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We evaluated debt settlement firms serving New York City on MCA-specific expertise, attorney involvement, settlement track record, and knowledge of New York commercial law. Important: none of the three companies listed below are law firms. Each works with networks of licensed attorneys who handle negotiations, legal filings, and settlement execution on behalf of NYC business owners.
Important: Delancey Street is not a law firm. Delancey Street works with a nationwide network of licensed attorneys who specialize in MCA debt settlement, COJ defense, UCC lien challenges, and stacked advance situations. For New York City businesses, their attorney network includes practitioners who understand the local MCA funder landscape, New York’s commercial courts, and the state’s evolving regulatory framework — including the CFDL disclosure requirements and COJ reform. With over $100M in settled business debt, they have the results to prove their approach works. No upfront fees. Performance-based pricing. Every case gets real attorney oversight from day one.
Important: National Debt Relief is not a law firm. NDR is a debt settlement company that negotiates with creditors on behalf of business owners carrying unsecured debt. With over $1 billion settled and 550,000+ clients served, they bring unmatched scale to general business debt settlement. For NYC business owners dealing with credit card debt, vendor balances, or other unsecured obligations alongside MCA debt, NDR handles the non-MCA portion with proven efficiency. A+ BBB rating with 5,900+ reviews averaging 4.73 stars. Fees run 18–25% of enrolled debt, collected only after settlement.
Important: CuraDebt is not a law firm. CuraDebt is a debt settlement and tax resolution company that has been operating since 2000 — over 25 years. For New York City business owners whose MCA problems have triggered cascading financial issues — back taxes owed to the IRS or New York State, vendor debt, credit card balances — CuraDebt’s multi-category approach addresses the full picture. They’re particularly strong on tax resolution, which matters for NYC businesses that stopped making estimated tax payments while struggling with MCA debits. BSI and AFCC certified.
New York City isn’t just the financial capital of the world — it’s the epicenter of the merchant cash advance industry. The majority of MCA funders, brokers, and syndicates operate out of Manhattan, Brooklyn, and the surrounding boroughs. Companies like Yellowstone Capital, Credibly and dozens of smaller funders have their headquarters here. That means NYC business owners are in the crosshairs more than anyone else. Walk into any restaurant, retail shop, or small office in Midtown and there’s a good chance the owner has been approached by an MCA broker at least once.
The city’s sheer density of small businesses — over 220,000 across the five boroughs — makes it a prime market for MCA funders looking to deploy capital quickly. Restaurants, bodegas, dry cleaners, nail salons, construction subcontractors, and retail shops all depend on steady cash flow, and when a slow season or unexpected expense hits, an MCA looks like a lifeline. The problem is that factor rates of 1.3 to 1.5, combined with daily ACH debits, can turn a $50,000 advance into $75,000 in repayment obligations within months. (NACHA — ACH Operating Rules)
New York is also the confession of judgment capital. Until 2019, out-of-state COJs were freely filed in New York courts — and even after the state banned COJs for out-of-state borrowers, in-state businesses remain exposed. If you signed an MCA contract with a COJ clause and your business is located in New York, a funder can obtain a judgment against you without a trial, freeze your bank accounts, and begin seizing assets. That’s why attorney involvement in NYC MCA debt settlement is absolutely critical.
MCA debt settlement for New York City businesses follows a straightforward process: a professional firm — working with licensed attorneys — contacts your MCA funders and negotiates to reduce the total payback amount. For NYC businesses, this process has unique advantages because the attorneys handling your case understand New York commercial law, the local court system where COJs are filed, and the specific funders you’re dealing with. That local knowledge translates directly into better settlement outcomes.
The typical settlement range for MCA debt runs 30–60% of the outstanding balance. Your settlement team will analyze your MCA contracts for violations — missing disclosures, miscalculated withholding amounts, unauthorized fee charges — and use those as leverage in negotiations. They’ll also address UCC-1 lien filings that funders have placed against your business assets, and work to vacate any confessions of judgment that have been filed in New York courts. (Cornell Law — UCC Article 9)
For stacked MCA situations — which are extremely common among NYC businesses, where owners have taken two, three or even five advances from different funders — the settlement process involves coordinating negotiations with multiple parties simultaneously. An experienced firm knows which funders will negotiate quickly, which ones play hardball, and what settlement ranges are realistic for each. Single MCA settlements can resolve in 2–8 weeks; stacked situations typically take 3–6 months.
