Buyer's Desk
How to Finance Refurbished Medical Imaging Equipment
April 18, 2026 · 8 min · Medical Imaging Specialists

Practical considerations, risk points, and what to ask before you buy, service, move, or maintain imaging equipment.
Considering a lease instead?
Equipment, service, PMs, parts, and applications support can be bundled into one monthly payment.
If this article is about financing, ROI, service contracts, or total cost of ownership, the leasing model may simplify the decision.
Target Keyword Phrase: financing refurbished medical imaging equipment
Buying a refurbished CT scanner, MRI, or PET/CT system is already a smart financial move — you’re getting proven clinical capability at 40–60% less than new equipment pricing. But even at refurbished prices, medical imaging systems represent a significant capital investment. A refurbished 64-slice CT scanner might run $150,000–$350,000. A refurbished 1.5T MRI can land between $200,000 and $500,000. For many facilities — especially outpatient centers, independent clinics, and growing hospital networks — writing a check for that amount isn’t realistic or even advisable.
That’s where financing comes in. The right financing structure lets you acquire the imaging equipment you need now, start generating revenue immediately, and spread the cost over time in a way that works for your cash flow.
This guide walks through the most common financing options for refurbished medical imaging equipment, what to watch out for, and how to structure a deal that protects your facility financially.
Why Finance Instead of Paying Cash?
Even if your facility has the capital available, there are strong reasons to finance imaging equipment rather than paying outright:
- Preserve working capital. A $300,000 cash outlay ties up money you could use for staffing, renovations, marketing, or other revenue-generating investments.
- Start earning sooner. Financing lets you install the system and begin scanning patients — generating revenue — while paying over time. In many cases, the equipment pays for itself within the first 12–18 months of operation.
- Tax advantages. Depending on your structure, lease payments may be fully deductible as operating expenses. Equipment loans may qualify for Section 179 deductions or bonus depreciation. Your accountant should weigh in, but the tax benefits of financing are often substantial.
- Manage obsolescence. Technology in medical imaging evolves. Financing — especially leasing — gives you flexibility to upgrade when the time is right rather than being locked into a system you paid full price for.
Common Financing Options for Refurbished Imaging Equipment
1. Equipment Loans (Traditional Financing)
An equipment loan works like a standard business loan: a lender provides the capital, you purchase the equipment, and you repay the loan over a set term with interest. The equipment itself typically serves as collateral.
Typical terms:
- Loan amounts: $100,000–$1,000,000+
- Terms: 3–7 years
- Interest rates: 6–12% depending on credit, facility history, and lender
- Down payment: 10–20% is common
Best for: Established facilities with strong credit that want to own the equipment outright at the end of the term. Ownership means you can depreciate the asset and have no restrictions on resale or upgrades.
Watch out for: Some lenders unfamiliar with refurbished medical equipment may require additional documentation or appraisals. Work with a lender who understands the imaging equipment market — they’ll move faster and offer better terms.
2. Capital Leases (Finance Leases)
A capital lease is structured similarly to a loan — you’re essentially financing the purchase — but it’s structured as a lease agreement. At the end of the term, you typically have a $1 buyout option or a fixed purchase price that transfers ownership.
Typical terms:
- Terms: 3–5 years
- Monthly payments comparable to a loan
- Ownership transfers at end of lease
Best for: Facilities that want the tax benefits of leasing during the term but plan to own the equipment long-term. Capital leases often have slightly more flexible credit requirements than traditional loans.
3. Operating Leases (Fair Market Value Leases)
An operating lease is a true rental arrangement. You make monthly payments for the use of the equipment, and at the end of the term, you can return it, renew the lease, or purchase it at fair market value.
Typical terms:
- Terms: 3–5 years
- Lower monthly payments than capital leases or loans
- No ownership at end of term (unless you exercise a purchase option)
Best for: Facilities that want the lowest monthly payment, want to keep the equipment off their balance sheet, or expect to upgrade to newer technology within a few years. Operating leases are popular with multi-site operators who rotate equipment across locations.
Watch out for: The total cost of an operating lease over its full term can exceed what you’d pay with a loan, especially if you end up purchasing the equipment at fair market value at the end.
