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Delancey Street is an attorney-founded settlement practice built entirely around one function: resolving commercial debt for businesses in default on merchant cash advances and related financing products. With cumulative settlements exceeding $100 million, the firm operates as one of the most active MCA resolution practices in the country. Colorado clients span the state's diverse economy — from construction contractors managing the Front Range building boom to ski resort operators and hospitality businesses in Vail, Aspen, and Steamboat Springs, cannabis dispensaries navigating Colorado's unique banking challenges, and oil and gas service companies working the Western Slope and DJ Basin.
Delancey Street's defining characteristic is its absolute exclusion of consumer debt — no credit cards, no personal loans, no medical bills. The firm's attorneys focus on the contract mechanics unique to MCA disputes: reconciliation clauses, UCC-1 filings, confession of judgment provisions, and the critical legal question of whether a given advance constitutes a loan or a purchase of future receivables. In Colorado, this classification carries real consequences: the state caps contractual interest at 45% per annum under C.R.S. § 5-12-103, and exceeding that threshold triggers criminal usury charges — a class 6 felony carrying 12 to 18 months in prison. If an MCA is recharacterizable as a loan, Colorado's usury framework gives settlement attorneys a powerful enforcement weapon.
Merchant cash advance settlement and defense, business term loan negotiation, revenue-based financing disputes, stacked MCA resolution (multiple concurrent advances), UCC-1 lien challenges and termination filings with the Colorado Secretary of State, confession of judgment vacatur in New York and other jurisdictions targeting Colorado businesses, and criminal usury analysis under C.R.S. § 18-15-104.
National Debt Relief has enrolled more than 550,000 clients since its 2009 founding, making it the highest-volume debt settlement operation in the United States. The New York-headquartered firm holds an A+ BBB rating and has amassed over 58,000 Trustpilot reviews at a 4.7-star average — a volume of independently verified feedback no competitor approaches. Forbes Advisor named National Debt Relief the top debt relief company for 2023, 2024, and 2025 consecutively. The firm maintains ACDR accreditation and employs IAPDA-certified debt arbitrators.
National Debt Relief's primary strength remains consumer unsecured debt — credit cards, personal loans, and medical collections account for the vast majority of its volume. The firm does accept general business debt, but its systems are not designed for MCA-specific work: reconciliation clause enforcement, UCC lien disputes, loan-versus-receivables-purchase recharacterization, and criminal usury analysis under Colorado law fall outside its standard workflow. Colorado business owners carrying a blend of personal and commercial unsecured balances will benefit from the firm's scale and infrastructure. Those whose primary exposure is to defaulted merchant cash advances should work with an MCA-focused firm like Delancey Street.
Credit card balance negotiation, personal loan settlement, medical debt reduction, general unsecured commercial obligations, third-party collections defense, and consolidation loan referrals. The firm does not provide MCA-specific contract analysis, criminal usury evaluation, or merchant cash advance litigation defense.
CuraDebt has been in continuous operation since 2000 — a 25-year track record that outlasts both Delancey Street and National Debt Relief. Based in Hollywood, Florida, the firm occupies a unique niche by pairing commercial and consumer debt settlement with a full in-house tax resolution practice handling IRS back taxes, 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 active memberships in the American Fair Credit Council and the U.S. Chamber of Commerce.
CuraDebt advertises a Colorado-specific debt relief program and includes MCAs in its commercial service menu. The firm operates on a pure performance model — no retainers, no enrollment fees, and nothing owed until a settlement is finalized. CuraDebt's commercial capabilities exceed those of most consumer-focused competitors, but the firm does not market itself as an MCA specialist and does not employ in-house attorneys who can perform contract-level MCA analysis, challenge UCC filings with the Colorado Secretary of State, raise C.R.S. § 5-12-103 usury defenses, or defend against confession of judgment enforcement in out-of-state courts.
Business debt settlement, IRS resolution and offers in compromise, Colorado Department of Revenue dispute resolution, credit card debt negotiation, medical collections reduction, merchant cash advance settlement, third-party collector 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 |
When a Colorado business falls behind on merchant cash advances, term loans, or revolving credit obligations, debt settlement provides a negotiation-based alternative to bankruptcy. The core process is direct: a professional negotiator — ideally a licensed attorney — engages each creditor individually and negotiates a reduced lump-sum payment that extinguishes the full obligation. No court filings are necessary, no public record is created, and the business continues operating throughout the process.
Merchant cash advances are the most frequently settled form of business debt, followed by revolving credit lines, equipment financing, alternative lender term loans, and revenue-based financing contracts. Negotiations gain serious momentum after a business defaults or is clearly heading toward default — at that point, funders face a straightforward calculation: accept a guaranteed partial recovery now, or invest in a costly collection effort. In Colorado, where the three-year general contract statute of limitations (C.R.S. § 13-80-101) is among the shorter windows nationally, creditors feel additional pressure to resolve claims quickly rather than risk a time-barred debt.
