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Make
Model
DefaultRating: High to LowRating: Low to High
John Deere 333G
 John Deere 333G
John Deere 331G
 John Deere 331G
John Deere 325G
 John Deere 325G
John Deere 317G
 John Deere 317G
334 P-Tier
 John Deere 334 P-Tier
John Deere 330 P-Tier
 John Deere 330 P-Tier
318 P-Tier
 John Deere 318 P-Tier
316 P-Tier
 John Deere 316 P-Tier
SVL110-3
 Kubota SVL110-3
SVL97-3
 Kubota SVL97-3
SVL75-3
 Kubota SVL75-3
SVL65-2S
 Kubota SVL65-2S
SVL65-2
 Kubota SVL65-2
Kubota_SSV75
 Kubota SSV75
kubota_ssv65
 Kubota SSV65

Compact Loaders

Browse compact loaders in Canada — including skid steer loaders and compact track loaders (CTLs) from major brands. Compact loaders are versatile, attachment-driven machines used across construction, agriculture, landscaping, snow removal, and acreage operations. They're the workhorse equipment for operators needing strong loader capability in a maneuverable footprint.

This category on Aglist helps Canadian buyers compare specs, read real owner reviews, find dealer information, and make informed decisions across the full range of compact loader brands and models available in Canada.

What is a Compact Loader?

A compact loader is an umbrella term covering two related but distinct machine types: skid steer loaders (wheeled) and compact track loaders (track-driven). Both share the same general concept — a small chassis with high-power hydraulics, a quick-attach mounting system for swapping attachments, and a vertical or radial lift boom design optimized for loader work.

The difference comes down to how they drive: skid steers run on four rubber tires and turn by skidding (forcing different sides to spin at different speeds), while compact track loaders run on rubber tracks and turn the same way but with much lower ground pressure and better flotation.

Both categories share these common characteristics:

  • Operating weight typically 4,000-15,000+ lb
  • 60-110+ HP diesel engines
  • Universal SSL Quick-Tach mounting (industry standard)
  • Compatible with hundreds of attachments (buckets, forks, augers, grapples, snow attachments, brooms, mowers, breakers)
  • Compact footprint for tight-quarter operation
  • 4WD standard (or 4-track equivalent)

Skid Steer Loaders vs Compact Track Loaders

The single most-important decision when comparing compact loaders: wheels or tracks?

When a Skid Steer Loader (Wheels) Makes Sense

  • Predominantly hard surfaces (concrete, asphalt, gravel)
  • Operations requiring high travel speed
  • Lower-cost machine and lower-cost maintenance
  • Snow removal on paved surfaces
  • Operations not needing soft-ground flotation
  • Faster across-site transport between jobsites

When a Compact Track Loader (Tracks) Makes Sense

  • Soft soil, mud, sand, snow conditions
  • Agricultural work in field conditions
  • Landscape work where ground disturbance must be minimized
  • Operations crossing varied terrain regularly
  • Year-round operation including muddy spring conditions
  • Lower ground pressure for minimal lawn or soil damage

For most Canadian operators, the CTL is the more-popular choice — better flotation in mud, snow, and field conditions matches typical Canadian use patterns. Wheeled skid steers remain the right choice for predominantly hard-surface operations (snow contractors on commercial pavement, indoor warehouse work, gravel material handling).

Common Compact Loader Applications

Compact loaders are extremely versatile — the right attachment makes one machine handle dozens of different jobs:

  • Construction: material handling, demolition cleanup, grading, site prep
  • Agriculture: feed yard chores, manure handling, bale moving, fence work
  • Landscaping: sod handling, mulch spreading, tree work, hardscape installation
  • Snow removal: pushers, plows, blowers, buckets — see HLA Snow attachments
  • Forestry: mulching, brushing, log handling (with high-flow hydraulics)
  • Material handling: pallet work, gravel, mulch, soil, salt/sand

The attachment ecosystem is what makes compact loaders so productive — a single machine with a properly-matched attachment set replaces multiple specialized machines.

Sizing Compact Loaders to Your Work

Operating weight is the primary sizing metric, but horsepower, rated operating capacity (ROC), and hydraulic flow all matter:

Operating Weight Class Typical HP ROC Best For
Under 6,500 lb Small-frame 50-65 HP 1,500-1,750 lb Residential, light commercial
6,500-9,500 lb Mid-frame 65-80 HP 1,800-2,500 lb Most commercial operations
9,500-13,000 lb Large-frame 80-100 HP 2,500-3,500 lb Production commercial
13,000+ lb Production-class 100+ HP 3,500+ lb Heavy duty cycles, mulching, demolition

For most Canadian commercial operators, the mid-frame (6,500-9,500 lb) class is the sweet spot — sufficient capability for typical construction, agriculture, and landscape work without the cost premium of production-class machines.

Browse Compact Loader Categories on Aglist

The compact loader category on Aglist is divided into two main types — choose the category that matches your wheels-vs-tracks decision:

Skid Steer Loaders

Wheeled compact loaders for hard-surface operations, snow removal on pavement, and operations prioritizing travel speed and lower cost. Available models include the Kubota SSV Series and John Deere P-Tier skid steers.

[Browse Skid Steer Loaders on Aglist →]

Compact Track Loaders (CTLs)

Track-driven compact loaders for soft ground, agricultural work, snow removal in mud and snow, and operations needing low ground pressure. Available models include the Kubota SVL Series and John Deere G-Series CTLs.

[Browse Compact Track Loaders on Aglist →]

Brands Available on Aglist

The major compact loader brands serving the Canadian market — each with established dealer networks across all provinces:

  • Kubota — strong reputation in agriculture and landscape segments; SSV (skid steers) and SVL (CTLs) lineup
  • John Deere — comprehensive lineup spanning P-Tier (current generation) and G-Series (proven generation); strong dealer support
  • Bobcat, Case, New Holland, CAT, Gehl, JCB — other major brands serving the Canadian market

For detailed brand and model comparisons:

  • John Deere P-Tier vs G-Series Compared — buyer's guide covering 316 P-Tier, 318 P-Tier, 330 P-Tier, 334 P-Tier, 317G, 325G, 331G, 333G
  • Kubota SVL Series Compared — buyer's guide covering SVL65-2, SVL75-3, SVL97-3, SVL110-3 CTLs

Compact Loader Attachments

The compact loader's versatility comes from its attachment ecosystem. Browse compatible attachments by category:

  • Snow pushers and box plows — see our Snow Pushers buyer's guide
  • Snow blowers, plows, and buckets
  • Material handling buckets, forks, grapples
  • Grading attachments, augers, breakers
  • Mulching heads, brush cutters, brooms

Most attachments use the universal SSL Quick-Tach mounting plate — compatible across virtually all skid steer and CTL brands.

Related Resources

  • Prairie Winter Skid Steer Operation Guide — cold-weather operating tips for Canadian winter
  • John Deere P-Tier vs G-Series Compared — Canadian buyer's guide for John Deere compact loaders
  • Kubota SVL Series Compared — Canadian buyer's guide for Kubota CTLs

Aglist is an independent equipment marketplace based in Canada. Specifications and pricing vary by manufacturer, dealer, and configuration — always confirm details with your local dealer before purchase.

Note: We try our best to keep specs and information accurate, but some details can be missing or different depending on the source. Before you buy, service, or repair equipment, please double-check key specs with the manufacturer, the owner’s manual, or your dealer.

 

About reviews: Reviews on Aglist are written by real users. We moderate them for spam and abuse, but opinions and claims are still personal—so use them as guidance, not as a guarantee.

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