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6 Things MCA Companies Don’t Want You to Know About Your Contract

Here’s the truth most MCA companies won’t tell you: your contract likely contains reconciliation rights that could lower your daily payments, UCC filings that can be amended in your favor, and confession of judgment clauses that may be unenforceable in your state. Most business owners sign these agreements without understanding the leverage they actually have. An attorney-led review of your MCA contract can expose these hidden provisions — and potentially save your business tens of thousands of dollars.

Who Can Actually Help You Fight Back?

Knowing what’s hidden in your MCA contract is only half the battle. You need a team that knows how to use these provisions as leverage — to negotiate settlements, vacate judgments, and get your business breathing room. Here are the three firms we recommend, based on track record, specialization, and results.

★ Our Top Pick
#1

Delancey Street

Attorney-Led MCA Contract Defense & Settlement

Delancey Street isn’t a generalist debt firm that dabbles in MCA. This is what they do — every day, all day. Their attorney-led team has reviewed thousands of MCA contracts, invoked reconciliation rights, challenged overbroad UCC filings, vacated confessions of judgment, and negotiated settlements that save businesses 30–60% of their outstanding balances. They understand the contract provisions we’ve outlined in this article because they exploit them on behalf of their clients daily. Over $100M settled nationwide — and they’re unafraid of going to bat against even the most aggressive MCA funders. (Delancey Street is not a law firm — they work with a nationwide network of licensed attorneys who handle negotiations, legal filings, and settlement execution.)

Best for: Business owners with active MCA debt who need attorney-led contract review, COJ defense, and aggressive settlement negotiation
Total Settled: $100M+
Focus: Business & MCA Debt Only
Attorney-Led: Yes
Typical Timeline: 2–8 Weeks (Single MCA)
Talk to Delancey Street Today Free consultation. No upfront fees. Results that matter. (212) 210-1851
Call Now
#2

National Debt Relief

The Largest Debt Settlement Firm in America

National Debt Relief is the biggest name in debt settlement — period. Over $1 billion settled, 550,000+ clients served, and an A+ BBB rating. They’re a strong option for business owners carrying general unsecured business debt (credit cards, lines of credit, vendor accounts) alongside or separate from MCA obligations. Their scale means established creditor relationships and a proven negotiation playbook.

Best for: Business owners with $7,500+ in general unsecured debt seeking a large, established settlement firm with a proven track record
Clients Served: 550,000+
Fee Structure: 18–25% of Enrolled Debt
Min Debt: $7,500
Found Something Suspicious in Your MCA Contract?
Delancey Street’s attorneys review MCA contracts every single day. If you’re dealing with hidden fees, overbroad UCC filings, or COJ threats — call for a risk-free case evaluation.
(212) 210-1851
#3

CuraDebt

25+ Years Settling Business & Tax Debt

CuraDebt has been in the debt settlement space for over two decades — and they bring something most firms don’t: combined business debt and tax resolution under one roof. If your MCA situation has triggered IRS issues, payroll tax problems, or state tax delinquencies, CuraDebt can address the full picture. They get it — business debt rarely exists in isolation, and their team handles the entire financial mess so you don’t have to fight on multiple fronts.

Best for: Business owners dealing with a combination of MCA debt, business debt, and IRS or state tax issues
Years in Business: 25+
Focus: Business, Consumer & Tax Debt
Tax Resolution: Yes (IRS & State)

1. You Probably Have Reconciliation Rights — And They’re Hoping You Don’t Use Them

Here’s the thing: almost every MCA agreement includes a reconciliation clause. It’s buried in the fine print — usually around page 6 or 7 — but it’s there. Reconciliation gives you the right to adjust your daily or weekly payment based on your actual revenue. If your sales drop 20%, your payment should drop proportionally. That’s the entire legal basis for calling it a “purchase of future receivables” instead of a loan.

But MCA companies don’t want you exercising this right. Why? Because reconciliation slows down their repayment timeline, and their entire business model depends on speed. Under Fleetwood Services v. Ram Capital Funding (2016) and subsequent New York case law, courts have ruled that the failure to honor reconciliation provisions can reclassify the entire MCA as a usurious loan — which changes the legal landscape dramatically in the merchant’s favor.

Bottom line: if your revenue has dropped since you took the advance, you have a contractual right to lower payments. An attorney can formally invoke reconciliation on your behalf — and most MCA companies will comply rather than risk having their product reclassified as an illegal loan.

