Casper sits in the middle of Wyoming's Powder River Basin country, where oil and gas activity, agriculture, and a steady infrastructure build cycle create concrete demand across a wide geography with limited plant coverage. Operators who have tried to serve remote pads and rural structures with transit mix know the drill: long hauls, degraded slump, minimum-load charges that make small pours expensive, and dispatch windows that cost the pour schedule. A volumetric concrete mixer truck solves all of that from one asset. We finance those units for Casper-area contractors and oilfield service operators who are ready to own the margin on their own concrete supply.
Minimum deal size is $50,000. Sweet spot is $100,000 to $150,000 and above. New and used units both qualify. We work with B/C credit and fund in roughly one to two weeks from a complete file.
Casper's Industrial and Construction Footprint
Natrona County anchors a market that draws on oil and gas field services, wind energy infrastructure, ranching and ag construction, and municipal public works across central Wyoming. The Powder River Basin and surrounding formations have long driven demand for pad construction, pipe-trench backfill, and access road concrete that keeps field operations running year-round. These jobs rarely sit near a ready-mix plant, and the ones that do often generate small-load pours that plant operators price with minimum charges.
Oilfield and energy construction operators in Casper have historically been early movers on volumetric equipment because the cost math closes quickly when plant logistics are stripped out of the equation. Wind farm support structures, collector road headers, and turbine pad footings all benefit from on-site batching where the mix spec can be adjusted on the fly without ordering a new truck. Agricultural and farm construction contractors are a parallel market: barns, feed lots, irrigation structures, and grain storage foundations across the basin all generate concrete demand in remote locations where a mixer that travels with the job is the only practical option.
The Right Unit for Central Wyoming Work
For operators who work a variety of job types and sizes, a mid-capacity unit in the 8 to 12 yard range covers most of the territory. An 8-yard volumetric mixer is well-matched to residential and light commercial pours, post bases, and small infrastructure work. A 12-yard volumetric mixer handles larger flatwork and foundation pours without requiring multiple loads. The choice between them is partly about the typical job size in your work mix and partly about the chassis and road requirements for the areas you serve.
For operators focused on pad and site work for the oilfield sector, a unit with a tri-axle configuration provides the payload and stability for heavy-use applications on rough site conditions. For ag contractors who need access to farm lanes and soft approaches, a lighter tandem or single-axle configuration may be the better fit. We finance all of these configurations and the underwriting does not require a specific unit type.
What the File Looks Like
Three months of business bank statements and a completed credit application are the starting point. For deals under roughly $400,000, this is often enough for an approval through our application-only program. Larger or more complex deals may need recent tax returns or additional supporting documentation. The process is not a bank audit. We are looking at whether the business generates consistent enough cash flow to carry the monthly payment, and we read construction company financials differently than a conventional bank would.
B/C credit programs exist specifically for operators whose credit profile has marks from business cycles, contract disputes, or past cash crunches. The rate will be above the prime tier, but ownership and a payment track record built on a volumetric unit often improve the credit profile over time. Operators who want to understand what their current credit tier means for the rate should have that conversation before the application goes in rather than after.
Other Structures Worth Knowing
An equipment loan is the most common starting point and the simplest to explain: you borrow, you pay, you own. But there are adjacent structures that may fit specific situations better. A dollar-buyout lease is effectively a loan with a lease wrapper, giving you tax-treatment flexibility while ending in ownership for $1. A fair market value lease gives you a lower monthly payment and the option to return or purchase at the end of the term, useful when you want to upgrade equipment on a regular cycle.
If you have a concrete mixer or other heavy equipment you own free and clear, a cash-out refinance can pull equity from it for operational capital or a down payment on a second unit. These tools give Casper operators more ways to structure a deal than a simple loan application typically reveals.
Fund Your Casper Volumetric Mixer
Central Wyoming concrete demand is broad and the margin on self-supplied concrete is real. Submit an application today. We fund new and used volumetric mixers, work with B/C credit borrowers, and close in about one to two weeks. Call us or start the application online and we will walk the numbers with you.

