Hospital bed financing for business allows healthcare providers, nursing facilities, home health agencies, and medical equipment companies to acquire the beds they need without paying the full purchase price upfront. Whether you're outfitting a new skilled nursing facility, expanding your home health fleet, or upgrading aging equipment across multiple wards, structured financing preserves your working capital while giving you immediate access to the equipment that keeps patients safe and comfortable.
In This Article
Hospital bed financing is a type of equipment financing specifically structured for the acquisition of medical-grade beds used in healthcare settings. This includes acute care hospital beds, long-term care beds, skilled nursing facility (SNF) beds, psychiatric care beds, bariatric beds, and home health beds delivered to patients' residences.
Rather than depleting cash reserves or waiting months to save the capital needed for a large bed purchase, healthcare businesses use financing to spread the cost over a defined term - typically 24 to 84 months - while gaining immediate use of the equipment. The beds serve as collateral in most financing agreements, which makes this a relatively accessible form of credit even for newer healthcare businesses.
According to the U.S. Small Business Administration, equipment financing is one of the most common forms of funding used by small and mid-sized businesses to acquire fixed assets. For healthcare operators, hospital beds are among the highest-cost and most operationally critical assets they'll ever purchase, making structured financing an especially logical choice.
The category of "hospital beds" encompasses a wide range of specialized equipment, each serving distinct patient populations and care settings. Most lenders offering medical equipment financing can fund any of the following:
Lenders generally treat all of these similarly from an underwriting standpoint - what matters most is your business's revenue, time in operation, and creditworthiness, not the specific bed type.
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Apply NowFor healthcare businesses operating on tight margins, preserving cash while still acquiring mission-critical equipment is a strategic priority. Hospital bed financing delivers several concrete advantages:
Industry Context: The global hospital beds market is growing significantly through 2030, driven by aging populations and expanding long-term care capacity. Financing enables providers to keep pace with this demand without sacrificing financial flexibility.
The financing process for hospital beds follows the same general structure as most commercial equipment loans, though there are healthcare-specific nuances worth understanding.
Before approaching a lender, get quotes from your equipment vendor(s). Know the total number of beds, unit cost, and any ancillary equipment (mattresses, side rails, overbed tables) you plan to bundle into the financing request.
You have several options: equipment-specific loans (most common), business lines of credit, SBA loans, or equipment leases. Each has different collateral, rate, and ownership implications.
Typical documentation includes: business bank statements (3-6 months), business tax returns (1-2 years), a completed loan application, and the vendor invoice or equipment quote. Larger requests may also require a business plan or financial projections.
Lenders evaluate your credit profile, revenue trends, debt service coverage, and time in business. For medical equipment financing, lenders also consider the collateral value of the equipment itself. Most approvals come within 1-5 business days for requests under $500,000.
Once approved, the lender pays the vendor directly (or reimburses you if already purchased). The beds are delivered, and you begin monthly payments on your agreed schedule.
Quick Guide
Hospital Bed Financing - At a Glance
Hospital bed financing is available to a broad range of healthcare and medically-related businesses. Typical qualifying businesses include:
While requirements vary by lender, most hospital bed financing programs look for:
Good to Know: Medical equipment - including hospital beds - is considered strong collateral because it retains functional value over its useful life. This often means lenders are willing to offer more favorable terms for medical equipment financing than for other types of business loans where collateral is less tangible.
Healthcare operators have three primary options when acquiring hospital beds. Understanding the trade-offs helps you choose the structure that best fits your operational and financial goals.
| Factor | Equipment Loan (Finance) | Equipment Lease | Outright Purchase |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ownership | You own after final payment | Lessor retains ownership (unless $1 buyout) | Immediate full ownership |
| Upfront Cost | Low (often $0 down) | Low to moderate | Full purchase price upfront |
| Monthly Payment | Moderate (includes principal + interest) | Often lower than a loan payment | No payment |
| Flexibility | Moderate - you own and can sell | High - easy to upgrade at term end | Full flexibility, no restrictions |
| Best For | Businesses wanting to own with cash preservation | Frequent equipment upgraders | Cash-rich businesses with minimal debt |
| Impact on Cash | Preserves working capital | Preserves working capital | Large one-time cash outflow |
For most healthcare businesses that plan to keep their beds for 5-10+ years, an equipment loan makes more sense than a lease because you build equity in a tangible asset. Leasing can be attractive if you're running a DME supply company and want to upgrade to newer models every few years without the hassle of reselling used beds. Learn more about the differences in our guide to equipment leasing vs. equipment financing.
