Edan's DUS series and Acclarix line cover a range of point-of-care and clinic-based ultrasound needs at price points that make sense for smaller practices, community clinics, and international health settings. The brand is not as widely known in the US as GE or Philips, but it has a real installed base across urgent care clinics, rural health facilities, and mobile imaging operations, and we finance Edan systems with the same structure we apply to any medical equipment: based on the practice's revenue, the equipment's clinical utility, and a payment that fits the cash flow.
Our minimum is $50,000. Edan configurations that include the system plus a full probe set for abdominal, OB, cardiac, and vascular applications typically reach that threshold without difficulty. Application-only approval is available up to roughly $400,000, and three months of bank statements satisfy the documentation requirement for most established practices. Funding arrives in one to two weeks from approval. If your credit profile has challenges, bring the bank statements and let the cash flow speak; B and C credit equipment financing is in scope for Edan purchases just as for any other brand we finance.
The case for financing Edan specifically often comes down to stretching a limited capital budget to add ultrasound capability to a room that otherwise would not have it. A practice that cannot justify $120,000 for a mid-tier Mindray or Samsung may find that an Edan system at a meaningfully lower price point pencils out cleanly. Financing that Edan system through an ultrasound equipment loan spreads the cost over the period when the equipment is generating revenue, which is a better cash flow position than a single outlay, regardless of the brand on the console. Primary care and community practices adding point-of-care ultrasound to their workflow represent the most common Edan buyer profile, and we structure payments to match how quickly that practice converts the capability to billable encounters.