Lift financing for the work above.
Section 179 on this year's lifts.
Put a boom or scissor to work before year end and the full first-year deduction can follow it into your return.
Boom Lifts
Articulating and telescopic booms from 40 to 185 feet — financed around utilization, not the calendar.
Scissor Lifts
Electric slabs and rough-terrain diesels alike. Terms sized to rental rates and crew schedules.
Fleet Packages
Multiple units on one file — one approval, staggered deliveries, and a single payment calendar.
The desk behind the numbers.
One underwriting desk that reads lift files all day — hours, deck height, and the work the unit is booked for.
Write-offs that favor buying this quarter.
Section 179 and bonus depreciation change what a lift really costs. Here is how operators are structuring this year's orders.
Application-only ceiling raised to $500,000
Most lift deals now close on the application alone — full financials only above the line.
Used booms are pricing well at auction
Late-model used units with clean hour meters are underwriting close to new-unit terms.
Seasonal payment schedules for winter slowdowns
Deferred-start and skip-payment structures keep notes matched to billable weeks.
Rental fleets run on timing.
Re-fleeting season, auction season, and utilization curves — how rental houses structure lift purchases through the year.
Numbers back the same day.
Tell us the unit and the term. The desk answers with rate, payment, and first-payment date.
More from the lift desk.
Articulating Booms
Up-and-over reach for congested sites — knuckle booms financed new or used.
Telescopic Booms
Straight-stick reach to 185 feet. Structured for steel, glazing, and utility work.
Electric Scissors
Slab units for interior trades — quiet, clean, and cheap to run between rents.
Browse the lift lineup
Questions about a quote?
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