About / Where to Buy

Where to Buy Skid Steer Attachments in Canada

OEM dealers, specialty independents, online retailers, auction houses, and Kijiji — each channel has real trade-offs. This is a practical directory of who's actually selling what, where.

Option 1: OEM Dealers (Bobcat, Cat, Case, Deere)

Buying from an OEM dealer means buying the manufacturer's own attachment — Bobcat attachments from a Bobcat dealer, Cat attachments from a Cat dealer. You'll pay more than almost any other channel, but you get:

OEM pricing for common attachments typically runs 20–40% higher than equivalent third-party options. A Bobcat-branded GP bucket will cost more than an HLA or Virnig bucket of comparable spec. The premium buys certainty — particularly relevant for high-duty attachments like hydraulic breakers and cold planers where compatibility and flow matching matter.

For basic attachments (buckets, pallet forks, angle brooms), the OEM premium is harder to justify. For complex hydraulic attachments on machines still under warranty, it may be worth it to avoid voiding coverage.

Option 2: Specialty Equipment Dealers

These dealers carry multiple attachment brands, typically stock more inventory than OEM dealers, and often have more product knowledge on the attachment side specifically.

BC

Westerra Equipment

John Deere dealer with multiple BC locations. Carries Deere attachments plus third-party lines. Strong inventory presence in the Lower Mainland and Interior.

westerraequipment.com ↗
BC · AB

GLC Equipment

BC and Alberta specialty dealer focused on North American-made skid steer attachments. Carries brands including Virnig and others. Known for good stock across categories.

glcequipment.ca ↗
AB · SK

Rocky Mountain Equipment

Case and CNH dealer network across Alberta and Saskatchewan. Multiple locations carrying OEM Case/New Holland attachments plus aftermarket lines. One of the largest equipment dealer networks in the Prairies.

rockymtnequip.com ↗
ON · QC · East

Nortrax

John Deere dealer with locations across Ontario, Quebec, and Atlantic Canada. Attachment inventory varies by location — call ahead for specific categories. Strong service network east of Ontario.

nortrax.com ↗
ON

Shaw Brothers Equipment (Barrie, ON)

Specialty attachment dealer in central Ontario. Carries augers, brush cutters, tracks, and more. Ships across Canada. Good option for Ontario buyers who want something other than OEM pricing.

shawbros.ca ↗
ON · National

Tag Equipment

Canadian dealer carrying hydraulic tools, grapples, snow blades, and other attachments. Ships nationally. Decent breadth of categories with pricing listed online.

tagequipment.ca ↗

Option 3: Canadian Online Attachment Retailers

These companies sell new attachments direct, ship nationally, and operate primarily online. Pricing is typically competitive with specialty dealers. The trade-off is you can't inspect the product before it arrives, and returns on large equipment attachments are complicated.

ON · Ships Nationally

HLA Attachments

Manufactured in Listowel, Ontario. HLA is one of the largest Canadian attachment manufacturers — snow pushers, blades, buckets, grapples, augers, and more. Products are made domestically. Wide dealer network and direct purchase available. Strong choice for snow attachments in particular.

hlaattachments.com ↗
BC · Ships Nationally

TMG Industrial

Based in Langley, BC. Carries a broad range of skid steer attachments at competitive price points. Strong on agricultural and landscaping categories. Shipping from BC means longer lead times to Eastern Canada.

tmgindustrial.ca ↗
National

AgDealer

Online marketplace aggregating listings from dealers across Canada and the US. Not a direct seller — it's a search layer over dealer inventory. Useful for finding regional stock and comparing dealer pricing on specific attachment types.

agdealer.com ↗

Option 4: Buying Used in Canada

Used attachments are a legitimate option for many buyers — especially for simpler attachments where wear is visually inspectable and parts are cheap. The savings can be significant. The risks are real.

Kijiji

Kijiji is the most active used attachment market in Canada. Alberta has the highest volume — often 700+ listings at any time, reflecting the oilpatch and ag sector demand. Ontario and BC are also active.

Search tips:

Red flags on Kijiji:

Ritchie Bros. Auctioneers

Ritchie Bros runs live and online auctions with Canadian locations at Nisku AB, Barrhead AB, Mascouche QC, and Tilbury ON, plus smaller regional sites. The selection is large, conditions are usually better documented than Kijiji, and you can often view items in person before bidding.

Attachment lots go for a wide range — a simple GP bucket might clear for $300–$800, while a quality auger with bits goes for $2,000–$5,000. Premium attachments from recognizable brands (Metal Pless, Virnig, HLA) tend to hold value well at auction.

The catch: buyer's premium. Ritchie Bros charges a buyer's fee (typically 10–15% on top of hammer price) plus applicable taxes. Factor this into your bidding ceiling.

rbauction.com — skid steer attachments ↗

IronPlanet Canada

IronPlanet (now under Ritchie Bros umbrella) runs online-only auctions with condition reports including photos and sometimes third-party inspection reports. Less common for attachments than whole machines, but worth checking for hydraulic tools and specialty items.

ironplanet.com ↗

Option 5: Import and Grey Market

Chinese-manufactured attachments are available through importers, direct from AliExpress suppliers, or via container freight. The pricing is often dramatically lower than domestic equivalents. The trade-offs are real and worth understanding honestly.

Where imports work:

Where imports are a real risk:

Coupler compatibility: Chinese imports often specify "universal" or "skid steer compatible" without clearly stating whether the plate matches Bob-Tach, H-Tach, Q-Tatch, or another standard. Verify the plate dimensions before ordering, and confirm with your dealer. Retrofitting a coupler plate to an import attachment is doable but adds cost and labour.

Price Comparison Framework

What to expect to pay (new vs used, in CAD) for common attachments:

AttachmentNew (CAD)Used (CAD)Notes
GP bucket 72"$1,200–$2,500$400–$1,000Wide range based on steel thickness and brand
Rock/skeleton bucket 72"$2,000–$4,000$700–$1,800More steel = higher new cost; holds value used
Pallet forks (class II)$1,500–$3,000$600–$1,500Simple; buy used without much risk if tines are straight
Snow pusher 8ft$3,500–$8,000$1,200–$3,500Metal Pless at top end; Chinese imports at low end
Auger drive + bit (9")$3,000–$6,000$1,000–$3,000Check motor condition and bit wear on used
Grapple bucket 72"$3,000–$6,000$1,200–$3,000Check cylinder seals and tine welds on used
Hydraulic breaker (med)$5,000–$12,000$2,000–$5,000Service history matters; check chisel condition
Angle broom 72"$3,000–$5,500$900–$2,200Check hydraulic motor and bristle wear
Snow blower (pro)$8,000–$15,000$3,500–$7,000Check auger flights, impeller, and hydraulic fittings
The 60% rule for used: A well-maintained used attachment from a reputable source typically sells for 50–65% of current new replacement cost. If you're seeing used prices above 70% of new, compare carefully — there may be a reason, or the seller hasn't checked current pricing.
No affiliate relationships. All dealer and marketplace links are for reference only. Pricing is approximate market data — verify current pricing with your dealer or seller. SkidSteerAttachments.ca receives no commission from any source listed on this page.

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Your first stop for attachment research in Canada. Browse the skid steer attachment catalog for verified product pages on real models sold through Canadian dealers — with specs, pricing context, and dealer links.