New Holland's 200 Series skid steers and compact track loaders run on universal SSQA. That's the entire attachment story in five words. No adapter plates, no proprietary lock-in, no ecosystem tax. Buy any brand attachment from any supplier and it mounts directly — which is something Bobcat operators simply cannot say without a qualifier.
New Holland built their 200 Series around the Standard Skid Steer Quick Attach interface — the universal standard used across most of the industry. Every current L-Series and C-Series machine ships with SSQA as standard. You don't need to order a special coupler option, and there's no upgrade path required.
New Holland uses universal SSQA. Attachments from HLA, Virnig, Titan, Bobcat OEM, or any SSQA-compatible supplier mount directly to any 200 Series machine. You're buying into an open attachment ecosystem, not a walled garden.
Contrast this with Bobcat. Modern Bobcat machines technically use the same SAE J2513 interface (the standard that Bob-Tach is based on), but Bobcat's marketing leans heavily into their branded ecosystem, and some operators end up buying Bobcat-branded attachments at OEM pricing when third-party equivalents would work fine. On a New Holland, no one's trying to nudge you toward a brand-premium purchase. The coupler's the same. Buy what you want.
For Canadian buyers, this matters most when sourcing used attachments. A bucket off Kijiji, a grapple from an auction — if it's listed as "universal SSQA," it mounts on your New Holland. Full stop. No guesswork about Bob-Tach vs SSQA spacing, no adapter plates, no weight penalty.
Mechanical fit is easy. Hydraulics is where New Holland owners run into real compatibility questions. The 200 Series machines span a wide range of hydraulic output — from the L218's modest 20 GPM standard flow up to the L230 and C238's high-flow option at 37 GPM. Get this wrong and you'll either stall a mulcher or wonder why your new snow blower is producing a light dusting instead of clearing pavement.
The table below covers the current Canadian 200 Series lineup. High-flow is a factory option on all models — it must be ordered at build time or confirmed as installed on a used machine. Not all used New Hollands have high-flow, even if the model supports it. Always verify by serial number before buying a machine specifically for high-flow attachments.
| Model | Type | Engine HP | ROC (50%) | Std. Aux Flow | High-Flow Option | Aux Pressure | Width |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| L218 | Skid Steer | 60 hp | 1,800 lbs | 20 GPM | 30 GPM | 3,046 PSI | 66.1" |
| L220 | Skid Steer | 67 hp | 2,000 lbs | 20 GPM | 30 GPM | 3,046 PSI | 69.1" |
| L225 | Skid Steer | 76 hp | 2,500 lbs | 22 GPM | 34 GPM | 3,000 PSI | 69.2" |
| L228 | Skid Steer | 74 hp | 2,800 lbs | 24 GPM | 37 GPM | 3,046 PSI | 69.6" |
| L230 | Skid Steer | 90 hp | 3,000 lbs | 24 GPM | 37 GPM | 3,046 PSI | 76" |
| C227 | Track Loader | 74 hp | 2,700 lbs | 24 GPM | 32 GPM | 3,046 PSI | 65.9" |
| C232 | Track Loader | 74 hp | 3,200 lbs | 24 GPM | 37 GPM | 3,046 PSI | 76" |
| C238 | Track Loader | 90 hp | 3,800 lbs | 24 GPM | 37 GPM | 3,046 PSI | 76" |
At 66.1 inches, the L218 passes through most standard farm gates and many older barn doors. It's the machine livestock operators reach for when barn alley work or feedlot cleanup requires a machine that fits where bigger iron can't go.
Attachment sweet spot: 60"–66" GP buckets, pallet forks (2,000 lb capacity max, respect the ROC), bale spear for 4x4 round bales, hydraulic breaker (light to mid-size), standard auger drives to 12" bit. With high-flow option: commercial snow blower (confirm GPM), landscape broom.
The 30 GPM high-flow ceiling means aggressive mulching is off the menu. Standard farm and site work — absolutely.
The L220 steps up from the L218 in lift capacity and engine output but shares the same hydraulic profile — 20 GPM standard, 30 GPM with high-flow. Width is essentially the same at 69.1". This is the machine in a lot of Canadian farm country: enough capacity for round bales, light enough to work in tight yards.