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Crestmont Capital's advisors will walk you through your best financing structure at no cost. Get answers fast.
Talk to a SpecialistCrestmont Capital is a direct business lender specializing in equipment financing and small business lending. We work with healthcare operators across the spectrum - from single-facility nursing homes to multi-site home health agencies - to structure hospital bed financing that fits their operational and financial reality.
Here's what makes working with Crestmont different:
According to Forbes, equipment financing rates in 2026 typically range from 4% to 30% APR depending on creditworthiness, time in business, and loan structure. Crestmont works to get qualified healthcare operators toward the lower end of this range.
A 120-bed skilled nursing facility in Ohio received CMS approval to add 40 new beds to their existing wing. The cost for 40 semi-electric long-term care beds, specialty pressure-relief mattresses, and overbed tables came to $320,000. Rather than using operating reserves, the owner financed the full amount over 60 months at a competitive rate. Monthly payments were $5,900 - well within the facility's projected daily rate revenue from the new beds.
A growing home health agency in Florida managed 85 active patients requiring hospital beds in their homes. As their census grew to 150 patients, they needed to add 65 home health beds plus delivery/retrieval infrastructure. They financed $195,000 in beds over 48 months, structuring the payments to align with their Medicare/Medicaid reimbursement cycle, which comes 30-45 days after service delivery.
A newly licensed psychiatric facility in Texas was opening their first 30-bed adult unit. With 18 months of business history and solid personal credit from the physician-owners, they financed $210,000 in low-profile psychiatric beds and specialty mattresses. The 72-month term kept monthly payments manageable during their first year as they built census toward breakeven.
A general hospital in Michigan wanted to launch a dedicated bariatric program. They needed 12 specialty bariatric beds at $18,500 each - a $222,000 investment. Their existing equipment line of credit covered the purchase, and they drew down the funds within 48 hours of the vendor invoice being approved by the lender.
A durable medical equipment company in Georgia supplied hospital beds to home health agencies across three states. To expand into two new markets, they needed to add 200 beds to their rental fleet - a $400,000 investment. They used a combination of equipment financing ($250,000) and a commercial equipment lease ($150,000) to preserve flexibility on newer models while locking in ownership on older, proven designs.
A nonprofit hospice organization in Minnesota needed to add 50 beds to serve their growing patient population. Because they were a nonprofit with limited access to traditional bank credit, they worked with Crestmont Capital to structure a 48-month equipment loan based on their grant revenue and Medicare reimbursement history. The monthly payment fit comfortably within their operational budget. Read more about healthcare practice financing options in our guide to medical equipment financing.
Interest rates for hospital bed financing typically range from 6% to 25% APR, depending on your credit score, time in business, loan amount, and overall financial health. Businesses with strong credit (680+), 2+ years of operation, and solid revenue can generally access rates in the 6-12% range. Newer businesses or those with credit challenges may see rates in the 15-25% range. The beds themselves serve as collateral, which keeps rates more competitive than unsecured financing options.
Loan amounts for hospital bed financing can range from as little as $5,000 (for a single home health bed) to several million dollars (for large acute care facilities outfitting entire wings or floors). Most lenders impose minimums of $5,000-$10,000 and will lend up to 100% of the equipment's fair market value. The practical limit is usually tied to your business's revenue, cash flow, and existing debt obligations.
Yes, used hospital beds can be financed, though lenders typically apply stricter loan-to-value (LTV) ratios to used equipment compared to new. For used beds, expect to finance 80-90% of appraised value rather than 100% of invoice price. The lender may also require documentation of the equipment's condition, service history, and remaining useful life. Some lenders specialize in used/refurbished medical equipment and offer competitive programs specifically for this market.
Many hospital bed financing programs offer zero-down or low-down options, especially for established businesses with strong credit. Some lenders may require a down payment of 10-20% for newer businesses, higher-risk credit profiles, or very large loan amounts. The benefit of providing a down payment, when you can, is typically a lower interest rate and reduced total cost of financing.
Loan terms for hospital bed financing typically range from 24 to 84 months (2 to 7 years). Shorter terms result in higher monthly payments but lower total interest paid. Longer terms reduce monthly cash burden but increase the total cost of the loan. Most healthcare operators choose 48-72 month terms to balance payment affordability with reasonable total financing cost. The term should generally not exceed the expected useful life of the equipment.