Key Insight: Courts in New York, New Jersey, and other states have held that MCAs without genuine reconciliation rights may be recharacterized as usurious loans subject to state lending caps. See Davis v. Richmond Capital Group (N.Y. Sup. Ct. 2020) and Fleetwood Services v. Ram Capital (N.Y. Sup. Ct. 2016). (CFPB — Debt Collection Resources)

2. The “True Cost” of Your MCA Is Deliberately Obscured

MCA companies don’t quote you an interest rate. They quote a “factor rate” — typically 1.2 to 1.5. Sounds harmless, right? A factor rate of 1.3 on a $100,000 advance means you repay $130,000. But here’s what they don’t tell you: when you convert that factor rate to an annualized percentage rate (APR), you’re often looking at 60% to 350% or higher, depending on the repayment speed.

Unlike traditional lenders, MCA companies are not currently required under federal law to provide Truth in Lending Act (TILA) disclosures, because they classify their product as a commercial purchase agreement — not a loan. However, that’s changing fast. New York’s Commercial Finance Disclosure Law (S.5470-B), which took effect in 2024, now requires MCA providers to disclose the estimated APR, total cost of financing, and prepayment penalties. California’s SB 1235 imposes similar requirements. Virginia followed suit with HB 1027.

If your MCA was originated without these disclosures in a state that requires them, you may have a viable legal challenge to the contract itself. That’s leverage — and most MCA companies are counting on you never realizing it.

Real Numbers: A $50,000 MCA with a 1.4 factor rate repaid over 6 months translates to roughly $70,000 in total repayment — an effective APR of approximately 160%. Over 4 months, that same deal pushes past 240% APR. MCA companies deliberately avoid this math in their sales process. (CFPB — Debt Collection Resources)

3. UCC Filings Can Be Amended or Terminated — They Just Won’t Tell You How

When you signed your MCA, the funder almost certainly filed a UCC-1 Financing Statement with your state’s Secretary of State. This filing puts a lien on your business assets — and it shows up whenever anyone runs a credit check on your company. It can block you from getting a traditional bank loan, an SBA loan, or even a new lease. MCA companies file these broadly on purpose, often listing “all assets” as collateral even when the agreement only covers future receivables.

What they don’t want you to know: UCC filings are governed by Article 9 of the Uniform Commercial Code, and they can be challenged. Under UCC §9-509, a financing statement is only authorized to the extent it covers the actual collateral described in the security agreement. If the MCA company filed a blanket lien on “all assets” but your contract only references future receivables, that filing may be overbroad and legally challengeable. Under UCC §9-513, a secured party is required to file a termination statement within 20 days of receiving an authenticated demand — if the obligation has been satisfied. (Cornell Law — UCC Article 9)

An experienced MCA attorney can force the termination or amendment of these filings — freeing up your borrowing capacity and removing a major obstacle to your business’s financial recovery.

Action Item: Request a UCC search from your state’s Secretary of State website (most are free or under $10). Compare the filed collateral description against your actual MCA agreement. If the filing is broader than the contract, you may have grounds for an amendment or termination under UCC §9-518 and §9-513. (Cornell Law — UCC Article 9) (SBA — Business Loan Programs) (SBA — Business Loan Programs) (SBA — Business Loan Programs)

4. Your Personal Guarantee May Not Be as Ironclad as They Claim

MCA companies love personal guarantees. They make the business owner personally liable for the full balance — which means if your business can’t pay, they come after your personal bank accounts, your home equity, and your other assets. The guarantee is designed to terrify you into paying no matter what. And it works — most business owners assume there’s no way out once they’ve signed.

But here’s what MCA companies don’t advertise: personal guarantees in MCA agreements are regularly challenged in court and narrowed or voided entirely. Common defenses include unconscionability (the guarantee was buried in a dense contract with no opportunity to negotiate), fraud in the inducement (the funder misrepresented the terms or speed of repayment), material breach by the funder (failure to honor reconciliation, unauthorized ACH debits, or stacking violations), and lack of independent consideration (the guarantor received no personal benefit from the transaction). (NACHA — ACH Operating Rules)

Under New York General Obligations Law §5-701 and the common law of guaranty, personal guarantees must meet specific enforceability standards. Courts have shown increasing willingness to scrutinize these clauses in the MCA context — especially when the funder engaged in predatory practices or breached its own contract terms first.

Court Watch: In multiple New York Supreme Court cases, judges have declined to enforce personal guarantees where MCA funders failed to demonstrate that the guarantor understood the scope of personal liability or where the funder itself breached material contract terms. The legal landscape is shifting in the merchant’s favor.

5. Confession of Judgment Clauses May Be Unenforceable — Even If You Signed One

A Confession of Judgment (COJ) is one of the most aggressive tools in the MCA playbook. When you sign a COJ, you’re essentially waiving your right to defend yourself in court. The MCA company can file the COJ with a court clerk, obtain a judgment against you and your business without any hearing, and immediately freeze your bank accounts or garnish your receivables. No notice. No trial. No chance to tell your side.