Attachment sweet spot: Same as L218 hydraulically. The better lift capacity opens up heavier bucket work — 66" GP bucket, rock bucket for medium-duty gravel spreading. The 2,000 lb ROC handles most farm attachment work without issue.
The L225 sits in a practical sweet spot for Ontario and western Canadian farm operations. At 76 hp with 34 GPM high-flow capability, it runs a legitimate range of high-demand attachments — mid-size mulchers, commercial snow blowers, large auger drives. The 2,500 lb ROC handles large round bales comfortably with a bale spear or grapple.
Note on mulching: The 34 GPM high-flow ceiling will satisfy most brush mulchers in the 40–60 hp range, but check the specific attachment's flow requirements. Some disc mulchers want 35+ GPM — right at the edge of this machine's output.
The L228 is equipped with New Holland's Super Boom vertical-lift geometry as standard. At 24 GPM standard and 37 GPM high-flow, this machine runs the full attachment catalog without significant compromise. Cold planers, serious mulchers, large stump grinders — all sit within range if the high-flow option is installed.
This is the machine a lot of small-to-mid contractors in Canada spec for general purpose work: enough capacity to carry a loaded bucket of gravel, enough flow to run a breaker or snow blower efficiently.
The L230 is New Holland's largest wheeled skid steer in the Canadian market. At 76 inches wide, it's built for open construction sites and large farm operations — not barn alley work. The 90 hp engine and 3,000 lb ROC put it in the same conversation as a Bobcat S770 or Cat 272D.
Full attachment range. 72"–78" GP buckets, heavy rock buckets, commercial-class snow blowers, stump grinders, forestry mulchers. With high-flow, nothing in the standard attachment catalog is off the table. This is the machine you buy when you need a serious wheeled skid steer and don't want to step into CTL territory.
The C-Series machines trade tire traction for tracks — lower ground pressure, better grip on soft or wet surfaces, more consistent performance in conditions that chew up wheeled skid steers. In Ontario farmyards after spring thaw, or on muddy BC construction sites, the ground pressure difference is real. Tracks leave better surfaces than tires when you care about the ground.
The C227 is the narrow-frame CTL in the lineup — 65.9 inches wide, it fits in spaces that exclude the wider C232 and C238. But the lower high-flow ceiling (32 GPM vs 37 GPM on the larger CTLs) matters if you're planning to run demanding hydraulic attachments. Mid-size snow blowers, smaller mulchers, and standard auger drives are fine. The hungriest commercial attachments want more.
Strong choice for livestock operations that need track performance but need to fit through farm infrastructure. The SSQA coupler means no attachment compatibility headaches.
This is the machine Canadian landscapers and prairie farm contractors gravitate toward when they want CTL capability without going to the C238's size. The C232 handles large round bales, runs commercial mulchers and snow blowers with the high-flow option, and leaves better finished surfaces than a wheeled machine on soft soil.
At 3,200 lbs ROC, it picks up more than it looks like it should. The Super Boom vertical-lift geometry gives good forward reach when you need to center-load a truck bed — something the radial-lift architecture on some competing CTLs doesn't do as well.
The C238 is New Holland's largest CTL for Canada — 90 hp, 3,800 lb ROC, 76 inches wide. It competes with Cat 289 and Bobcat T76 class machines. Full attachment capability across the board. If you're doing serious land clearing, high-volume construction, or large farm operations and you want the track traction advantage, this is the machine.
The 37 GPM high-flow ceiling is the same as the L230 and C232 — New Holland's consistent ceiling for the larger machines. It satisfies most commercial attachments. For the absolute top-end forestry equipment that wants 45+ GPM, you're looking at machines with more hydraulic output, not more of the same.
Most skid steers use a radial-lift boom — the boom arcs forward as it rises, peaking at mid-height and falling back as you reach full extension. This is fine for most digging and loading work. But when you need to dump into a truck bed or load material accurately at height, the forward sweep of a radial boom can work against you.
