CNC Machine Affordability Calculator: Monthly Payment Estimator

Estimate your monthly CNC machine financing costs. See how different terms and interest rates impact your shop's cash flow before you apply for funding.

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If this monthly payment fits your shop’s budget, you likely qualify—the next step is to initiate a soft-pull rate check to see what you actually command in the current 2026 lending market. Keep in mind that the numbers below are estimates; your final CNC equipment loan rate depends strictly on your credit profile, time in business, and the specific age and make of the machine.

What changes your rate / answer

  • Credit History: Personal and business credit scores are the primary drivers of your APR. A clean track record often unlocks low-interest CNC financing options.
  • Loan Term: Extending your term from 36 to 72 months lowers your immediate monthly overhead, but it increases the total interest paid over the life of the machine.
  • Down Payment: Putting money down reduces the principal loan amount, which lowers your monthly obligation and often makes it easier to get approved for larger capital investments.
  • Collateral & Age: Lenders treat new CNC machine financing differently than used equipment. Older machines may carry higher rates or shorter terms due to the lender's risk assessment of the asset's remaining life.

How to use this

  • Enter the total equipment cost: Include shipping, rigging, and installation costs to get a realistic principal amount. If you are comparing equipment leasing vs. purchasing, enter the full purchase price.
  • Adjust the interest rate: Try inputs between 7% and 15% to see a range of possibilities. This helps you stress-test whether your cash flow can handle the machine if market rates are higher than expected.
  • Toggle your term: Slide the term length to see how your monthly burden shifts. Even a 12-month difference can significantly impact your shop's monthly operating budget.
  • Evaluate against revenue: Use the resulting payment to calculate how many extra parts or shop hours you need to produce monthly to cover the new overhead.

Bottom line

This calculator is for planning purposes only. Once you find a number that makes sense for your bottom line, move forward with a formal application to lock in real-world terms.

What are you looking for?

Pick the option that fits your situation — we'll take you to the right place.