- Sub-640 credit with strong collateral.
- Used gear with clear resale value.
- Ownership + longer useful life.
- Higher down if sub-600.
- Strict valuation caps LTV on older gear.
- Possible prepayment penalties.
Secured equipment loans can still be attainable with challenged credit. Use this quick snapshot and lender-style criteria to position your application for approval.
Credit score remains a key input, but equipment loans are secured by the asset. That security lets many lenders approve applicants with fair or poor credit when other strength factors are present.
Key takeaway: Pair a challenged score with strong revenue, meaningful down payment, and solid collateral to raise approval odds and lower APR.
| Credit Score | Rating | What to Expect |
|---|---|---|
| 740+ | Excellent | Broadest access; lowest rates and longest terms. |
| 680–739 | Good | Competitive pricing; high approval odds. |
| 620–679 | Fair | Generally financeable; modestly higher rates or shorter terms. |
| 580–619 | Poor | Fewer lenders; asset-based or specialty programs likely. |
| <580 | Very Poor | Harder to qualify; expect higher APR and stricter conditions. |
What lenders look for—and the fastest path to a “yes,” even with sub-620 scores.
Popular category with strong resale (e.g., skid steer, excavator, forklift) → better LTV & terms.
6–12 months bank statements and signed contracts/backlog to support payments.
Often approved with higher down (20–30%) and shorter terms; consider newer gear.
Short, clear ROI story (jobs lined up) can offset credit weaknesses.
Weak resale = low LTV and tougher approvals. Stick to mainstream models where possible.
Shotgunning applications in a week can increase APR or trigger denials—prequal first.
Compare 2–3 offers (no score impact). Ask about rate buy-downs and prepay terms up front.
Prioritize newer, liquid units with clear VIN/serial and photos. Bring 10–30% down if <620.
Bind insurance, finalize bill of sale, confirm any prepayment language. Typical funding in 1–5 business days.
Smaller, faster cards. Same information density—optimized for scanability.
| Option | Approval | Speed | Typical APR | Ownership | Best Use |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Asset-Based Loan | Med–High | Med | ~9%–22% | Yes | Strong collateral |
| Equipment Lease | High | Fast | ~10%–24% | Maybe | Cash-flow friendly |
| Vendor/Captive | Medium | Med | Promo→Market | Yes/Lease | New gear incentives |
| Independent Finance | High | Fast | ~11%–26% | Yes/Lease | Used gear |
| Subprime/Fintech | Very High | Fastest | ~16%–28%+ | Yes/Lease | <600 scores |
| SBA-Backed | Low (sub-600) | Slow | Lowest | Yes | Large purchases |
Benchmark realistic APRs and terms by credit tier, then use levers (down payment, collateral, documentation) to improve pricing and approval odds.
Context matters: newer equipment, bigger down payments, and stronger cash flow can push you to a better tier even with a lower score.
| Lender Type | Typical APR (Bad Credit) | Term Range | Down | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Independent Finance | ~11%–26% | 24–60 mo | 10%–25% | Flexible, asset-forward underwriting. |
| Subprime / Fintech | ~16%–28%+ | 12–48 mo | 15%–30% | Fastest approvals; watch total cost. |
| Vendor / Captive | Promo → Market | 24–72 mo | 0%–20% | Promos often exclude <600 FICO. |
| Asset-Based Loans | ~9%–22% | 24–72 mo | 10%–30% | Collateral value drives approval. |
Every 5% more down can shave APR or extend term eligibility.
Better collateral = better rate bands and longer terms.
Bank statements and signed backlog can offset score weaknesses.
A punch-list you can actually use. Tackle these in order to boost approvals and lower total cost.
Shop programs without stacking hard inquiries. Convert to hard pull only when you’re ready to sign.
Lower LTV = better pricing and longer terms—especially under 620 FICO.
Stronger collateral offsets weak credit. Avoid niche gear if approvals are tight.
6–12 months bank statements + signed contracts/backlog prove repayment capacity.
Co-signers with 660+ can widen lender options and trim APR.
24–48 month structures can clear underwriting when 60+ months won’t.
Explain job backlog, expected monthly revenue from the equipment, and payback period.
Multiple hard pulls in a week can spike pricing or trigger denials.
Underwriters verify. Mismatches delay or kill deals.
Weak collateral hurts approval odds and LTV caps.
Offer +5% more down or autopay enrollment for a lower APR band.
Ask for two quotes (shorter vs longer). You may qualify at a shorter term today, then refinance later.
Request a declining prepay or early payoff discount after 12 months.
| Metric | Healthy Target | Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|
| DSCR (Debt Service Coverage) | ≥ 1.25× | Shows cash flow cushion to cover payments. |
| LTV (Loan-to-Value) | ≤ 80–90% | Lower LTV reduces risk and rate. |
| Bank Balance Cushion | 1–2× monthly payment | Prevents NSF flags during underwriting. |
| Inquiry Control | ≤ 3 hard pulls / 30 days | Avoids pricing hits from clustered pulls. |
Straight answers for bad-credit equipment buyers—plus practical paths when a standard loan isn’t the move right now.
| Alternative | Use When | Typical Cost | Speed | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Working Capital (short-term) | Need cash to secure equipment or down payment | Higher APR; weekly/bi-weekly payments | Fastest | Bridge to approval; refinance into equipment loan |
| Rent-to-Own | Thin credit file; want “prove & own” path | Higher total cost than loans | Fast | Great for used gear; watch condition & buyout terms |
| Vendor/Captive | New gear with promos | Promo → Market | Medium | Promos may exclude <600 FICO; strong warranty/service |
| Refinance Later | Accept higher rate now to start jobs | Starts high → lower after 12–18 mo | Varies | Ask about prepay/buy-down to avoid penalties |
| SBA (7(a)/504) | Bigger purchases; improving credit | Lowest bank-linked | Slow | Heavy documentation; sub-600 usually not eligible |
Equipment loans/leases are secured by the machine (lower APR, longer terms). Working capital is unsecured or cash-flow secured (faster, shorter terms, higher cost). Many buyers use WC to build the down payment, then finance the machine on better terms.
Yes—used is often easier, provided it’s a liquid category with verifiable market value. Expect lower LTV and sometimes shorter terms for older/high-hour units. Clean photos, serial/VIN, and a bill of sale help approvals.
Co-signers/guarantors with stronger credit can widen lender options, reduce down payment, and improve APR. EIN-only is rare for bad credit unless the business has strong financials and time-in-business; most programs still require a personal guarantee.
Subprime/fintech and some independent lenders may charge flat or declining prepay fees. Ask for a declining prepay or buy-down option after 12 months. Many borrowers refinance to better rates once payment history improves.
Banks/credit unions have the best pricing but stricter cutoffs; sub-600 is usually a no. Independent equipment finance and subprime/fintech are more flexible and faster, trading off higher APR/shorter terms.
Business cash reserves, trade-ins, sale of old equipment, or a short-term working-capital bridge. Personal funds are common for small operators. Be ready to verify the source of funds if requested.
Independent and fintech programs can fund in 1–5 business days after docs and insurance are ready. Vendor/captive and bank options can take longer but may offer better terms if eligible.
Yes, but tighter: expect higher down (20–30%), shorter terms, and a focus on liquid equipment. Showing signed contracts or partner experience helps a lot.