4. Vendor Financing
Many refurbished equipment dealers — including Medical Imaging Specialists — either offer in-house financing or work with lending partners who specialize in medical equipment. Vendor financing can simplify the process because the dealer already understands the equipment’s value and condition.
Advantages:
- Faster approval process
- The dealer can package the system, installation, and service contract into a single financed amount
- More flexibility on down payments and terms for qualified buyers
- No need to educate the lender on what refurbished imaging equipment is worth
Best for: Buyers who want a streamlined purchase process and want to bundle equipment, service, and installation into one monthly payment.
5. SBA Loans
Small Business Administration (SBA) loans — particularly the SBA 7(a) program — can be used to finance medical imaging equipment. These loans offer longer terms and lower rates than conventional financing, but the application process is more involved and approval timelines are longer.
Typical terms:
- Rates: Prime + 1.5–2.75%
- Terms: Up to 10 years for equipment
- Down payment: As low as 10%
Best for: Small or startup facilities that may not qualify for conventional equipment financing. SBA loans take longer to close (30–90 days is common), so plan ahead.
What Lenders Look At When Financing Refurbished Equipment
If you’re applying for financing on a refurbished CT, MRI, or PET/CT, here’s what most lenders will evaluate:
- Facility financials. Revenue history, cash flow, existing debt obligations. Newer facilities may need to provide pro forma projections.
- Equipment age and condition. This is where buying from a reputable refurbisher matters. Lenders are more comfortable financing a system that comes with a warranty, has documented refurbishment records, and is sold by a dealer with a track record.
- Service contract or warranty. A system backed by a service contract or extended warranty is a lower-risk asset. Some lenders require proof of a service agreement before they’ll fund.
- Down payment. Putting 10–20% down reduces the lender’s risk and typically gets you a better rate.
- Personal guarantee. For smaller facilities or newer businesses, a personal guarantee from the owner may be required.
Tips for Getting the Best Financing Terms
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Get pre-qualified before you shop. Knowing your budget and financing terms upfront makes negotiations smoother and helps you act quickly when the right system becomes available.
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Bundle everything into one package. The total cost of an imaging system isn’t just the scanner. Include rigging, shipping, installation, site prep, and your first-year service contract in the financed amount so you’re not scrambling for additional capital after the system arrives.
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Work with lenders who know medical equipment. Generalist lenders often undervalue refurbished imaging equipment or don’t understand the market. Specialty medical equipment lenders will give you better terms and faster closings.
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Compare total cost, not just monthly payment. A lower monthly payment with a longer term or balloon payment at the end can cost significantly more over the life of the financing. Run the numbers on total cost of ownership.
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Ask your dealer about financing options. Reputable refurbished equipment dealers have relationships with lenders and can often connect you with competitive financing faster than sourcing it on your own.
How Financing Fits Into Total Cost of Ownership
When calculating the total cost of owning a refurbished imaging system, financing costs are part of the equation — but they shouldn’t scare you off. Consider a refurbished 64-slice CT scanner:
- Equipment cost: $250,000
- Installation and site prep: $40,000
- First-year service contract: $35,000
- Financing cost (5-year loan at 8%): ~$55,000 in interest
Total financed cost: ~$380,000 over 5 years — roughly $6,300/month.
If that scanner generates even 8–10 scans per day at an average reimbursement of $300–$500 per scan, you’re looking at $60,000–$100,000+ in monthly revenue. The equipment pays for itself many times over within the financing term.
The math works — especially when you’re buying refurbished and keeping your acquisition cost 40–60% below new equipment pricing.
Ready to Explore Your Options?
At Medical Imaging Specialists, we don’t just sell refurbished CT, MRI, and PET/CT systems — we help you put together a deal that makes financial sense for your facility. Whether you need help connecting with medical equipment lenders, want to explore vendor financing, or just want a straight answer on what a system will cost installed and running, our team is here to help.
Contact Medical Imaging Specialists today to discuss your imaging needs and find the financing structure that fits your budget and your growth plans.
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Related Reading
- Read next: Refurbished Imaging Equipment Total Cost Of Ownership
- Read next: How To Calculate Roi Refurbished Ct Mri Scanner
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