eligibility, financing availability, rates, terms, and down-payment requirements after reviewing the full transaction.
A used bucket truck can give a working crew access to revenue-producing aerial equipment while keeping the total purchase more aligned with the budget and work already on the schedule.
For many contractors and service businesses, the right used truck is not simply the lowest-priced unit—it is the asset that can safely support the work and the payment plan.
A used truck can reduce the purchase price compared with a new equivalent, which may help keep the amount financed, cash-down target, and operating payment more manageable.
When a crew needs to replace a truck or add capacity, used-equipment listings may provide more immediate choices than waiting for a newly built chassis and aerial package.
Working height, body storage, boom setup, payload needs, and job-site access should matter as much as price. A truck that fits the work can make a better operating decision.
Set aside room for inspections, maintenance, insurance, registration, and working capital. Use the commercial truck finance calculator to compare payment scenarios before you decide.
Whether a used bucket truck is eligible for financing depends on the truck, aerial equipment, condition, seller, buyer profile, and lender guidelines. MTM Financing does not guarantee eligibility, financing, rates, terms, or approval.
Two used bucket trucks can look similar online and create very different ownership decisions. Compare the operating value, documentation, and purchase structure before you focus only on the monthly number.
Start with the jobs, crew, reach, payload, storage, and access requirements—not simply the year or asking price. A useful truck has to make sense in the field.
Mileage and engine condition are important, but so are boom operation, hydraulics, dielectric testing, utility-body wear, and the history of repairs or inspections.
A clear listing, VIN, title status, service records, invoice, and seller contact can make a potential transaction easier for a lender to understand.
Cash down may affect the transaction structure, but you also need room for any maintenance, insurance, testing, or registration costs that follow the purchase.
This section is for purchase planning only. MTM Financing does not inspect equipment or provide mechanical, safety, tax, legal, or business advice. Lenders independently determine equipment eligibility and financing options after reviewing the transaction.
These sample scenarios show how purchase price, cash down, estimated rate, and term can change the monthly payment on a used bucket truck. They are planning examples—not offers or quotes.
Illustrations only. These examples do not represent an offer, quote, financing decision, or guaranteed rate or payment. Actual options, if any, are determined by a third-party lender after review of the applicant, business, bucket truck, seller, and full transaction structure.
Credit can matter, but lenders may evaluate the full used-equipment purchase. The truck, available cash down, business story, and requested structure may all play a role in what can be considered.
These are practical parts of the purchase that may help shape a lender conversation. They do not guarantee financing or a specific rate or term.
Credit history, payment behavior, current obligations, and any recent improvement may help lenders understand the applicant’s position.
A meaningful cash contribution may reduce the amount financed and can change how the overall purchase is structured for lender review.
The bucket truck’s year, mileage, aerial-equipment condition, documentation, price, and seller can help determine whether it fits a lender’s guidelines.
Revenue, bank activity, relevant experience, contracts, and the truck’s expected use may help lenders understand the operating story behind the purchase.
MTM Financing is a broker, not a lender. Financing options, if any, are determined by third-party lenders after review of the applicant, business, truck, seller, and complete transaction structure.
MTM Financing helps organize the truck purchase and present it for third-party lender review. The details and timing can vary by buyer, equipment, seller, and lender requirements.
Start with the listing, price, seller, chassis information, and aerial-equipment details available.
Review the intended work, business profile, requested amount, and potential cash-down contribution.
MTM may help identify lender programs that could fit the complete transaction for review.
When more documentation is needed, the truck, seller, and buyer details are kept organized through the next step.
MTM Financing is a broker, not a lender. We do not make credit decisions or guarantee financing. Any potential options are subject to third-party lender review and their program guidelines.
Used aerial-equipment purchases can bring extra questions around truck condition, lender requirements, and documentation. Here are direct answers to the questions buyers commonly ask.
MTM Financing helps buyers explore potential financing options with third-party lenders for eligible used bucket truck purchases. Whether options are available depends on lender review of the buyer, business, truck, aerial equipment, seller, requested amount, and overall transaction structure.
There is no single age limit that applies to every lender. A lender may consider the truck’s year, mileage, condition, valuation, boom or aerial-equipment details, maintenance history, and expected remaining service life. Older units can be evaluated differently than newer used trucks.
Available records can help explain the asset. Maintenance history, annual inspections, dielectric testing where applicable, repair documentation, and known aerial-equipment details may help clarify the truck’s condition. Requirements and how those records are weighed vary by lender and transaction.
Potentially, but private-seller purchases can be reviewed differently from dealership purchases. A clear bill of sale, title status, VIN, seller contact information, equipment details, and reliable purchase documentation can be especially important. Some lender programs may have seller guidelines.
There is no universal down-payment requirement. A lender may consider credit and business profile, truck age and condition, price, seller, requested term, and the overall transaction. More cash down can change the structure, but it does not guarantee financing, approval, or a particular rate.
Newer businesses and first-time owners may be considered, but lender options can vary. Relevant experience, intended work, available cash down, the strength of the equipment file, and the buyer’s overall credit and financial profile may all be part of the review.
Information on this page is for general planning purposes and is not a financing offer, approval, or lender commitment. MTM Financing is a broker; third-party lenders determine eligibility, financing availability, rates, terms, and other requirements.