Echo volume is the core revenue driver for a cardiology practice, and the system doing that work carries real financial weight. A TTE appointment that takes eighteen minutes on a current-generation platform might take twenty-eight on an aging console with slower image acquisition and less automated measurement software, and that difference compresses the schedule across every session. We finance cardiac ultrasound equipment for cardiology practices because the numbers on a financed system often work better than the numbers on a delayed replacement.
Our minimum is $50,000 and we routinely finance cardiac imaging systems somewhere in the $120k–$350k band, which covers platforms like the GE Vivid E95, Philips EPIQ Elite, and Siemens Acuson Sequoia configured for cardiac use. Transactions under approximately $400,000 usually require only an application and three months of bank statements. Credit decisions come back within one to two business days, and most deals fund in one to two weeks.
We finance new equipment, certified refurbished systems, and in some cases, purchases between practices when a group is acquiring a departing physician's assets. The structure depends on what the practice needs: a lease for off-balance-sheet treatment, a loan for ownership, or a sale-leaseback if there is equity in existing equipment the practice wants to convert to cash.