You can finance a used car in Canada much like a new one — with a few extra things to check. Here’s where to get the loan, what rates to expect, how private sales work, and how to get approved, whatever your credit.
Want to finance a used car without overpaying for it? You’re making the smart-money choice: lower price, slower depreciation, and cheaper insurance than new. Used car loans are widely available in Canada — from dealerships, banks, online lenders, and matching services like FindAVehicle — and approval is based largely on your income, so fair and bad credit are welcome. This guide covers the whole journey, including the part most guides skip: financing a private-sale purchase.
Convenient if you’re buying from a lot — financing and purchase in one place. Just compare the dealer’s rate against an outside quote before signing, since dealer rates can include markup.
Often the lowest rates for strong credit, though approval is stricter, slower, and may exclude older vehicles or private sales entirely.
FindAVehicle matches you with lenders across Canada who finance a used car for every credit type — including fair/bad credit and older or higher-mileage vehicles.
Buying from a private seller? Specialized lenders finance private purchases that banks and dealers often won’t touch — details below.

Rates to finance a used car run slightly higher than new-car rates because older vehicles carry more risk — but the gap is usually small, and a used car still costs far less overall. Auto APRs generally range from about 7% to 29.99%, depending mostly on your credit:
| Credit profile | Typical used-car APR |
|---|---|
| Good / excellent (660+) | ~8%–13% |
| Fair (560–659) | ~13%–20% |
| Bad / rebuilding (below 560) | ~20%–29.99% |
For the full picture of what drives your APR — and how to move yourself a tier — see our guide to auto loan rates in Canada. Rebuilding credit? Set realistic expectations on our bad credit car loans page, or estimate a payment with the car loan calculator.
Before you finance a used car in Canada, work backwards from your budget, not forwards from a car you’ve fallen for. A practical rule: keep all vehicle costs — loan payment, insurance, fuel, and maintenance — under about 15–20% of your take-home pay. On a $4,000 monthly take-home, that’s roughly $600–$800 for everything, which usually supports a payment in the $350–$450 range once insurance and gas are counted.
Used cars add one line new cars don’t: a maintenance cushion. Budget a little each month for wear items — tires, brakes, fluids — especially past 80,000 km. A slightly cheaper car with room left for upkeep beats a stretch purchase that leaves nothing for the first repair bill — the quiet rule of how to finance a used car well. The calculator shows how price, down payment, rate, and term combine into a payment, so you can test your ceiling before anyone shows you a showroom special.
Beyond your credit and down payment, the vehicle itself matters more than with a new car:

The biggest reason to buy used is depreciation. A new vehicle can lose 20–30% of its value in the first year and roughly half within three years. Buy a two- or three-year-old vehicle and someone else has already absorbed that drop — you get most of the life of the car for a fraction of the price.
Here’s a simplified example. A new SUV at $40,000 financed over 72 months at 9% APR costs roughly $720/month. A comparable two-year-old version at $27,000, financed over 60 months at 10% APR, costs about $574/month — and you finance $13,000 less. When you finance a used car instead, you pay less per month, less in total interest, and usually less for insurance. The trade-off is a shorter remaining warranty and the need to check the vehicle’s condition, which is where the tips below come in.
At a dealership, financing is built into the process: the dealer submits your application, the lender pays the dealer, you drive off. When you finance a used car from a private seller, you bring the financing yourself — and that’s where specialized private-sale lenders come in, because most banks and all dealer-arranged financing won’t follow you to a stranger’s driveway.
The mechanics differ in three ways. First, the lender verifies the vehicle and the seller, not just you: ownership, lien status, a realistic price against market value, and usually an inspection. Second, the money flows differently — the lender typically pays the seller directly (or pays out the seller’s remaining loan first) rather than handing you cash. Third, the paperwork is yours to manage: bill of sale, transfer, registration, and tax at the registry. It’s a few more steps, but private sales often price 10–15% below dealer retail for the same vehicle, which can outweigh a slightly higher rate. In other words: the cheapest way to finance a used car is often the one with the most paperwork — and the paperwork takes an afternoon.

Not all used cars are equal. A Certified Pre-Owned (CPO) vehicle is a used car — usually newer and lower-kilometre — that a manufacturer or dealer has inspected, reconditioned, and backed with an extended warranty. CPO cars cost more than an equivalent private-sale car, but the warranty and inspection lower your risk, and lenders often offer slightly better rates and longer terms because the vehicle is lower-risk.
A regular used car — from a dealer lot or a private seller — is cheaper and leaves more room to negotiate, but it’s sold as-is. If you go this route, a pre-purchase inspection and a vehicle history report are essential. Either way you can finance a used car through FindAVehicle; the right choice comes down to your budget and how much risk you’re comfortable with.
Yes, but it gets harder as a vehicle ages. Most lenders set limits — often around 10 model years or 150,000–200,000 kilometres — beyond which it’s tougher to finance a used car and terms are shorter, because the lender doesn’t want the loan to outlast the vehicle. Expect a higher rate on an older car, and be ready for a larger down payment.
If you’re financing an older car, keep the term short so you’re not still paying once major repairs start, and set aside a small cushion for maintenance. A reliable, well-maintained older vehicle with service records is far easier to finance — and to live with — than a cheap car with an unknown history.
Three pieces of paperwork protect you when you finance a used car in Canada:

When you finance a used car in Canada, you’re rarely locked in for life. Most Canadian auto loans are open to extra payments or full early payout without penalty — confirm in your agreement — so windfalls can shorten the loan and cut interest. And if you started at a rebuilding-credit rate, a year of on-time payments often re-tiers you: see whether refinancing your car loan would lower the rate, and read our breakdown of whether refinancing makes sense before you switch.
Yes. Lenders in our network consider all credit types and approve based on income. Expect a higher rate (up to about 29.99% APR) and the chance to rebuild your credit with on-time payments.
It can be. Lenders prefer newer, lower-kilometre vehicles and cap loan terms on older ones. A larger down payment or a co-signer can help you qualify.
Yes. FindAVehicle arranges private-sale financing, not just dealership loans. The lender verifies the vehicle, checks for liens, and typically pays the seller directly.
There’s no fixed amount, but a down payment lowers your loan, improves approval odds, and can reduce your rate. Even a small amount helps, especially with weaker credit.
Most lenders draw the line around 10 model years or 150,000–200,000 km, with shorter maximum terms as the vehicle ages. Beyond that, expect a bigger down payment or a specialist lender.
Yes — in most provinces the sales tax on a private purchase is collected when you register the vehicle, often based on the higher of the sale price or book value. Dealer purchases collect tax at the point of sale instead.
No. Pre-approval uses a soft check that doesn’t affect your score. A hard inquiry only happens later, with your consent, when you proceed with a lender.
Sources: Financial Consumer Agency of Canada — Loans & lines of credit · Equifax Canada · Criminal Code, s.347.
Disclaimer: FindAVehicle is an auto loan-matching service, not a lender, and does not guarantee approval. Auto loan rates typically range from about 7% to 29.99% APR depending on your credit and the vehicle; your actual rate is determined after a full assessment. Payment figures are illustrative. Provincial tax, registration, and inspection rules vary — confirm with your provincial registry. All credit is considered.