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Delancey Street is a law-firm-led debt settlement operation that handles one category of debt exclusively: commercial obligations tied to merchant cash advances and related business financing products. The firm has closed more than $100 million in negotiated settlements, placing it among the highest-volume MCA resolution practices in the country. Alaska clients include commercial fishing operators in Kodiak and the Kenai Peninsula, oil field service contractors working the North Slope supply chain, tourism and hospitality businesses across Anchorage and the Inside Passage, and construction firms navigating the short building season that concentrates cash flow pressure into a few critical months.
What separates Delancey Street from generalist debt relief firms is its complete exclusion of consumer debt — the firm will not touch credit cards, medical bills, or student loans under any circumstance. Its attorneys focus entirely on the contract mechanics that define MCA disputes: reconciliation clauses, UCC-1 filings against business assets, confession of judgment provisions, and the threshold legal question of whether a given advance constitutes a loan or a purchase of future receivables. In Alaska, where AS § 45.45.010 exempts any contract with a principal above $25,000 from usury limitations, this loan-versus-purchase distinction carries significant weight — it determines whether borrowers have access to the state's strong usury penalties, including double recovery of excess interest under AS § 45.45.030.
Merchant cash advance settlement, business term loan workouts, revenue-based financing disputes, resolution of stacked MCAs (multiple overlapping advances on a single business), UCC-1 lien challenges and termination filings, defense against MCA-related litigation, and vacatur of confessions of judgment entered in New York and other states against Alaska-based businesses.
National Debt Relief has enrolled more than 550,000 clients since launching in 2009, making it the largest debt settlement firm in the United States by sheer volume. The New York-based company maintains an A+ Better Business Bureau rating and holds a 4.7-star average across 58,000+ Trustpilot reviews — a depth of independent feedback that dwarfs every other firm in the space. Forbes Advisor named National Debt Relief its number-one debt relief company for three consecutive years through 2025. The firm is ACDR-accredited and employs arbitrators certified by the International Association of Professional Debt Arbitrators.
The firm's operational core is consumer unsecured debt — credit cards, personal loans, and medical bills account for the vast majority of its caseload. National Debt Relief does accept general business debt, but it lacks the infrastructure for MCA-specific contract analysis: reconciliation clause enforcement, UCC lien disputes, and the loan-versus-receivables-purchase distinction that shapes MCA legal strategy are outside its standard workflow. Alaska business owners who carry a blend of personal unsecured balances and general commercial obligations will find National Debt Relief's broad reach useful. Businesses whose primary burden is one or more defaulted merchant cash advances will see better results from a dedicated MCA firm like Delancey Street.
Credit card balance negotiation, personal loan settlement, medical bill reduction, general unsecured business debt resolution, third-party collections defense, and consolidation loan referrals. The firm does not specialize in merchant cash advance contract disputes or MCA-specific legal analysis.
CuraDebt has been in continuous operation since 2000, giving it a 25-plus-year track record that predates both Delancey Street and National Debt Relief. Headquartered in Hollywood, Florida, the firm occupies a unique position in the industry by pairing commercial and consumer debt negotiation with a fully staffed tax resolution practice — handling IRS back taxes, state tax obligations, offers in compromise, and penalty abatement. No other firm in this ranking provides tax services alongside debt settlement. CuraDebt is IAPDA-certified and maintains memberships with the American Fair Credit Council and the U.S. Chamber of Commerce.
CuraDebt lists an Alaska-specific debt relief program and explicitly includes merchant cash advances among its business debt services. The fee model is strictly performance-based — no retainers, no enrollment fees, and no charges until a settlement is finalized. While CuraDebt's commercial debt offering is broader than most consumer-focused competitors, the firm does not position itself as an MCA specialist and does not employ in-house attorneys capable of performing contract-level MCA analysis, disputing UCC filings with the Alaska Recorder's Office, or defending against confession of judgment actions filed in New York against Alaska businesses.
Business debt settlement, IRS back tax resolution and offers in compromise, state tax lien negotiation, credit card debt negotiation, medical debt reduction, merchant cash advance settlement, collections defense, and personal and commercial unsecured 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 |
Business debt settlement is a negotiation-driven process that allows Alaska companies to resolve defaulted commercial obligations — merchant cash advances, term loans, equipment financing, lines of credit — without entering bankruptcy proceedings. A professional negotiator, typically an attorney or certified arbitrator, engages each creditor directly to reach agreement on a lump-sum payment that is less than the full balance owed. The remaining debt is forgiven upon payment. Unlike Chapter 7 liquidation or Chapter 11 reorganization, settlement is a private transaction between debtor and creditor that creates no court record and requires no judicial approval.
The debts most frequently resolved through settlement are merchant cash advances, followed by business lines of credit, alternative lender term loans, equipment financing contracts, and revenue-based financing agreements. Negotiations become viable once the business has missed payments or formally defaulted — creditors must then weigh a guaranteed partial recovery against the expense and uncertainty of pursuing full collection. For out-of-state MCA funders attempting to collect from Alaska businesses, the geographic distance and jurisdictional complexity make settlement an especially pragmatic option.
