This is ground zero. Delancey Street operates from the heart of New York — where the MCA lending industry lives — and their entire practice is built to weaponize the state’s uniquely powerful legal framework against predatory funders. No other state gives you this arsenal: a 16% civil usury cap under GOL § 5-501, a criminal usury felony at 25% under Penal Law 190.40, a void-contract doctrine under GOL § 5-511 that makes usurious agreements completely unenforceable, and the landmark CFDL (effective August 2023) requiring APR-equivalent cost disclosures. Delancey Street’s attorneys deploy every single one of these tools — and they know how to win with them.
Here’s where Delancey Street really separates from the pack: they understand the interplay between New York’s usury statutes and the corporate defense exclusion under GOL § 5-521. Yes, that provision generally bars corporations from raising usury — but New York courts have carved out critical exceptions for loans under the $250,000 and $2.5 million thresholds, and Delancey Street’s attorneys exploit those carve-outs aggressively. They also vacate confessions of judgment under New York’s reformed COJ rules, remove UCC-1 liens through the NY Secretary of State, and use CFDL non-compliance as a pressure point to drive settlements down hard. This isn’t a generalist firm dabbling in MCA — this is all they do.
MCA debt settlement using New Yorks usury framework (GOL 5-501, Penal Law 190.40, GOL 5-511), CFDL compliance challenges against non-disclosing MCA funders, confession of judgment vacatur, UCC lien removal through the NY Secretary of State, business loan restructuring, creditor harassment defense, and asset protection for New York businesses facing multiple stacked MCAs.
National Debt Relief is actually headquartered right in New York City — and with 550,000+ clients served since 2009 and an A+ BBB rating, they’re the biggest name in the settlement industry. They handle both consumer and general business unsecured debt starting at $7,500 minimum enrollment, with fees of 18-25% of enrolled debt. In a state with aggressive consumer protection enforcement, that A+ rating carries real weight.
The candid truth: NDR doesn’t specialize in MCA settlements, which means they can’t leverage New York’s void-contract doctrine under GOL § 5-511, the CFDL disclosure requirements, or the criminal usury felony threshold that gives MCA borrowers nuclear-level negotiating leverage. For general unsecured business debt — credit cards, lines of credit, medical bills — their scale, reputation, and 24-48 month program deliver dependable results. But if MCA debt is your fight, you’re leaving money on the table without a specialist.
Consumer debt settlement (credit cards, medical bills, personal loans), general business unsecured debt, debt consolidation alternatives, and hardship-based negotiation programs for New York residents and business owners.
CuraDebt has been in the debt relief industry since 2000, making them one of the longest-operating firms in the space. Based in Florida, they offer a broad range of services including business debt settlement, consumer debt relief, and tax debt resolution with both IRS and state tax authorities. They are IAPDA certified and maintain memberships with the AFCC and U.S. Chamber of Commerce, lending institutional credibility to their operations.
For New York business owners, CuraDebts main advantage is their ability to handle tax debt alongside business debt - a common combination for small businesses struggling with MCA payments who have also fallen behind on New York State tax obligations. However, like National Debt Relief, CuraDebt does not specialize in leveraging New Yorks usury statutes, CFDL requirements, or the void-contract doctrine that can dramatically improve settlement outcomes for MCA-specific cases. Their performance-based fee structure is a positive, but the lack of attorney-led MCA expertise limits their effectiveness for the most common type of predatory business debt in New York.
Business debt settlement, consumer debt relief (credit cards, medical debt), IRS and New York State tax debt resolution, small business debt consolidation, and performance-based debt negotiation services.
| 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 |
If you’re reading this, your New York business is probably dealing with MCA debt, commercial loan pressure, or both. Business debt settlement puts a qualified negotiation team in your corner to reduce those obligations — MCA balances, term loans, equipment leases, credit lines, vendor payables — to a fraction of what you owe. And in New York, you have more legal firepower than business owners in any other state.
New York has the most powerful usury and commercial finance disclosure laws in the country for businesses fighting MCA debt. The General Obligations Law establishes a 6% default interest rate and a 16% civil usury cap under Section 5-501, while Penal Law 190.40 makes charging more than 25% interest a Class E felony - criminal usury. Under GOL 5-511, any contract found to be usurious is declared entirely void and unenforceable, not merely reduced to a legal rate. This is the nuclear option in settlement negotiations: if the effective interest rate on an MCA exceeds the usury threshold, the entire agreement may be legally worthless. Additionally, while GOL 5-521 generally prevents corporations from raising the usury defense, exceptions exist for loans under $250,000 and $2.5 million that many small businesses can take advantage of.
