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Towing & Recovery5 min read

5 Questions to Ask Before You Finance Your Next Tow Truck

June 18, 2026

A tow truck only makes money when it's on the road, so the way you finance it matters as much as the truck you pick. Before you commit, walk through these five questions — they'll save you money and headaches over the life of the loan.

1. New or used — and what does that do to my terms?

A brand-new wrecker supports the longest terms and lowest rates because it holds its value. A clean used truck can be the smarter buy if it puts you to work for less, but expect a shorter term and a closer look at mileage and condition.

Ask for both scenarios side by side: the monthly payment on new vs. used, and the term you'd qualify for on each. The cheaper sticker isn't always the cheaper monthly.

2. What's the real all-in monthly cost?

Look past the rate. The number that matters is the monthly payment and any fees rolled in. Get the full picture — payment, term, down payment, and documentation fees — in writing before you decide.

Then compare that payment to what one extra call or one extra job a day brings in. If the truck pays for itself in a handful of tows a week, the math is working for you.

3. How fast can you actually fund?

When a truck comes up at the right price, slow financing loses the deal. Ask how quickly you can get a decision and how fast funds reach the seller — whether it's a dealer or a private party.

A complete application is what keeps things moving. Have your business details, the equipment information, and owner information ready so nothing stalls the file.

4. Does the lender actually understand towing?

There's a real difference between a generic lender and one that knows a rollback from a rotator and understands how a recovery operation earns. The right partner structures terms around your season and your call volume instead of forcing your business into a one-size box.

5. What happens when business is seasonal or slow?

Towing has busy stretches and quiet ones. Before you sign, understand your options if a slow month hits — and build a down payment and term that leave you breathing room rather than stretching you to the limit.

Want a straight answer on what you'd qualify for? A quick credit-based pre-qualification shows you where you stand — usually a soft pull, so it won't affect your score.

See what you qualify for

Pre-qualifying takes a few minutes — usually a soft credit pull, so it won't affect your score.