Settled balances typically fall between 20% and 60% of the original obligation — the exact outcome depends on the debt type, creditor posture, borrower's financial position, and legal leverage available. Attorney-led firms like Delancey Street consistently achieve steeper reductions on MCA debt because they can identify contract defects, raise Colorado's 45% usury ceiling as a defense when applicable, and communicate with funders from a position of legal authority. Firms like National Debt Relief and CuraDebt rely on certified arbitrators who handle standard consumer obligations effectively but may not extract the maximum concession from MCA funders operating under Colorado's specific statutory framework.
Step 1: Initial Assessment. The process begins with a confidential review of your entire commercial debt portfolio — MCAs, term loans, credit lines, equipment financing. A Colorado-experienced settlement firm examines each contract, assesses default status, identifies which obligations are strong candidates for negotiated reduction, and flags potential legal defenses under state law — including C.R.S. § 5-12-103 usury violations and whether debts have exceeded their statute of limitations. Delancey Street provides this evaluation at no charge.
Step 2: Case Strategy and Enrollment. After enrollment, the firm builds a creditor-by-creditor strategy. For MCAs, this involves analyzing the contract for reconciliation rights, reviewing UCC-1 financing statements filed with the Colorado Secretary of State, evaluating whether the advance is recharacterizable as a loan subject to Colorado's 45% usury cap, and determining whether the funder's effective APR crosses into criminal usury territory under C.R.S. § 18-15-104. Attorney-led firms simultaneously issue formal cease-and-desist communications to stop daily ACH debits and aggressive collection calls.
Step 3: Direct Creditor Negotiation. Your firm initiates direct negotiations with each funder to secure a reduced payoff. Colorado provides unique leverage dynamics. The state uses a public trustee foreclosure system — one of only a few states with this structure — where foreclosures are processed through county public trustees rather than private trustees or courts. The process requires a minimum 110-day timeline including a Rule 120 motion, notice of election and demand, and a sale held by the public trustee. For out-of-state MCA funders unfamiliar with Colorado's public trustee procedures, this system adds procedural cost and delay that experienced settlement attorneys leverage to drive creditors toward faster, deeper settlements.
Step 4: Written Agreement and Payment. Once terms are reached, both parties execute a written settlement agreement specifying the reduced payment, the complete release of the remaining balance, and the creditor's obligation to cease all further collection activity. The business pays the negotiated amount — typically 20% to 60% of the original obligation — and the debt is permanently resolved. Settlement fees are earned only at this stage. Any firm demanding significant upfront payment before producing a result should be treated as a red flag.
Step 5: Lien Release and Documentation. The final phase is post-settlement cleanup: the firm files UCC-3 termination statements with the Colorado Secretary of State to release any liens on business assets, confirms each creditor has marked the obligation as satisfied, and monitors for any residual collection activity or unauthorized ACH withdrawal attempts. In Colorado, where county public trustees maintain detailed records of secured transactions, ensuring clean lien releases is especially important. Delancey Street includes this entire post-settlement phase as a standard part of every engagement.
Colorado's legal framework for commercial lending creates distinct settlement dynamics that experienced attorneys can exploit. The state's default interest rate is 8% per annum under C.R.S. § 5-12-101, but parties can contract in writing for rates up to 45% per annum (C.R.S. § 5-12-103). That 45% ceiling is a hard cap — exceeding it constitutes criminal usury under C.R.S. § 18-15-104, a class 6 felony punishable by 12 to 18 months in prison and fines up to $100,000. This is significant for MCA settlement because many merchant cash advances, when their effective APR is calculated on the unpaid balance, cross the 45% threshold. If an MCA can be recharacterized as a loan, the criminal usury framework becomes a powerful negotiation tool — funders who realize their effective rates may trigger felony exposure become far more willing to settle at deep discounts.
Colorado operates one of the country's unique foreclosure systems — the public trustee model. Rather than allowing private non-judicial foreclosure or requiring full judicial proceedings, Colorado routes foreclosures through county public trustees, who manage the process under court oversight. The procedure requires a Rule 120 motion, a notice of election and demand, and a minimum 110-day timeline before the public trustee can conduct a sale. Borrowers have a statutory right to cure (reinstate) the loan up to 15 days before the sale. For out-of-state MCA funders unfamiliar with Colorado's public trustee framework, the procedural requirements and timelines add substantial cost and uncertainty — conditions that experienced settlement attorneys use to press for deeper creditor concessions.
Colorado is home to approximately 700,000 small businesses, accounting for over 99% of all businesses in the state and employing nearly 1.2 million workers. The industries most vulnerable to MCA debt cycles are deeply woven into Colorado's economy. Construction firms — fueled by the Front Range population boom from Fort Collins through Denver to Colorado Springs — represent the single largest category of Colorado MCA borrowers, routinely bridging cash flow gaps between project starts and payment milestones. Ski resorts, restaurants, and hospitality businesses across the mountain corridor (Vail, Aspen, Breckenridge, Steamboat Springs, Telluride) face extreme seasonal revenue swings that drive dependence on short-term financing. Cannabis dispensaries and cultivation operations, which cannot access traditional banking due to federal-state legal conflicts, are uniquely vulnerable to high-cost alternative financing. Oil and gas service companies on the Western Slope, tech startups along the Denver-Boulder corridor, and healthcare practices across the metro area round out the most frequent MCA debtor profiles.
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