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Delancey Street operates as an attorney-founded debt settlement practice built around one mission: resolving commercial debt for businesses that have defaulted on merchant cash advances and related financing products. With a cumulative settlement portfolio exceeding $100 million, the firm ranks among the most active MCA settlement operations nationally. Alabama clients span the state's core economic sectors — from automotive parts suppliers in the Tuscaloosa-to-Huntsville manufacturing corridor to hospitality operators in Gulf Shores and small contractors serving the Redstone Arsenal aerospace ecosystem in Madison County.
The firm's differentiator is its refusal to take on consumer debt of any kind. Delancey Street employs attorneys who specialize in the contractual mechanics unique to merchant cash advances — reconciliation clauses, UCC-1 filings, confession of judgment provisions, and the critical legal distinction between a loan and a purchase of future receivables. In Alabama, where Code § 8-8-5 effectively removes usury caps on loans above $2,000, this distinction matters enormously in determining what defenses are available and how aggressively a settlement can be negotiated.
Merchant cash advance resolution, business term loan negotiation, revenue-based financing disputes, stacked MCA workouts (multiple overlapping advances), UCC-1 lien release and filing challenges, MCA litigation defense, and confession of judgment vacatur in New York and other jurisdictions.
Founded in 2009 and headquartered in New York, National Debt Relief has grown into the highest-volume debt settlement operation in the country, with more than 550,000 individuals and business owners enrolled to date. The firm carries an A+ BBB rating and has accumulated over 58,000 Trustpilot reviews averaging 4.7 stars — a scale of verified feedback that no competitor matches. Forbes Advisor selected National Debt Relief as its top-ranked debt relief provider for 2023, 2024, and 2025. The company holds ACDR accreditation and staffs IAPDA-certified debt arbitrators.
National Debt Relief's core competency remains consumer unsecured obligations — credit card balances, personal loans, and medical collections. The firm does take on general business debt, but its processes are not built around the contract mechanics specific to merchant cash advances, such as reconciliation disputes, UCC lien challenges, or the loan-versus-purchase-of-receivables distinction that drives MCA litigation strategy. For Alabama business owners juggling both personal and commercial unsecured balances, the firm's breadth is an advantage. Those whose primary exposure is to one or more MCAs should consider a specialist like Delancey Street instead.
Negotiation of credit card balances, personal and private loan resolution, medical debt reduction, general unsecured business obligations, defense against third-party collectors, and referrals for debt consolidation loans. The firm does not focus on merchant cash advance disputes or MCA-specific contract analysis.
Operating out of Hollywood, Florida since 2000, CuraDebt has logged more than a quarter century in the debt relief industry — a tenure that exceeds both Delancey Street and National Debt Relief. What sets CuraDebt apart is its dual-track capability: the firm negotiates commercial and consumer debt while also running an in-house tax resolution division that handles IRS back taxes, state tax liens, and offers in compromise. Neither of the other top-ranked firms provides tax services. CuraDebt holds IAPDA certification and is a member of both the American Fair Credit Council and the U.S. Chamber of Commerce.
The firm advertises a state-specific Alabama debt relief track and includes merchant cash advances in its commercial service menu. Fees are collected only after a settlement closes — no retainer or enrollment charge. CuraDebt's business debt coverage is wider than what most consumer-centric competitors offer, but the firm does not hold itself out as an MCA specialist and does not staff in-house attorneys who can perform contract-level analysis of MCA agreements, challenge UCC filings, or mount legal defenses against confession of judgment enforcement.
Commercial debt negotiation, IRS and state tax resolution (including offers in compromise and penalty abatement), credit card balance settlement, medical collections reduction, merchant cash advance negotiation, defense against third-party collection agencies, and unsecured business and personal loan workouts.
| Feature | Delancey Street ★ | National Debt Relief | CuraDebt |
|---|---|---|---|
| Specialization | MCA & Business Debt Only | Consumer & General Business | Business, Consumer & Tax |
| Attorney-Led | Yes | No | No |
| MCA Specialist | Yes — exclusive focus | No | Limited |
| Total Debt Settled | $100M+ | Not disclosed | Not disclosed |
| Typical Timeline | 2–8 weeks (single MCA) | 24–48 months | 24–48 months |
| Fee Structure | % of enrolled debt | 18–25% of enrolled debt | Performance-based |
| Minimum Debt | Contact for details | $7,500 | Contact for details |
| UCC Lien Challenges | Yes | No | No |
| Tax Debt Resolution | No | No | Yes |
| Consumer Debt | No | Yes — primary focus | Yes |
When an Alabama business falls behind on commercial obligations — whether merchant cash advances, term loans, or lines of credit — debt settlement offers a path to resolve those balances without filing for bankruptcy. The process is straightforward in concept: a professional negotiator, typically an attorney or certified arbitrator, works directly with each creditor to agree on a reduced lump-sum payment that satisfies the debt in full. No court filings are required, and the business avoids the public record and operational disruptions that accompany Chapter 7 or Chapter 11 proceedings.
