Financing Guide

How Financing Helps Contractors Close More Jobs (and When It Doesn't)

Let's be precise, because this topic attracts hype: financing does not automatically increase revenue or close rates. What it can do is remove one specific objection — "we can't afford it right now" — for homeowners who wanted to say yes.

The actual mechanism

A $18,000 project reads as impossible to many households; a monthly payment reads as a decision. When affordability is the real blocker, a payment option keeps the conversation alive. When the blocker is trust, urgency, or a competitor's price, financing changes nothing. Knowing which objection you actually face is the skill.

Presenting payment options without overpromising

When financing won't move the needle

This is the "marketing gets the lead, trust closes the gap, financing closes the deal" equation. All three carry weight.

Who This Fits

Who This Does Not Fit

FAQ

Will offering financing raise my close rate?

It may, for the portion of your losses that were genuinely affordability-driven. Track quotes with and without a presented payment option and let your own data answer.

Should I raise prices to cover financing costs?

If your program carries dealer fees, model that decision carefully — it affects cash-deal competitiveness. No-dealer-fee models avoid the question.

When in the pitch should financing come up?

Early and low-key. Homeowners who know payments exist stay engaged through the price conversation.

Not Sure Which Model Fits Your Business?

Take the 60-second Contractor Financing Fit Check and get a recommendation based on your trade, ticket size, timeline, and sales process.

Take the Fit Check
Take the 60-Second Fit Check