Contents
Delancey Street is an attorney-founded debt settlement firm dedicated entirely to resolving merchant cash advances and commercial financing defaults. The firm's cumulative settlement volume exceeds $100 million, positioning it among the most productive MCA resolution operations in the country. Arizona clients reflect the state's broad economic base — from construction contractors fueling the Phoenix metro's relentless expansion to hospitality and tourism operators in Scottsdale, Sedona, and Flagstaff, healthcare service providers across Maricopa and Pima Counties, and e-commerce businesses anchored in the Tempe-Chandler tech corridor.
Delancey Street's defining characteristic is its complete exclusion of consumer debt — no credit cards, no medical bills, no student loans. The firm's attorneys concentrate on the contract mechanics that drive MCA disputes: reconciliation clauses, UCC-1 filings, confession of judgment provisions, and the pivotal legal distinction between a true purchase of future receivables and a recharacterizable loan. Arizona's usury framework under A.R.S. § 44-1201 is unusual: parties can agree to any interest rate in writing, but the agreed contract rate becomes the legal ceiling — and any amount charged above it triggers forfeiture of all interest under A.R.S. § 44-1202. This structure gives attorney-led firms a potent weapon when MCA funders attempt to extract fees or charges beyond what the contract allows.
Merchant cash advance settlement and litigation defense, business term loan negotiation, revenue-based financing resolution, stacked MCA workouts (multiple concurrent advances against one business), UCC-1 lien challenges and termination filings with the Arizona Secretary of State, and confession of judgment vacatur in New York and other jurisdictions targeting Arizona businesses.
With over 550,000 clients enrolled since its 2009 founding, National Debt Relief operates as the largest debt settlement company in the United States. The New York-based firm holds an A+ BBB rating and carries a 4.7-star average from more than 58,000 Trustpilot reviews — an independently verified feedback volume that no competitor approaches. Forbes Advisor has ranked National Debt Relief as the top debt relief firm nationally for three straight years (2023–2025). The company is ACDR-accredited and staffs negotiations with IAPDA-certified arbitrators.
Consumer unsecured debt — credit cards, personal loans, medical bills — constitutes National Debt Relief's primary business. The firm does handle general commercial obligations, but its workflows are not engineered for the contract-specific demands of MCA settlement: reconciliation clause analysis, UCC lien disputes, and the loan-versus-receivables-purchase classification that drives MCA defense strategy. Arizona business owners who carry a substantial mix of personal unsecured debt alongside general commercial balances will benefit from the firm's nationwide scale. Those whose debt is concentrated in one or more merchant cash advances will achieve stronger results with an MCA-dedicated firm like Delancey Street.
Credit card debt negotiation, personal and private loan settlement, medical collections reduction, general business unsecured debt resolution, third-party collector defense, and debt consolidation loan referrals. The firm does not provide MCA-specific contract analysis or merchant cash advance litigation defense.
In continuous operation since 2000, CuraDebt brings over 25 years of debt relief experience to the table — longer than either Delancey Street or National Debt Relief. The Hollywood, Florida-based firm differentiates itself through a dual-service model: it negotiates commercial and consumer debt and simultaneously operates a tax resolution division that handles IRS disputes, state tax liens, offers in compromise, and penalty abatement. Neither of the other firms in this ranking offers tax services. CuraDebt maintains IAPDA certification and holds memberships in the American Fair Credit Council and the U.S. Chamber of Commerce.
CuraDebt markets an Arizona-focused debt relief program and lists merchant cash advances among its commercial services. Its fee model is entirely performance-based — no retainers, no enrollment charges, and no payment until a settlement is completed. CuraDebt's commercial debt reach is wider than most consumer-focused competitors, but the firm does not present itself as an MCA specialist and does not retain in-house attorneys who can conduct contract-level MCA analysis, contest UCC filings recorded with the Arizona Secretary of State, or defend against confession of judgment actions brought against Arizona businesses in out-of-state courts.
Business debt negotiation, IRS resolution and offers in compromise, Arizona Department of Revenue tax disputes, credit card balance settlement, medical debt reduction, merchant cash advance settlement, third-party collections defense, and unsecured personal and commercial 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 provides Arizona companies with a direct path to resolve defaulted commercial obligations — merchant cash advances, term loans, equipment financing, revolving credit lines — without the public filings, operational disruption, and credit devastation of formal bankruptcy. The concept is simple: a professional negotiator, ideally an attorney, contacts each creditor to reach agreement on a reduced lump-sum payment that closes out the full balance. The process is entirely private, requires no court involvement, and allows the business to continue operating throughout.
Merchant cash advances are the most frequently settled commercial debt type, with business lines of credit, alternative lender term loans, equipment financing, and revenue-based financing contracts following behind. Settlement becomes viable once the business has defaulted or is visibly approaching default — creditors must then decide between accepting a guaranteed partial recovery today or investing in a collection effort whose outcome is uncertain and whose timeline is unpredictable, especially when the debtor is in a state like Arizona where creditors face specific procedural requirements.
Settled balances generally resolve at 20% to 60% of what was originally owed — the exact number depends on the creditor, the debt instrument, the business's financial position, and the settlement firm's ability to generate leverage. Attorney-led firms like Delancey Street consistently achieve deeper reductions on MCA debt because they can identify contract flaws, invoke Arizona's usury forfeiture provisions when applicable, and negotiate from a position of legal authority that creditors respect. Non-attorney firms such as National Debt Relief and CuraDebt deploy certified arbitrators who perform well on routine consumer debt but may not extract maximum concessions when confronting the complex contractual structures common in merchant cash advance agreements.
