How Printer Rental for Business Works in Ohio
How Printer Rental for Business Works in Ohio from application to funding — here’s exactly how medical equipment financing and working capital funding works for practices in Ohio. No jargon, no surprises, just the real process from start to finish.
How Equipment Financing Works — Step by Step
Five steps from initial inquiry to equipment delivery. Most application-only deals close in 3–7 business days.
Submit Your Application
Fill out our online application or call us directly. We’ll ask about your practice, equipment needs, and basic financials. For deals under $250k with strong profiles, this may be all we need.
- Practice details (specialty, location, time in business)
- Equipment type and vendor quote (if available)
- Estimated funding amount
- Basic revenue and credit profile
Document Review
We’ll request supporting documents based on deal size and structure. Smaller deals are streamlined; larger transactions require full financials.
- 3–6 months business bank statements
- Vendor quote or equipment specifications
- Driver’s license and voided check
- Larger deals: P&L, tax returns, AR/AP aging
Underwriting & Approval
Our underwriting team reviews cash flow, credit, time-in-business, and equipment collateral. We look at the full picture — not just credit score.
- Cash flow analysis (revenue vs. debt service)
- Credit review (personal and business)
- Equipment value and useful life assessment
- Approval decision typically within 24–48 hours
Terms & Documentation
Once approved, we present financing options — loan vs. lease, payment structures, down payment requirements. You choose what fits your cash flow.
- Review financing structures (EFA, FMV, seasonal, etc.)
- Lock in rate, term, and payment schedule
- Sign agreements electronically
- Coordinate with your equipment vendor
Funding & Delivery
We pay your vendor directly. Equipment ships to your practice. You start making payments on the agreed schedule — typically 30 days after delivery.
- Vendor receives funds via wire or ACH
- Equipment delivered and installed
- First payment due 30–45 days post-delivery
- Ongoing support for add-ons or upgrades
You’re Live
Equipment is operational, payments are scheduled, and your practice has preserved working capital for staffing, supplies, and growth. Welcome aboard.
What Happens When — A Typical Timeline
Here’s how a standard equipment financing deal progresses from inquiry to funding.
Day 0 — Initial Contact
You submit an application online or speak with our team. We discuss equipment type, practice profile, and estimated funding needs.
Day 1 — Document Request
We send a document checklist via email. Bank statements, vendor quotes, and basic entity info are uploaded to our secure portal.
Day 2–3 — Underwriting
Our team reviews cash flow, credit, and equipment details. We may request clarification or additional documentation during this window.
Day 4 — Approval Decision
You receive a formal approval with financing options. We walk through structures, rates, and payment schedules.
Day 5 — Documentation Signing
Electronic agreements are sent for signature. We coordinate directly with your vendor to confirm equipment availability and delivery timeline.
Day 6–7 — Funding
Funds are wired to vendor. Equipment ships to your practice. First payment typically due 30–45 days post-delivery.
Faster for Strong Applicants
Practices with excellent credit, strong cash flow, and clean financials can move faster — some deals close in 2–3 business days. Startups and complex structures take longer but are still feasible.
Larger Deals (>$500k)
High-dollar equipment packages require additional underwriting: full financial statements, tax returns, equipment appraisals, and vendor coordination. Timeline extends to 10–14 business days but pricing improves with scale.
Working Capital vs. Equipment
Working capital loans (no equipment collateral) have slightly different underwriting criteria. Expect more emphasis on cash flow, bank deposits, and use-of-funds planning.
What We’ll Ask For
Here’s the full checklist. Not all deals require every item — we’ll tell you exactly what’s needed based on your scenario.
All Applicants
- Completed application form
- Driver’s license (personal guarantee)
- Voided business check
- 3–6 months business bank statements
Equipment Financing
- Vendor quote or equipment invoice
- Equipment specs (make, model, serial if used)
- Installation and soft cost breakdown
- Vendor W-9 (we coordinate this)
Larger Deals (>$250k)
- Year-to-date P&L and balance sheet
- Prior-year business tax return
- AR/AP aging (for group practices)
- Entity documents (articles, EIN letter)
Startups & New Practices
If you’ve been in business less than 12 months, we’ll also request: personal tax returns, business plan or pro forma, capital injection evidence, and professional resumes. A larger down payment or security deposit may be required to offset limited operating history.
What We Look At During Underwriting
We evaluate the full picture — not just credit score. Here’s what our underwriting team considers.
Cash Flow
Monthly revenue, deposit consistency, and ability to service debt alongside operating expenses.
Credit Profile
Personal and business credit scores, payment history, existing debt load, and credit utilization.
Time in Business
Operating history, seasonality patterns, and revenue trajectory. Startups are considered with strong plans.
Equipment Value
Collateral assessment — new vs. used, resale market, technological obsolescence, and useful life.
Credit Score Guidelines
We’re flexible, but here’s the general range:
| Credit Tier | FICO Range | Typical Terms |
|---|---|---|
| Excellent | 720+ | Best rates, 0% down options, application-only under $250k |
| Good | 680–719 | Competitive rates, 10–15% down, full doc for larger deals |
| Fair | 640–679 | Higher rates, 15–20% down, stronger cash flow required |
| Below 640 | Case-by-case | Higher down payment, co-signer or additional collateral may help |
How Payments Work
You choose the structure that matches your practice’s cash flow. Here are the most common payment schedules.
Standard Fixed Monthly
Equal payments every month for the duration of the term. Simple, predictable, and easy to budget. Most popular option for stable practices.
- Same payment every month
- Terms: 24–84 months
- First payment 30–45 days after delivery
Seasonal / Step Payment
Payments adjust to match your revenue cycle. Lower payments during slow months, higher during peak seasons. Common for practices with uneven reimbursement schedules.
- Custom schedule aligned to cash flow
- Front-loaded or back-loaded options
- Total cost slightly higher than fixed
Deferred First Payment
First payment pushed out 60–90 days to give you time to ramp up revenue with new equipment. Good for practices adding new service lines.
- No payment for first 2–3 months
- Standard monthly after deferral period
- Interest may accrue during deferral
Revenue-Based (Working Capital)
Daily or weekly ACH tied to a percentage of revenue. Flexible but requires careful cash management. Typically used for working capital, not equipment.
- Payments adjust with revenue fluctuations
- Daily ACH debit from business account
- Higher total cost than term loans
We Don’t Stack Daily-Pay Advances
If you’re currently stacked with multiple daily-pay MCAs, ask us about refinancing into a single structured term loan. It’s almost always cheaper and less stressful than running multiple daily debits simultaneously.