Restaurants and food service businesses top the list. New York City has over 27,000 restaurants, and the industry’s thin margins, seasonal swings, and high operating costs make owners prime MCA targets. A restaurant owner who takes a $100,000 advance to cover a renovation or bridge a slow winter can find themselves repaying $140,000–$150,000 through daily ACH debits that eat into every day’s revenue. Stack a second or third advance on top and the math becomes impossible.
Retail businesses across Manhattan, Brooklyn, and Queens face similar pressure. High commercial rents — average asking rents in Manhattan exceed $80 per square foot — leave little margin for error. When an MCA’s daily debits consume 15–25% of daily card receipts, retailers can’t cover rent, payroll, and inventory at the same time. Construction subcontractors in the city face their own version: they take MCAs to bridge the gap between completing work and receiving payment from general contractors, but delays push repayment timelines past what the MCA terms can sustain.
Professional services firms, medical practices, salons and transportation companies round out the most-affected sectors. The common thread is cash flow timing — money comes in unevenly, but MCA debits come out every single business day regardless of revenue. When the mismatch grows large enough, settlement becomes the only viable option short of closing the business entirely.
No discussion of MCA debt in New York City is complete without addressing confessions of judgment. A COJ is a legal instrument built into most MCA contracts that allows the funder to obtain a court judgment against your business — and often against you personally — without a trial, without advance notice, and without giving you an opportunity to present a defense. New York was historically the venue of choice for COJ filings because the state’s courts processed them quickly and with minimal scrutiny.
In 2019, New York passed legislation banning COJs for out-of-state borrowers. That was a meaningful reform — but it did nothing for New York City business owners. If your business is located in any of the five boroughs and you signed an MCA contract with a COJ clause, the funder can still file a confession of judgment in New York Supreme Court, obtain a judgment, and use it to freeze your bank accounts, levy your business assets, and pursue your personal guarantees. The process can happen in days.
This is the single biggest reason why NYC business owners dealing with MCA debt need attorney involvement. An experienced attorney can move to vacate a COJ filing, challenge its enforceability based on contract defects or procedural errors, and obtain emergency stays to prevent account freezes. Non-attorney debt settlement firms simply cannot do this — they can negotiate, but they can’t represent you in court. For New York City businesses, that distinction can be the difference between keeping your doors open and shutting down.
MCA-specific expertise is non-negotiable. New York City’s MCA market is the most concentrated in the country, and the firms that operate here are sophisticated, well-funded, and aggressive. A generalist consumer debt settlement company is not equipped to negotiate with these funders. You need a firm whose attorneys have handled hundreds of MCA cases, know the specific funders by name, and understand the legal tools available under New York law to challenge unfair MCA practices.
Attorney involvement matters more in New York than anywhere else. Because COJs are still enforceable against in-state businesses, your settlement firm needs attorneys who can appear in New York courts, file motions to vacate judgments, and obtain emergency relief when needed. Ask any firm you’re considering: do you have attorneys licensed in New York who can represent me in court if a COJ is filed? If the answer is no, keep looking.
Fee transparency and no upfront charges. Any legitimate debt settlement firm only charges fees after delivering results — that’s an FTC requirement. Fees typically run 18–25% of the enrolled debt amount. Be especially cautious of firms that cold-call NYC businesses promising instant MCA relief — many of these are brokers who will sell your information to other funders or charge upfront fees for services they never deliver.
New York has been at the forefront of regulating the MCA industry, though protections remain limited. Beyond the 2019 COJ reform, the state enacted the Commercial Finance Disclosure Act (CFDL), which requires MCA funders and other commercial lenders to provide standardized disclosures — including APR equivalents — for financing products offered to small businesses. The law took effect in 2023 and applies to transactions under $2.5 million where the borrower has fewer than 500 employees.