For most equipment financing requests under $500,000, approval decisions typically come within 24-72 hours of submitting a complete application with supporting documents. Larger requests or more complex deal structures may take 5-10 business days for underwriting. Once approved, funding is typically disbursed within 1-3 business days, after which the equipment vendor can be paid and delivery scheduled.
Standard documentation includes: a completed loan application, 3-6 months of business bank statements, 1-2 years of business tax returns, a vendor quote or invoice for the beds, and government-issued ID for the business owner(s). Larger requests (generally $250,000+) may also require a business financial statement, balance sheet, profit and loss statement, and a brief description of how the beds will be used in your operations.
Yes, though the options may be more limited than for established businesses. Startups with less than 1 year in operation can access startup equipment financing programs that place more weight on the owner's personal credit score (typically 650+), business plan, and projected cash flows. SBA loans are another option for startups, as they allow longer repayment terms and lower down payments, though the application process takes longer.
Yes. SBA 7(a) loans can be used to finance medical equipment, including hospital beds, for eligible small healthcare businesses. SBA loans offer long repayment terms (up to 10 years for equipment) and competitive interest rates, but they require more documentation and have longer approval timelines (typically 30-90 days). SBA 504 loans can also be used when the bed purchase is part of a larger capital investment project.
Most conventional equipment lenders prefer a personal FICO score of 620 or higher. Scores between 680-720+ will typically unlock the most competitive rates and terms. Businesses with scores below 620 may still qualify through alternative and subprime equipment financing programs, though at higher interest rates. Building your business credit score alongside your personal score can also strengthen your application over time.
Yes, most lenders allow you to bundle multiple pieces of equipment into a single loan, as long as all items are related to the same business purpose. Common items bundled with hospital beds include specialty mattresses, overbed tables, IV poles, patient lift systems, and monitoring equipment. Bundling simplifies your administration with a single monthly payment and can sometimes unlock slightly better terms due to the larger loan size.
At the end of an equipment loan term, once you've made your final payment, you own the beds outright - free and clear. There's no residual payment, no buyout option required, and no further obligation to the lender. At that point, you can continue using the equipment, sell it, or trade it in toward a new purchase. This is a key distinction between financing (loan) and leasing, where end-of-term options are more complex.
Most equipment loans allow early repayment, though some have prepayment penalties - typically 1-3% of the remaining balance if paid off within the first year or two of the loan. Before signing, ask your lender about prepayment terms. If you anticipate strong cash flow and may want to pay off the loan early, negotiate a loan with no prepayment penalty or one that steps down over time.
Responsibly managed equipment financing can positively impact your business credit score over time. When lenders report on-time payments to business credit bureaus, each timely payment contributes positively to your PAYDEX score and overall business credit profile. This strengthens your borrowing capacity for future financing needs - including additional equipment, working capital, or facility expansion.
Hospital bed financing (an equipment loan) is a closed-end, lump-sum loan tied to a specific bed purchase - you borrow a defined amount, make fixed payments, and own the beds at term end. A medical equipment line of credit is a revolving facility that allows you to draw funds as needed for equipment purchases over time, repay, and draw again. Lines of credit are better for businesses with ongoing, frequent equipment needs. Loans are better for one-time or large-batch purchases where you want a fixed repayment schedule.
Hospital bed financing for business is one of the most practical tools available to healthcare operators who need to acquire, upgrade, or expand their bed inventory without disrupting cash flow or delaying patient care. Whether you're running a skilled nursing facility, home health agency, behavioral health unit, or DME supply company, structured equipment financing lets you match the cost of your beds to the revenue those beds generate over time.
With loan amounts from $5,000 to several million dollars, terms from 24 to 84 months, and approval decisions often available within 24-72 hours, hospital bed financing is both accessible and flexible. The key is working with a lender that understands healthcare business models and can structure financing around your operational reality.
Crestmont Capital specializes in exactly this kind of financing - fast, flexible, and tailored to the way healthcare businesses actually work. If you're ready to explore hospital bed financing for your business, apply online today or speak with one of our healthcare lending specialists. For additional healthcare financing resources, explore our guides on medical equipment financing and healthcare equipment financing.
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Apply Now - No ObligationDisclaimer: The information provided in this article is for general educational purposes only and is not financial, legal, or tax advice. Funding terms, qualifications, and product availability may vary and are subject to change without notice. Crestmont Capital does not guarantee approval, rates, or specific outcomes. For personalized information about your business funding options, contact our team directly.