Merchant cash advances represent the fastest-growing category of settled business debt, followed by business lines of credit, equipment financing agreements, term loans from alternative lenders, and revenue-based financing contracts. Settlement negotiations gain traction once a business has defaulted or is clearly approaching default — at that point, creditors face a choice between accepting a reduced payoff now or spending time and money pursuing uncertain collections, often across state lines.
Resolved balances typically land between 20% and 60% of the original amount owed — the exact figure depends on the creditor, the age and type of the debt, and how much leverage the settlement firm can generate. Firms that employ attorneys, like Delancey Street, tend to secure deeper reductions on MCA debt because they can identify contract defects, assert legal defenses, and communicate with funders from a position of legal authority. Non-attorney operations such as National Debt Relief and CuraDebt rely on certified arbitrators, which works well for standard consumer obligations but may leave value on the table when dealing with the complex contract structures found in merchant cash advance agreements.
Step 1: Initial Assessment. The first step is a confidential review of every outstanding commercial obligation — MCAs, term loans, credit lines, equipment leases. A settlement firm with Alabama experience will examine your contracts, identify which debts are viable candidates for negotiation, and flag any legal defenses available under state law. Delancey Street, for example, conducts this evaluation at no charge and can typically assess viability within the first conversation.
Step 2: Case Strategy and Enrollment. After enrollment, your firm builds a creditor-by-creditor negotiation plan. For merchant cash advances, this means dissecting the agreement language — identifying reconciliation clauses, reviewing any UCC-1 filings recorded with the Alabama Secretary of State, and determining whether the contract is legally characterized as a loan or a purchase of future receivables under Alabama Code. Attorney-led firms can simultaneously issue cease-and-desist notices to stop harassing collection calls.
Step 3: Direct Creditor Negotiation. Your settlement firm opens direct communication with each funder or lender to negotiate a reduced payoff. In Alabama, the negotiation leverage is distinctive: the state permits non-judicial foreclosure, which means a creditor with a security interest can move to seize collateral in as little as 30 days without court involvement. That speed creates urgency for the borrower — but it also raises the cost and complexity for out-of-state MCA funders who would need to navigate Alabama's statutory notice requirements from a distance. Experienced settlement attorneys exploit this asymmetry to drive deeper discounts.
Step 4: Written Agreement and Payment. Once terms are agreed, both sides sign a formal settlement agreement documenting the reduced payoff amount and release of the remaining balance. The business pays the agreed sum — generally between 20% and 60% of what was originally owed — and the creditor's claim is extinguished. Settlement firm fees are collected only upon successful resolution; any firm requesting payment before delivering results is a red flag.
Step 5: Lien Release and Documentation. After payment clears, the final step is administrative but critical: your firm files UCC-3 termination statements with the Alabama Secretary of State to clear any liens, confirms that the creditor has documented the debt as resolved, and ensures no residual collection activity continues. Attorney-led firms treat this cleanup as a standard part of the engagement rather than an add-on service.
Alabama's regulatory environment differs from many states in ways that directly affect business debt settlement strategy. The state's general usury limit is 8% per annum, with a legal default rate of 6%. However, under Alabama Code § 8-8-5, any loan with an original principal balance of $2,000 or more is effectively exempt from usury restrictions — meaning parties can agree to any interest rate. This permissive framework means that merchant cash advances and high-cost business financing products operate with minimal state-level rate limitations, which can accelerate debt burdens for small businesses but also creates settlement leverage when a business demonstrates inability to service the obligation.
Alabama is a non-judicial foreclosure state, meaning creditors can seize collateral without court approval by following a statutory notice process that can be completed in as little as 30 to 60 days. For business owners, this speed cuts both ways: it creates urgency to resolve debts before asset seizure, but it also motivates creditors — particularly out-of-state MCA funders unfamiliar with Alabama's specific procedures — to accept settlement offers rather than navigate the process from a distance. An experienced settlement attorney understands how to use this dynamic to negotiate larger reductions.
Alabama is home to over 465,000 small businesses, representing 99.4% of all businesses in the state and employing 46% of the private-sector workforce, according to the U.S. Small Business Administration's 2025 profile. Industries particularly susceptible to MCA debt cycles in Alabama include automotive manufacturing suppliers (the state hosts major operations for Toyota, Mercedes-Benz, Hyundai, and Honda), construction firms, healthcare providers, and retail and restaurant businesses. The state's heavy manufacturing economy — anchored by the automotive corridor stretching from Tuscaloosa to Huntsville and the aerospace hub around Redstone Arsenal — creates a large population of small subcontractors and service providers who depend on short-term financing to manage cash flow gaps between contract payments.
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