These 10 questions will help you dig deeper — and make a smarter, more strategic decision about your next copier lease.
When you're looking to lease a new office copier or multifunction device, you're not just choosing equipment — you're choosing a financial path and a service partner that will impact your team’s workflow for the next several years.
One of the most overlooked — but most critical — decisions you'll make during this process is who manages your lease. In many cases, that lease is underwritten by a third-party financing company: a bank or outside leasing institution that handles the financial agreement, while a separate vendor provides the hardware and service. This setup can lead to rigid terms, multiple points of contact, and limited flexibility when your business needs change.
By contrast, in-house copier leasing means the same provider that installs and supports your copier also owns and manages your lease. That tighter integration often translates into faster deployment, more adaptable terms, bundled services, and a single point of accountability when questions or issues arise.
So which option aligns best with your goals, your budget, and your plans for growth?
These 10 questions will help you dig deeper — and make a smarter, more strategic decision about your next copier lease.
Third-party leases often come with rigid, boilerplate terms. In-house options may offer more flexibility around upgrades, end-of-term transitions, or early buyouts.
Ask whether you’ll receive a true total solution bundle, or if service/support/integration costs are handled separately. This impacts cash flow, transparency, and convenience.
With third parties, there may be finger-pointing between the leasing company and the service provider. In-house leasing typically streamlines accountability and response time.
Business needs shift. Leasing with someone who understands your workflow — and owns the full relationship — can make upgrades smoother and timelier.
In-house providers often minimize upfront costs and can deploy equipment faster since approval and provisioning are managed internally.
Can you return the equipment, renew, upgrade, or buy it outright — and will that process be simple? This varies widely between in-house vs. third-party arrangements.
Third-party leases may be tied to financing conditions outside your control. Ask whether your lease has fixed, predictable payments for better budgeting.
Clarify early. Some third-party leases include return fees, overage charges, or renewal traps that don’t benefit the customer.
Leasing should free up cash for growth activities. Make sure your option — especially if in-house — is structured to support financial health, not strain it.
If you have short-term, project-based usage spikes, ask whether your provider offers flexible lease durations that align with those timelines.
Leasing your next copier is a business decision that touches workflow, cash flow, and long-term IT strategy. Asking these 10 questions ensures you're not just getting a box that prints — you're getting a reliable, flexible, and fully invested technology partner.
If you're exploring leasing options now, or want help comparing in-house vs. third-party agreements, we’d be glad to walk you through what a partnership can really look like.