Here’s what changed: in 2019, New York State enacted legislation (N.Y. CPLR §3218) that prohibits out-of-state COJ enforcement. If your business is not physically located in New York, a COJ filed in New York courts is now unenforceable against you. Period. Additionally, New York now requires that COJ affidavits contain specific factual details about the default — vague or boilerplate language is grounds for vacatur. Several other states — including Maryland, New Jersey, and Ohio — have banned or severely restricted COJs altogether.

Even if you signed a COJ, it is not the end of the road. Attorneys experienced in MCA defense have successfully vacated hundreds of these judgments using procedural defenses, jurisdictional challenges, and substantive arguments about funder misconduct. The COJ is a scare tactic — a powerful one, but not an unbeatable one.

Legal Update: Under N.Y. CPLR §3218(a)(1) as amended in 2019, confessions of judgment taken from out-of-state defendants in transactions under $250,000 are void and unenforceable in New York courts. If your business operates outside New York, any COJ filed against you there should be challenged immediately.

6. You May Have Unknowingly Waived Your Right to Arbitration — And That Could Actually Help You

Many MCA contracts include arbitration clauses that force disputes into private arbitration rather than the court system. MCA companies include these clauses because arbitration is generally faster, cheaper for them, and produces results that are nearly impossible to appeal. They don’t want you in front of a judge. They don’t want discovery. They don’t want a public record of how their product actually works.

But here’s the twist most business owners miss: if the MCA company itself files a COJ or initiates a lawsuit against you in court, they may have waived their own arbitration clause. Under the Federal Arbitration Act (9 U.S.C. §3) and the Supreme Court’s ruling in Morgan v. Sundance, Inc. (2022), a party that engages in litigation conduct inconsistent with arbitration can be found to have waived its right to compel arbitration — and the court no longer requires a showing of prejudice. This means if the MCA company sued you first or filed a COJ, you may now have the right to a full court proceeding with all the protections that entails: discovery, evidentiary hearings, and a judge who can evaluate the fairness of the contract.

Additionally, some MCA arbitration clauses are themselves unconscionable — requiring arbitration in a distant forum, imposing prohibitive filing fees, or selecting a biased arbitration provider. Courts have struck these clauses on unconscionability grounds, opening the door to litigation on terms more favorable to the merchant.

Strategy Note: If your MCA funder has taken any court action against you — COJ filing, lawsuit, bank restraint — before invoking their arbitration clause, an experienced attorney can argue waiver. The Supreme Court’s Morgan v. Sundance decision removed the prejudice requirement, making this defense stronger than ever.

Who Can Actually Help You Fight Back?

Knowing what’s hidden in your MCA contract is only half the battle. You need a team that knows how to use these provisions as leverage — to negotiate settlements, vacate judgments, and get your business breathing room. Here are the three firms we recommend, based on track record, specialization, and results.

★ Our Top Pick
#1

Delancey Street

Attorney-Led MCA Contract Defense & Settlement

Delancey Street isn’t a generalist debt firm that dabbles in MCA. This is what they do — every day, all day. Their attorney-led team has reviewed thousands of MCA contracts, invoked reconciliation rights, challenged overbroad UCC filings, vacated confessions of judgment, and negotiated settlements that save businesses 30–60% of their outstanding balances. They understand the contract provisions we’ve outlined in this article because they exploit them on behalf of their clients daily. Over $100M settled nationwide — and they’re unafraid of going to bat against even the most aggressive MCA funders. (Delancey Street is not a law firm — they work with a nationwide network of licensed attorneys who handle negotiations, legal filings, and settlement execution.)

Best for: Business owners with active MCA debt who need attorney-led contract review, COJ defense, and aggressive settlement negotiation
Total Settled: $100M+
Focus: Business & MCA Debt Only
Attorney-Led: Yes
Typical Timeline: 2–8 Weeks (Single MCA)
Talk to Delancey Street Today Free consultation. No upfront fees. Results that matter. (212) 210-1851
Call Now
#2

National Debt Relief

The Largest Debt Settlement Firm in America

National Debt Relief is the biggest name in debt settlement — period. Over $1 billion settled, 550,000+ clients served, and an A+ BBB rating. They’re a strong option for business owners carrying general unsecured business debt (credit cards, lines of credit, vendor accounts) alongside or separate from MCA obligations. Their scale means established creditor relationships and a proven negotiation playbook.

