Platform Basket Spider 22.10 Spider Lift Financing
Financing Program
- Priced on the asset — platform height, hours, resale strength
- Application-only up to $500,000
- New, used, dealer, auction, or private party
- Numbers back the same business day
The Program
A 72-foot articulating platform on a tracked undercarriage that folds narrow enough to pass through a doorway: the Platform Basket Spider 22.10 is the choice for access contractors who need real working height in environments that shut the door on standard booms. Platform Basket is an Italian manufacturer that has built its reputation specifically on the spider lift segment, and the 22.10 sits in their mid-range with a working height that handles the majority of institutional and commercial high-ceiling access work.
Machines like this are specialty equipment in the North American market, which affects both how they are bought and sold and how they are financed. Platform Basket has grown its dealer footprint in the U.S. and Canada, but auction volume is lower than for mainstream brands, which means used transactions often happen through dealer networks or direct from users rather than through open auctions. Price range on used 22.10 units runs roughly $85,000 to $140,000. We fund Platform Basket spider lifts from $50,000, short-doc to approximately $400,000, and B and C credit gets a real underwriting review. Two weeks is the target close from a complete application.
Spider 22.10 Specs: Platform Height and Access Envelope
Working height of approximately 72 feet (22 meters) through a multi-section articulating boom with rotating jib at the platform. The boom sections allow the operator to clear overhead obstructions, work in recesses and setbacks, and position the platform on both vertical and inclined surfaces that a single-section boom could not reach with precision. The outreach at full extension gives the machine coverage over a substantial horizontal distance, making it practical for both height-and-reach applications rather than purely vertical elevation work.
Platform Basket builds the 22.10 on a tracked undercarriage with self-leveling outrigger pads that deploy for stability during lift operations. The narrow-travel mode puts the machine under 30 inches wide in most configurations, which is the critical measurement for passing through standard commercial and institutional door openings. The hybrid power system runs on battery for indoor use and diesel for outdoor extended operation, providing the same indoor-outdoor flexibility that characterizes the best machines in this class.
- Working height: approximately 72 ft (22 m)
- Multi-section articulating boom with jib
- Travel width: under 30 in in narrow mode
- Undercarriage: rubber tracks with self-leveling outriggers
- Power: hybrid diesel-electric
- Suitable for indoor and outdoor, level and sloped terrain
Who Buys a Platform Basket Spider 22.10
The 22.10 is a contractor's machine, not a rental yard staple. It belongs to operations that specialize in access work where the machine's particular capabilities are what wins the contract, not just the platform height. Window cleaning and facade restoration contractors who serve premium commercial and institutional clients use the 22.10 for facades where the access path goes through covered areas, pedestrian colonnades, or landscaped grounds that a wheeled machine would damage. The tracked undercarriage crosses over soft landscaping with far less ground damage than rubber tires at similar weight.
Building envelope contractors doing caulking, waterproofing, and joint sealing on tall commercial facades find the 22.10's combination of reach and access geometry allows them to work more efficiently than scaffold, and to respond to maintenance calls without the setup time and cost that scaffold mobilization requires. Facility and building maintenance operations at venues with large interior volumes, such as indoor arenas, covered courtyards, and large corporate atriums, use the 22.10 because it is one of the few machines that can enter through the venue's access doors and reach above 60 feet inside.
The rental market for the 22.10 is more specialized than for a standard boom; customers who need a spider lift know what they need and seek out operators who have the machine. Rental operators who invest in the 22.10 typically serve a specific industry segment and can price the specialty capability at a premium over what a wheeled boom earns per day.
Pulling Equity from an Owned Platform Basket
Platform Basket machines that are owned free and clear or with equity above the loan payoff can be monetized through a sale-leaseback or cash-out refinance. Both structures let you continue operating the machine while converting the equity to working capital. For specialty access contractors whose machine is the tool that generates the revenue, not selling the machine is often the right answer, and a cash-out refinance extracts the equity without selling the asset.
The math on a sale-leaseback is straightforward: we buy the machine at a market-referenced price, you sign a lease to continue using it, and the purchase proceeds are cash in your account. The lease payment is a known monthly expense that replaces the equity you had in the machine. For growing operations that need working capital to bid on additional contracts, hire a second crew, or purchase complementary equipment, the sale-leaseback is a way to finance growth without a business loan or line of credit application. A boom lift sale-leaseback on the 22.10 follows the same process as any equipment sale-leaseback, just with collateral assessment specific to the spider lift market.
Comparing the 22.10 to Other Spider Lifts
The spider lift segment has several manufacturers worth comparing. The Hinowa Lightlift 20.10 is a lighter, fully electric alternative at 66 feet; it is the choice when floor loading is the binding constraint. The CMC S25 steps up to 82 feet on a similar tracked hybrid platform, suited when the project requires more reach than the 22.10 provides. The Platform Basket brand page covers other models in the lineup if the 22.10 is not quite the right size. For all spider lift options across all brands, the spider lift financing overview covers the complete field we fund.
Fund the Platform Basket Spider 22.10
Send us the machine details and purchase price and we will have a payment structure back to you in short order. One to two weeks to close on a clean file.
Common Questions
How does Platform Basket's dealer network affect service and parts availability?
Platform Basket has a smaller North American dealer and service network than dominant boom brands, which means buyers should confirm access to service and parts before purchasing, particularly for machines outside major metro areas. This is an operational consideration, not a financing one, but it can affect resale value and downtime risk, both of which lenders factor into their collateral assessment.
Can I include shipping and import costs in the financing if I am buying a 22.10 from Europe?
Import transactions are more complex than domestic purchases. If the machine is arriving through a U.S.-based importer or dealer who takes ownership and resells it domestically, the transaction is treated as a standard domestic purchase and soft costs like delivery can often be included. Direct imports where the buyer is the importer of record involve additional complexity around customs, EPA compliance, and title that require individual review.
What happens at the end of a lease on a spider lift like the 22.10?
At end of a fair-market-value lease, you can purchase at appraised value, return it, or extend. A dollar-buyout lease ends with clear title for one dollar. The structure you pick at signing determines your choices at term end.
My business does both boom lift and spider lift work. Can I bundle both pieces of equipment in one financing deal?
Yes. A multi-machine deal under a single credit facility is structured as a fleet purchase. This is often more efficient than two separate applications and can improve your overall terms by presenting a stronger revenue picture across the full operation. We handle fleet deals and can package multiple units in one transaction.
Does the 22.10 come with a jib as standard or is it an option?
Platform Basket typically includes the rotating jib as a standard feature on the 22.10. Whether a specific used unit has it depends on the original order spec; confirm during pre-purchase inspection.

