|
Lease
Types
While
many leasing companies may use the same name to describe a lease, the
actual terms and conditions written in their contracts often vary. At
Excel Capital LLC, we always recommend you carefully review any leasing
documents and ask your leasing company or Excel Capital LLC to explain
anything that is unclear.
True Lease
or Operating Lease
Best For:
Equipment that will rapidly depreciate or become obsolete in a short period
of time - i.e. some forms of computer equipment.
How It Works: In a true or operating lease, the leasing company
retains ownership of the equipment during the lease. True or operating
leases typically have no predetermined buyouts - customers usually classify
these payments as an operating expense.
Benefits:
Lower payments and typically the most tax-friendly form of leasing, Additionally,
true or operating leases offer three choices at the end of your lease:
· return the equipment to the leasing company,
· purchase the equipment at its fair market value or option amount
· extend your lease term.
Finance
Lease or Capital Lease
Best For:
If you would prefer to own the equipment when the lease agreement ends.
How It Works: The full purchase price, plus interest, is spread
over the length of the lease agreement.
Benefits: At the end of the lease, you own the equipment for a
minimal payment, usually $1.00 or a small percentage of the original purchase
price.
Skip Lease
Best For:
Seasonal businesses, agricultural companies, recreational services firms,
and other organizations which might require a more flexible payment schedule
due to seasonal business conditions.
How It Works: You specify the months when you would prefer not
to make payments.
Benefits: Flexible, in that it can be adjusted to irregular cash
flow.
Sale-Leaseback
Best For:
Customers who have purchased their equipment, but now have decided that
leasing would be more beneficial. Sale-leaseback also allows companies
to raise cash for other investments or cash flow purposes.
How It Works: The business that has already purchased equipment
sells it to a leasing company, which then takes ownership of the equipment
and leases it back to the business. Access Equipment Leasing requires
that the equipment be purchased within 90 days.
Benefits: The sale-leaseback allows you to put money back into
your business or into investments that appreciate rather than depreciate.
60
or 90-Day Deferred Lease
Best For:
Businesses that need equipment for operation and development that will
not immediately generate revenue.
How It Works: A 60 or 90-day deferred lease can be structured as
a finance lease or a true lease. With this form of lease, there is usually
no advance payment required, and the first payment is not due for 60 or
90 days after the lease begins.
Benefits: The equipment you need can be acquired with little to
no money up front and no payments for 2-3 months.
Master
Lease
Best For:
If your leasing requirements will likely be expanding over time.
How It Works: Separate lease schedules are created to accommodate
the addition of equipment over a period of time of your specification.
The master lease governs the basic terms and conditions. Each schedule
may include different end of term options and different lease lengths
but all will come under one "Master Lease."
Benefits: Acquiring additional equipment is made more convenient.
Municipal
Lease
Best For:
Local and state government organizations that wish to acquire equipment.
How It Works: The tax structures and details of municipal leases
will vary considerably from standard business leases. Seek the advice
of your financial advisor to better understand your municipal lease options.
Benefits: Municipal leases are designed specifically for local
and state government organizations.
Step
Up Lease
Best For:
Businesses whose financed equipment will allow more profitability over
a period of time.
How It Works:Payments increase according to a regular schedule
over the life of the lease.
Benefits: Payments can be structured to match current cash flow.
APPLY
NOW or CONTACT US
|