New Holland's Super Boom is a vertical-lift design. The pivot point sits closer to the machine's centre of gravity, and the geometry keeps the attachment more level and further forward through the lift arc. In practice, this means two things:
The Super Boom is standard on L218, L220, L225, L228, C232, and C238. Not the C227 or L230 in some configurations — verify on specific machines. For attachment use, the practical implication is that bucket placement at height is more accurate, and heavy grapple or pallet work benefits from the stability.
New Holland machines span a wide width range — from the 66.1" L218 to the 76" L230 and C238. Size your bucket to match:
For rock work, hard clay, or frozen ground — go narrower, not wider. A 60" rock bucket on an L228 digs more effectively than a 72" in tough conditions. Width is about volume, not power delivery.
All 200 Series machines handle standard auger drives comfortably — 10–20 GPM at 2,000–3,000 PSI is well within every model's standard output. Where operators hit limits:
Snow pushers work on every NH model without hydraulics — purely mechanical, no flow requirements. Standard is a 96"–108" pusher on L228, C232, and C238. Snow blowers are the hydraulic-intensive option. Most commercial single-stage blowers want 20–30 GPM. Two-stage heavy-duty units can ask for 35+ GPM.
New Holland is part of CNH Industrial, which also covers Case IH and Case Construction. The dealer network in Canada is the New Holland Agriculture dealer chain — these dealers handle both ag equipment and the construction skid steers. Coverage is solid across the prairies and Ontario; thinner in Quebec and Atlantic provinces, though not absent.
Key dealer groups to know:
One honest note about service: New Holland skid steers don't enjoy the same parts-in-stock depth as Bobcat machines in most Canadian markets. CNH dealers primarily stock ag equipment, and the construction skid steer parts are secondary. For common items — hydraulic filters, bucket cutting edges, track components on CTLs — you're usually fine. For unusual hydraulic or electrical components, expect order lead times of a few days to a week.
Used New Holland skid steers show up regularly on Kijiji Canada and at Ritchie Bros. auctions in the western Canadian markets. L228 and L230 machines appear most frequently in Alberta and Saskatchewan farm equipment listings. The CTL versions (C232, C238) turn up at equipment auctions more than on private Kijiji sales.
What to confirm when buying a used NH machine if you're buying specifically for attachment use:
The attachment compatibility advantage of SSQA means a used NH machine is a clean slate for whatever attachment collection you already own or plan to buy. You're not inheriting a Bob-Tach ecosystem question. That's real value in a used machine purchase.
Yes — with a caveat. Modern Bobcat OEM attachments (post mid-1990s) use the same SAE J2513 interface that is the basis of both Bob-Tach and SSQA. The mounting plate geometry is compatible. A Bobcat 72" GP bucket will mount on an NH L228. What won't transfer: any Bobcat attachment that relies on Bobcat's proprietary hydraulic control connections or their X-Change system (which is a separate Bobcat-specific feature on some attachments). For standard buckets, forks, grapples, auger drives — no issue.
Yes. HLA Attachments (based in Listowel, Ontario) makes SSQA-compatible equipment — snow pushers, buckets, material handling attachments. Their products mount directly on NH 200 Series machines. HLA has dealer coverage across most Canadian provinces, making them a practical choice for Canadian NH operators who want domestic supply chains and warranty service.
Generally no — high-flow on New Holland machines is a factory-configured option, not a simple field upgrade. The high-flow system requires a different hydraulic pump or pump configuration, different coupler ports, and appropriate plumbing. Some shops have done this work, but it's not bolt-on. Get the machine's spec sheet before you buy if high-flow is essential to your attachment plan.
Mainly size and capacity. The L230 is physically wider (76" vs 69.6") and heavier, with a 3,000 lb ROC vs the L228's 2,800 lb. Both share the same 24 GPM standard / 37 GPM high-flow hydraulic output. For attachment use, they're equivalent hydraulically. The L230 is the right choice when you need the extra payload or will be running the widest bucket options consistently.
Looking for specific models available in Canada? Browse the skid steer attachment catalog for verified product pages on real models sold through Canadian dealers.