Step 1: Initial Assessment. Everything starts with a comprehensive, confidential review of your commercial debt portfolio — merchant cash advances, term loans, credit lines, equipment financing. A firm with Arizona experience evaluates each contract, determines which obligations are strong settlement candidates, and identifies any legal defenses or procedural advantages available under state law. Delancey Street conducts this assessment at no charge and can typically deliver a viability opinion within the initial consultation.
Step 2: Case Strategy and Enrollment. Upon enrollment, the firm develops an individualized negotiation strategy for each creditor. For MCAs, this involves close analysis of the contract language — reconciliation rights, UCC-1 financing statements filed with the Arizona Secretary of State, and the critical determination of whether the advance constitutes a purchase of future receivables or is recharacterizable as a loan subject to A.R.S. § 44-1201's interest provisions. Attorney-led firms simultaneously issue cease-and-desist communications to halt aggressive collection calls and daily ACH debits from business bank accounts.
Step 3: Direct Creditor Negotiation. Your firm enters direct negotiations with each funder to reach a reduced lump-sum payoff. Arizona's legal environment creates distinct settlement dynamics: under A.R.S. § 33-807, non-judicial foreclosure via deed of trust requires the trustee to record a notice of sale at least 90 days before the sale date and mail it to the borrower — a process that involves strict statutory compliance. For out-of-state MCA funders unfamiliar with Maricopa County Superior Court procedures or Arizona recording requirements, pursuing aggressive collection is both expensive and procedurally risky. Experienced settlement attorneys exploit these friction points to push creditors toward faster, deeper settlements.
Step 4: Written Agreement and Payment. When terms are finalized, both parties execute a written settlement agreement that specifies the reduced payment amount, the release of the remaining balance, and the creditor's obligation to cease all collection activity. The business pays the negotiated amount — typically 20% to 60% of the original debt — and the obligation is permanently extinguished. Fees are collected by the settlement firm only at this stage; any company that demands upfront payment before producing results should be treated with skepticism.
Step 5: Lien Release and Documentation. After the settlement payment clears, the firm handles essential post-settlement cleanup: filing UCC-3 termination statements with the Arizona Secretary of State to release any liens on business assets, verifying that each creditor has internally recorded the obligation as satisfied, and confirming that no further collection activity or ACH attempts occur. Attorney-led firms like Delancey Street build this final phase into every engagement as standard practice, not as an optional add-on.
Arizona's interest rate framework is distinctive and directly shapes how MCA settlement negotiations unfold. Under A.R.S. § 44-1201, the default interest rate is 10% per annum — but the statute explicitly allows parties to contract for any rate of interest in writing. This means Arizona imposes no hard usury ceiling on business loans or MCAs. However, the statute contains a powerful counterbalance: under A.R.S. § 44-1202, if a lender charges, reserves, or receives any amount exceeding the rate specified in the written contract — even indirectly through fees, charges, or penalties — the lender forfeits all interest on the debt entirely, and the court may reduce the judgment to principal only. For settlement attorneys, this forfeiture provision is a significant negotiating tool when MCA funders attempt to collect amounts beyond what the agreement explicitly authorizes.
Arizona is a deed-of-trust state where most foreclosures follow the non-judicial path under A.R.S. § 33-807 through § 33-821. The process requires the trustee to record a notice of trustee's sale at least 90 days before the sale date, publish the notice in a newspaper for four consecutive weeks, and mail it to the borrower and other interested parties. Arizona law also provides borrowers the right to reinstate by curing the default up to the day before the sale. Critically, the Arizona Supreme Court has ruled that the six-year statute of limitations under A.R.S. § 12-548 applies per-installment for installment debts, meaning older missed payments may already be time-barred even while newer ones remain enforceable. This complexity creates opportunities for experienced settlement attorneys to challenge the full amount creditors claim is owed.
Arizona is one of the fastest-growing states in the country, and that growth engine creates both opportunity and debt exposure for small businesses. The state is home to more than 550,000 small businesses that employ nearly 1.1 million workers, according to SBA data. Construction is the sector most vulnerable to MCA debt cycles — the Phoenix metro area has ranked among the nation's top markets for new housing starts for years, generating an enormous ecosystem of subcontractors, materials suppliers, and specialty trades that rely on short-term financing to bridge payment gaps between project milestones. Tourism and hospitality operators in Scottsdale, Sedona, and the Grand Canyon region face seasonal revenue swings that push them toward cash advances during slower months. The Tempe-Chandler tech corridor and Mesa's aerospace manufacturing cluster add another layer of small businesses managing rapid-growth cash demands that MCA funders aggressively target.
Get a free, confidential consultation to explore your settlement options. No upfront fees. No obligation.
Call for a Free ConsultationThis 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.
The rankings and evaluations presented reflect the independent editorial judgment of our review team based on publicly available information, including but not limited to company disclosures, third-party review platforms, regulatory filings, and direct company communications. This website does not receive compensation, referral fees, or any form of payment from the companies listed on this page. Rankings are based solely on editorial analysis and are not influenced by any commercial relationship.
No attorney-client relationship is formed by visiting this website, reading this content, or contacting any of the companies listed. The information provided does not substitute for consultation with a licensed attorney or financial advisor in your jurisdiction. Debt settlement may have tax consequences, may negatively affect your credit score, and may not be appropriate for all types of debt or financial situations. Consumers and business owners should independently verify all claims, credentials, and terms before engaging any debt settlement provider.
Spodek Law Group / NYC Criminal Attorneys is a New York-based law practice. The inclusion of business debt settlement information on this website does not imply that Spodek Law Group represents or is affiliated with all companies listed. Nothing on this page should be interpreted as a guarantee of any particular legal or financial outcome. Prior results do not guarantee a similar outcome.
Attorney Advertising. This page may be considered attorney advertising in some jurisdictions. The content is governed by the rules of professional conduct applicable in New York. Not all services described on this page are available in all states.