Best for: Business owners with $7,500+ in general unsecured debt seeking a large, established settlement firm with a proven track record
Clients Served: 550,000+
Fee Structure: 18–25% of Enrolled Debt
Min Debt: $7,500
Found Something Suspicious in Your MCA Contract?
Delancey Street’s attorneys review MCA contracts every single day. If you’re dealing with hidden fees, overbroad UCC filings, or COJ threats — call for a risk-free case evaluation.
(212) 210-1851
#3

CuraDebt

25+ Years Settling Business & Tax Debt

CuraDebt has been in the debt settlement space for over two decades — and they bring something most firms don’t: combined business debt and tax resolution under one roof. If your MCA situation has triggered IRS issues, payroll tax problems, or state tax delinquencies, CuraDebt can address the full picture. They get it — business debt rarely exists in isolation, and their team handles the entire financial mess so you don’t have to fight on multiple fronts.

Best for: Business owners dealing with a combination of MCA debt, business debt, and IRS or state tax issues
Years in Business: 25+
Focus: Business, Consumer & Tax Debt
Tax Resolution: Yes (IRS & State)

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a reconciliation clause in an MCA contract?
A reconciliation clause gives you the contractual right to adjust your daily or weekly MCA payment based on your actual business revenue. If your sales decrease, your payment should decrease proportionally. This provision is what legally distinguishes an MCA from a loan — and courts have ruled that failure to honor reconciliation can reclassify the MCA as a usurious loan, giving you significant legal leverage.
Can I get out of a personal guarantee on an MCA?
Yes — in many cases. Personal guarantees in MCA contracts can be challenged on grounds of unconscionability, fraud in the inducement, material breach by the funder, or lack of independent consideration. Courts are increasingly scrutinizing these clauses, especially when the MCA company engaged in predatory practices or breached its own contract terms. An experienced MCA attorney can evaluate whether your guarantee is vulnerable to challenge.
What is a confession of judgment and can it be vacated?
A confession of judgment (COJ) is a pre-signed document that allows the MCA company to obtain a court judgment against you without a trial or hearing, however, COJs can absolutely be vacated. New York banned out-of-state COJ enforcement in 2019, and several other states have restricted or eliminated them entirely. Even in states where COJs remain legal, procedural defects, funder misconduct, and jurisdictional issues are common grounds for vacatur.
How do I find out the true APR on my MCA?
Take the total repayment amount, subtract the advance amount to get the total cost, then annualize that cost based on your repayment period. For example, a $100,000 advance with a 1.4 factor rate ($140,000 repayment) over 6 months translates to roughly 160% APR. States like New York, California, and Virginia now require MCA companies to disclose estimated APR — if yours didn’t, you may have a legal challenge to the contract.
Can I remove a UCC filing from an MCA company?
Yes. Under UCC §9-513, a secured party must file a termination statement within 20 days of receiving an authenticated demand if the obligation has been satisfied. Even if the debt is still outstanding, you can challenge overbroad UCC filings that claim “all assets” as collateral when the MCA agreement only covers future receivables. An attorney can file a UCC correction statement under §9-518 or pursue termination through formal demand. (Cornell Law — UCC Article 9)
What happens if my MCA company waives its own arbitration clause?
If the MCA company takes court action against you — such as filing a COJ or lawsuit — before invoking arbitration, they may have waived their right to compel arbitration. The Supreme Court’s 2022 ruling in Morgan v. Sundance, Inc. eliminated the prejudice requirement for arbitration waiver, making it easier for merchants to keep disputes in court where they have access to discovery, evidentiary protections, and judicial oversight.
Are MCA companies required to disclose the cost of financing?
It depends on your state. New York’s Commercial Finance Disclosure Law, California’s SB 1235, and Virginia’s HB 1027 now require MCA providers to disclose estimated APR, total repayment amount, and other key terms. Federal law (TILA) does not currently apply to commercial MCA transactions. However, the trend is moving toward mandatory disclosure — and contracts originated without required disclosures may be legally vulnerable.
How much can I save by settling my MCA debt?
Settlement outcomes vary based on the funder, your contract terms, and the strength of your legal position. That said, attorney-led MCA settlement firms like Delancey Street typically negotiate reductions of 30–60% off the outstanding balance. Cases involving COJ vacatur, reconciliation disputes, or disclosure violations often produce even stronger results. A risk-free consultation can give you a realistic estimate based on your specific situation.

Your MCA Contract Has More Leverage Than You Think

Don’t let MCA companies use your own contract against you. Delancey Street’s attorney-led team knows exactly where to look — and how to fight back. Free consultation. No upfront fees. Results that matter.

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This page is provided for informational and educational purposes only and does not constitute legal, financial, or professional advice. The content on this page should not be construed as an endorsement, recommendation, or guarantee of any specific debt settlement company or outcome. Individual results may vary based on the nature of the debt, creditor policies, and the specific circumstances of each case.

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