Adding to this already formidable legal landscape, New Yorks Commercial Finance Disclosure Law (CFDL) - effective August 2023 - is the most comprehensive MCA regulation in America. It requires commercial financing providers to disclose the total cost of financing, APR-equivalent rates, payment amounts, and prepayment penalties in a standardized format. MCA funders who fail to provide these disclosures face enforcement actions and create additional leverage for settlement negotiations. Combined with New Yorks 6-year statute of limitations under CPLR 213, judicial-only foreclosure process averaging 445+ days, and approximately 2.4 million small businesses spanning finance, healthcare, tech, media, and hospitality, the state represents both the largest MCA market and the most legally protected one.
Step 1: Complete New York Business Debt Inventory. Contact a settlement firm for a confidential review of your business debts. For New York cases, the firm should immediately analyze whether your MCA agreements exceed the 16% civil usury cap or the 25% criminal usury threshold, whether the lender complied with CFDL disclosure requirements, and whether your business qualifies for usury defense exceptions under the $250K/$2.5M thresholds in GOL 5-521.
Step 2: Case Setup and New York Creditor Strategy. Your settlement team reviews all MCA contracts, business loan agreements, UCC filings, and any confessions of judgment. In New York, this phase includes calculating effective interest rates to identify usury violations, checking CFDL compliance by each funder, documenting any predatory lending practices, and determining whether the void-contract doctrine under GOL 5-511 applies to any of your obligations.
Step 3: Settlement Negotiation for New York Obligations. Armed with the legal analysis, your settlement firm contacts each creditor to negotiate reduced payoffs. In New York, the threat of a usury challenge - especially one that could render the entire contract void under GOL 5-511 or trigger criminal liability under Penal Law 190.40 - gives settlement firms dramatically more leverage than in other states. CFDL non-compliance adds another pressure point that sophisticated negotiators use to drive settlements down to 30-60 cents on the dollar.
Step 4: Executing New York Lump-Sum Settlement Payments. Once a settlement is reached, the agreement is documented in writing with clear terms including the reduced payoff amount, payment timeline, and confirmation that the debt will be marked as settled. For New York businesses, this phase also includes ensuring that UCC-1 liens are terminated with the NY Secretary of State, any confessions of judgment are vacated, and the settlement agreement contains protections against future collection attempts under New Yorks 6-year statute of limitations (CPLR 213).
Step 5: Removing New York Creditor Liens and Recovering. After settling your debts, the focus shifts to rebuilding your business credit and financial health. This includes confirming all UCC liens have been removed from New York Secretary of State records, verifying that settled accounts are properly reported, and developing a plan to avoid predatory MCA financing in the future. New Yorks strong economy - with its concentration of finance, healthcare, tech, media, and hospitality industries - means rebuilt businesses have abundant opportunities for sustainable growth.
New York is not just another state when it comes to MCA debt settlement - it is the single most important jurisdiction in America for this practice area. The vast majority of MCA funders are headquartered in New York, most MCA contracts specify New York law as the governing jurisdiction, and the states courts have developed a sophisticated body of case law around the critical question of whether an MCA is a purchase of future receivables (not subject to usury laws) or a disguised loan (fully subject to them). When a court determines that an MCA is actually a loan, the entire weight of New Yorks usury framework comes crashing down: the 16% civil cap under GOL 5-501, the 25% criminal felony threshold under Penal Law 190.40, and most devastatingly, the void-contract doctrine under GOL 5-511 that makes the entire agreement unenforceable.
The Commercial Finance Disclosure Law (CFDL), effective August 2023, fundamentally changed the MCA landscape in New York and represents the most comprehensive regulation of commercial financing in any state. The CFDL requires providers of merchant cash advances, factoring agreements, and other commercial financing products to deliver standardized disclosures including total repayment amounts, APR-equivalent rates, and itemized costs before a business owner signs. Funders who fail to comply face enforcement actions from the New York Department of Financial Services. For settlement purposes, CFDL non-compliance creates powerful additional leverage because it demonstrates a pattern of non-transparency that courts and regulators view unfavorably. Combined with the existing usury framework, the CFDL means New York business owners have more legal tools for fighting predatory MCA debt than borrowers in any other state.
New Yorks economic landscape also shapes the debt settlement environment. With approximately 2.4 million small businesses operating across industries ranging from Wall Street finance and Midtown media to Brooklyn hospitality and upstate healthcare, the demand for MCA funding - and the resulting debt problems - is enormous. New York is a judicial-only foreclosure state, meaning creditors must go through the court system to seize business assets, a process that averages 445+ days and gives debtors significant time and procedural leverage. The 6-year statute of limitations under CPLR 213 provides a long window for pursuing claims against predatory lenders. Business owners should also be aware that New Yorks reformed confession of judgment rules now provide greater protections, and that skilled attorneys can often vacate previously filed COJs when procedural defects are identified.
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