When planning a major project, acquiring essential equipment like cranes, excavators, or earthmoving machinery is a significant investment. These assets are critical to project success, but they come with a hefty price tag. The question many businesses face is: “Should we pay cash or finance the purchase?”
At Quadrent, we help businesses make smart financial decisions through tailored vendor finance solutions, including matching the finance term to the length of your project. Here’s why financing your equipment often makes more sense than paying upfront.
Paying cash may seem simple, but it comes with a hidden cost: opportunity. Every dollar spent upfront on equipment is a dollar you cannot invest elsewhere.
For example, imagine you have $500,000 in cash. You could:
Calculation:
By financing, you not only keep your cash working for you, but you also gain potential investment income. Over five years, that $500,000 could grow to roughly $864,000 (compounded annually at 12%), demonstrating the real cost of paying upfront.
The tax benefits of leasing instead of paying cash can be substantial for significant asset acquisitions like cranes or earthmoving equipment.
Cash is powerful, but it’s often smarter when used to leverage debt, rather than spent outright. By financing equipment, you can:
For example, using equipment finance at 7% interest to fund a $500,000 excavator keeps your $500,000 cash available. If your business can earn 12% elsewhere, you effectively earn a 5% net benefit on your cash by borrowing at a lower rate than your return. This is smart leverage in action.
Many businesses assume all loans cost the same, but equipment finance is often the cheapest form of debt compared to a standard working capital facility.
Example: Financing a $500,000 piece of machinery over 5 years:
By choosing equipment finance, you save over $50,000 in interest alone, making it a much more cost-effective option than drawing on general business loans.
Another important difference is what the loan is secured against:
This distinction matters. Equipment finance isolates risk to the machine you’re buying, protecting other assets and reducing personal exposure.
Paying cash offers no tax relief, but financing provides clear benefits:
Example: Financing $500,000 at 7% interest → $35,000 interest first year. If your corporate tax rate is 30%, you save $10,500 in tax in year one alone. Paying cash yields no such benefit.
Unexpected costs are a reality in construction and infrastructure projects. Paying cash upfront leaves your business exposed. Financing allows you to:
Liquidity can mean the difference between a project thriving or stalling.
Financing your equipment does more than solve today’s funding need - it builds your creditworthiness for future projects.
Lenders look favourably on businesses with a solid repayment history. Establishing this track record makes it easier to secure larger loans for bigger projects down the road.
For large assets like cranes and earthmoving machinery, financing offers multiple advantages over paying cash upfront:
At Quadrent, we specialise in vendor finance solutions that make these benefits a reality. If you’re planning a major project, financing your equipment strategically can give your business the flexibility, savings, and growth potential you need.
|
Factor |
Paying cash |
Equipment finance |
Working capital loan |
|
Interest cost |
$0 |
Low (7%) ≈ $101,000 |
High (11%) ≈ $155,000 |
|
Opportunity cost |
High (cash tied up) |
Low (cash invested at 12%) |
Medium |
|
Security |
N/A |
Asset itself |
Business/Owner property |
|
Tax benefit |
None |
Interest deductible → $10,500 first year |
Interest deductible |
|
Credit building |
None |
Yes |
Yes |