Other Assets, new, used, dealer or private.
Chippers, IT and medical gear, gym and hospitality fit-outs, mobile plant — the assets that don't fit a neat category. The rule is simple: if the equipment earns income, there's a good chance we can finance it.
- Chippers & arborist gear
- Medical & dental
- IT & technology
- Gym & fitness
- Hospitality equipment
- Anything income-producing
We read the file before we pick the lender.
We read the asset, not the category
Lenders get cautious about equipment they don't see often. We frame what the asset does and how it earns, so the file reads clearly.
Income is the anchor
If the gear generates revenue, that's the story a lender needs. We build the file around the cash it produces, not the label on it.
Bring us the odd ones
The unusual asset, the mixed-use rig, the thing the last broker wouldn't touch — that's exactly the kind of file worth a call.
Worth a read
All resources →Bank vs non-bank equipment finance — what the 200bps actually buys
For a lot of deals the real choice isn't bank or non-bank — it's whether chasing a marginal bank approval for weeks beats going straight to a lender that wants the deal. What the rate gap actually costs, and why downtime usually costs more.
Fit-outWorkshop fit-out finance — chattel mortgage vs commercial lease vs operating lease
Three ways to fund a fit-out, and how each lands on tax and the balance sheet. A plain-English read for trades, hospitality and retail.
AgricultureAg machinery finance — the seasonal repayment options most brokers skip
Farm cash flow doesn't run monthly. The seasonal, annual and skip-month repayment structures that line equipment finance up with how the year actually pays.
Got an unusual asset?
Tell us what it is and what it earns — we'll tell you straight if it's financeable.
