Financing Construction Equipment: What Contractors Should Know
March 25, 2026
Construction runs on equipment, and the right financing keeps your cash free for materials, payroll, and the next bid. Here's what contractors should keep in mind when financing yellow iron and attachments.
Match the term to the equipment's life
Heavy machines like excavators and loaders hold value and earn for years, so they support longer terms. Smaller or higher-wear equipment is usually financed over a shorter period. Lining the term up with how long the machine will earn keeps your payments sensible.
New, used, and auction buys
Contractors buy across the board — dealer-new, used from another outfit, and auction units. All can be financed, but auction and private-party purchases need clean documentation and sometimes an inspection. Confirm your lender handles the channel you're buying from before you bid.
Seasonality and project-based cash flow
Construction income comes in waves. A down payment that leaves you a cushion, and a term that keeps payments manageable through slower months, beats stretching for the lowest rate. Build for the slow season, not just the busy one.
Keep your working capital free
Financing the equipment instead of paying cash preserves the capital you need to float payroll and materials between draws. That flexibility is often worth more than owning a machine outright on day one.
See what you qualify for
Pre-qualifying takes a few minutes — usually a soft credit pull, so it won't affect your score.