Settlements typically resolve at 20% to 60% of the original obligation — the specific figure depends on the creditor, the debt instrument, the borrower's financial condition, and the leverage the settlement firm can bring to the table. Attorney-led firms like Delancey Street tend to negotiate steeper reductions on MCA debt because they can identify contract deficiencies, raise legal defenses specific to the loan-versus-purchase classification, and negotiate with the legal authority that creditors take seriously. Non-attorney firms including National Debt Relief and CuraDebt use certified arbitrators effectively for routine consumer debt but often lack the specialized tools needed to extract maximum concessions from MCA funders.
Step 1: Initial Assessment. You begin with a confidential assessment of all outstanding business debts — merchant cash advances, term loans, revolving credit lines, equipment leases. A qualified settlement firm reviews each contract, evaluates your default status, and identifies which obligations are strong candidates for negotiation based on creditor behavior, contract terms, and available legal defenses under Alaska law. Delancey Street offers this initial evaluation at no cost and typically provides a viability assessment during the first call.
Step 2: Case Strategy and Enrollment. Once you enroll, the firm constructs an individualized strategy for each creditor. For MCA debts, this involves analyzing the agreement for reconciliation rights, reviewing UCC-1 financing statements filed with the Alaska Recorder's Office, and evaluating whether the contract qualifies as a true purchase of future receivables or is legally recharacterizable as a loan under Alaska commercial law. Attorney-led firms can also send formal cease-and-desist communications to halt aggressive collection calls and daily ACH withdrawal attempts.
Step 3: Direct Creditor Negotiation. Your firm initiates direct negotiation with each funder to secure a reduced lump-sum resolution. Alaska's geography creates a natural negotiation advantage: most MCA funders are based in New York or Florida, and pursuing collection against a business in Anchorage, Fairbanks, or a remote Alaskan community involves significant jurisdictional hurdles and travel costs. Alaska permits both judicial and non-judicial foreclosure under AS § 34.20.070, but the non-judicial process requires a minimum 90-day notice period and strict compliance with recording and mailing procedures — procedural requirements that out-of-state creditors find expensive to navigate. Experienced settlement attorneys leverage these friction points to negotiate steeper discounts.
Step 4: Written Agreement and Payment. When both sides agree on terms, they execute a written settlement agreement that specifies the reduced payment amount and formally releases the remaining balance. The business pays the negotiated sum — typically between 20% and 60% of the original obligation — and the creditor's claim is permanently resolved. The settlement firm collects its fee only at this stage; any firm that demands payment before producing a settlement result should be avoided.
Step 5: Lien Release and Documentation. The final phase is administrative cleanup — essential but often overlooked by non-attorney firms. Your settlement firm files UCC-3 termination statements with the Alaska Recorder's Office to release any liens on business assets, confirms that each creditor has recorded the debt as satisfied, and monitors for any continued collection activity. Attorney-led operations like Delancey Street include this post-settlement work as a standard component of every engagement.
Alaska's legal framework creates a distinct environment for business debt settlement. Under AS § 45.45.010, the state caps interest at 10.5% per annum on money after it is due, with a contractual ceiling of 5% above the Federal Reserve 12th District rate. However, any contract or loan commitment with a principal exceeding $25,000 is entirely exempt from these usury limits — meaning most commercial financing arrangements, including merchant cash advances, operate without a state-imposed rate ceiling. Alaska is also one of the few states where usury violations carry real teeth: under AS § 45.45.030, a borrower who pays usurious interest can recover double the excess amount, and under AS § 45.45.040, a court finding of usury results in forfeiture of all interest on the debt. These provisions give attorney-led settlement firms a meaningful legal tool when an MCA is recharacterizable as a loan.
Alaska permits both judicial and non-judicial foreclosure, though most proceedings follow the non-judicial path under AS § 34.20.070. The non-judicial process requires the trustee to record a notice of default at least 30 days after the borrower's default and not less than 90 days before the scheduled sale — creating a minimum timeline of roughly 105 days. Crucially, a creditor who forecloses non-judicially in Alaska forfeits the right to a deficiency judgment, meaning they cannot pursue the borrower for any remaining balance after the sale. This no-deficiency rule gives settlement firms powerful leverage: creditors must choose between accepting a negotiated payoff or proceeding to foreclosure knowing they absorb any shortfall. For out-of-state MCA funders, the logistical and legal burden of conducting a foreclosure in Alaska — where courthouses may be hundreds of miles apart and winter travel can be unreliable — further incentivizes settlement.
Alaska's economy is built around a handful of capital-intensive, seasonal industries that create exactly the kind of cash flow volatility that drives businesses toward merchant cash advances. The oil and gas sector — concentrated on the North Slope and supported by a pipeline and logistics network stretching through Fairbanks to Valdez — generates thousands of subcontractor and service company relationships where payment cycles are long and unpredictable. Commercial fishing operations in Kodiak, Bristol Bay, and the Southeast Panhandle face enormous upfront costs for fuel, crew, and equipment before a single pound of catch is sold. Tourism businesses in Anchorage, Denali, and Juneau invest heavily in the compressed May-through-September season, often taking on MCAs to bridge the gap between winter expenses and summer revenue. Construction firms statewide face a building season limited to roughly five months, concentrating both capital needs and debt pressure into a narrow window. According to SBA data, Alaska has approximately 73,000 small businesses — a small total relative to the Lower 48, but a population uniquely vulnerable to the cash-advance cycle due to the state's extreme seasonality and geographic isolation.
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