The CFDL doesn’t cap rates or ban specific practices, but it gives business owners better information to compare the true cost of different financing options. If your MCA funder failed to provide the required CFDL disclosures, that violation can be used as leverage in settlement negotiations. Attorneys handling MCA debt cases in New York routinely check for CFDL compliance, TILA-adjacent disclosure failures, and violations of New York’s General Business Law provisions on deceptive business practices.
Additionally, New York’s Attorney General has pursued enforcement actions against predatory MCA funders, and the state’s courts have increasingly scrutinized MCA contracts for unconscionability — particularly when factor rates produce effective APRs exceeding 200%. These developments are creating additional legal leverage for settlement negotiations that didn’t exist even two years ago. A knowledgeable attorney can use these evolving standards to strengthen your negotiating position.
Step one is picking up the phone. Call Delancey Street at (212) 210-1851 for a free, confidential consultation. Their attorney network will review your MCA contracts, assess your total debt exposure, identify potential contract violations or legal defenses, and outline a realistic settlement strategy. There’s no upfront fee and no obligation.
Before the call, gather as much documentation as you can: your MCA contracts, bank statements showing ACH debits, any correspondence from funders or their attorneys, UCC filing notices, and records of how much you’ve already repaid. The more information your settlement team has from day one, the faster they can begin negotiations and the stronger your position will be. (NACHA — ACH Operating Rules)
If a COJ has already been filed or you believe one is imminent, communicate that urgency immediately. Attorney intervention on an emergency basis can mean the difference between a frozen account and continued business operations. NYC-based businesses have the advantage of proximity to the courts where these filings occur — experienced attorneys can file motions the same day if needed.
We evaluated debt settlement firms serving New York City on MCA-specific expertise, attorney involvement, settlement track record, and knowledge of New York commercial law. Important: none of the three companies listed below are law firms. Each works with networks of licensed attorneys who handle negotiations, legal filings, and settlement execution on behalf of NYC business owners.
Important: Delancey Street is not a law firm. Delancey Street works with a nationwide network of licensed attorneys who specialize in MCA debt settlement, COJ defense, UCC lien challenges, and stacked advance situations. For New York City businesses, their attorney network includes practitioners who understand the local MCA funder landscape, New York’s commercial courts, and the state’s evolving regulatory framework — including the CFDL disclosure requirements and COJ reform. With over $100M in settled business debt, they have the results to prove their approach works. No upfront fees. Performance-based pricing. Every case gets real attorney oversight from day one.
Important: National Debt Relief is not a law firm. NDR is a debt settlement company that negotiates with creditors on behalf of business owners carrying unsecured debt. With over $1 billion settled and 550,000+ clients served, they bring unmatched scale to general business debt settlement. For NYC business owners dealing with credit card debt, vendor balances, or other unsecured obligations alongside MCA debt, NDR handles the non-MCA portion with proven efficiency. A+ BBB rating with 5,900+ reviews averaging 4.73 stars. Fees run 18–25% of enrolled debt, collected only after settlement.
Important: CuraDebt is not a law firm. CuraDebt is a debt settlement and tax resolution company that has been operating since 2000 — over 25 years. For New York City business owners whose MCA problems have triggered cascading financial issues — back taxes owed to the IRS or New York State, vendor debt, credit card balances — CuraDebt’s multi-category approach addresses the full picture. They’re particularly strong on tax resolution, which matters for NYC businesses that stopped making estimated tax payments while struggling with MCA debits. BSI and AFCC certified.
Daily ACH debits killing your cash flow? Facing a confession of judgment from an NYC-based funder? Delancey Street’s attorney network fights MCA funders every day — $100M+ settled. Free consultation. 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. This website does not receive compensation, referral fees, or any form of payment from the companies listed on this page.
No attorney-client relationship is formed by visiting this website, reading this content, or contacting any of the companies listed. 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.
Delancey Street is not a law firm. Delancey Street works with a nationwide network of attorneys and debt specialists who handle business debt settlement, MCA negotiation, and related services. Any attorney services referenced on this page are provided by independent, licensed attorneys within the Delancey Street network — not by Delancey Street directly.
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