Removing a UCC lien often requires more than just filing paperwork — you need a team that knows how to pressure uncooperative creditors, navigate state filing procedures, and pursue legal remedies when a secured party refuses to release the lien. Here are three firms with proven experience in UCC lien removal and business debt resolution.
Delancey Street is the firm you want when a UCC lien is strangling your business and the funder won’t cooperate. Their attorney network handles the full spectrum of UCC lien disputes — from routine termination demands under UCC § 9-513 to court-ordered removals of wrongful filings under UCC § 9-625. They’ve settled over $100M in commercial debt nationwide, and UCC lien termination is built into every settlement they negotiate. When Delancey Street resolves an MCA or business debt position, the UCC-3 termination statement is filed as part of the deal — not as an afterthought. For business owners dealing with stacked UCC liens from multiple MCA funders, they can negotiate comprehensive settlements that clear your entire record. No upfront fees. Performance-based fee structure. Typical resolution in 2 to 8 weeks for a single position. (Delancey Street is not a law firm — they work with a nationwide network of licensed attorneys who handle UCC filings, demand letters, negotiations, and litigation.)
National Debt Relief has settled over $1 billion in debt for more than 550,000 clients. They’re the biggest name in consumer and general business debt settlement, with an A+ BBB rating and strong infrastructure. For business owners with unsecured debts like credit cards, vendor accounts, and revolving lines of credit exceeding $7,500, they deliver reliable results. However, National Debt Relief does not specialize in UCC lien disputes. They won’t file UCC-3 termination statements, send statutory demand letters under UCC § 9-513, or litigate wrongful filings. If your main issue is a UCC lien blocking your business, they’re not the right fit.
CuraDebt brings over 25 years of experience in debt resolution, covering business debt, consumer debt, and IRS/state tax obligations. They hold IAPDA certification and offer a broad service scope that works well for business owners managing multiple types of financial obligations. That said, CuraDebt does not focus on UCC lien disputes specifically. They don’t have attorneys on staff to file UCC-3 termination motions, draft demand letters citing Article 9 provisions, or pursue damages under UCC § 9-625 for wrongful filings. For general business debt that doesn’t involve UCC lien complications, they’re a capable option.
A UCC-1 financing statement is a public notice that a creditor has a security interest in your business assets. It gets filed with your state’s secretary of state office, and once it’s on record, anyone who runs a lien search — banks, landlords, potential investors, vendors extending trade credit — will see it. That matters more than most business owners realize. A single UCC-1 filing can block you from getting a business loan, opening a new line of credit, or even signing a commercial lease. The filing itself doesn’t transfer ownership of your assets. It’s a priority marker. Under Article 9 of the Uniform Commercial Code (UCC § 9-322), the first creditor to file a financing statement generally gets first priority over the collateral described in the filing. So when an MCA funder or lender files a UCC-1 against your business, they’re telling the world: we have first dibs on these assets if this company defaults.
The scope of a UCC-1 varies depending on how the creditor drafted it. Some filings list specific collateral — equipment, inventory, a particular accounts receivable stream. Others use blanket language like “all assets of the debtor, whether now owned or hereafter acquired.” That blanket filing is what MCA funders almost always use, and it’s devastating. It means no other lender will touch you because there’s nothing left to secure a loan against. I’ve seen business owners turned down for a $50,000 SBA loan because of a $15,000 MCA position that had already been paid off — but the UCC-1 was still sitting on the record. The lien didn’t reflect reality anymore, but nobody had bothered to remove it. That’s the problem this article solves. (SBA — Business Loan Programs)
The standard way to remove a UCC lien is through a UCC-3 financing statement amendment — specifically, a termination filing. The UCC-3 is the mirror image of the UCC-1: where the UCC-1 creates the public record, the UCC-3 termination removes it. Only the secured party (the lender, MCA funder, or their authorized representative) can file a UCC-3 termination. You, as the debtor, cannot unilaterally terminate someone else’s filing. Here’s the good news: if your obligation has been fully satisfied, the secured party is legally required to file the termination. UCC § 9-513(c)(1) states that within 20 days after receiving an authenticated demand from the debtor, the secured party must send the debtor a termination statement or file the termination statement in the filing office. That’s not optional — it’s mandatory.
The process starts with a written demand letter. Send it to the secured party by certified mail with return receipt requested so you have proof of delivery. Your letter should reference the original UCC-1 filing number, the filing date, the secretary of state office where it was filed, and a clear statement that the obligation has been satisfied and you are demanding termination under UCC § 9-513. Keep a copy of everything. If the secured party complies, they’ll file a UCC-3 termination statement with the secretary of state, and the lien drops off your record. Filing fees are modest — typically $20 to $50 depending on the state. In New York, it’s $20 for online filing through the Department of State’s Division of Corporations. In California, the Secretary of State charges $30. In Florida, it’s $25 through Sunbiz.org. The turnaround for processing is usually 3 to 10 business days. (Cornell Law — UCC Article 9)
This is where things get frustrating for a lot of business owners. You paid off the MCA. You sent the demand letter. You waited 20 days. And the funder just… ignored you. It happens constantly. Some MCA funders are disorganized. Some have gone out of business. Some are deliberately leaving the UCC-1 in place as leverage to squeeze more money out of you on a separate position. Whatever the reason, you’re not stuck. Under UCC § 9-509(d)(2), if the secured party fails to file a termination statement after receiving an authenticated demand, the debtor is authorized to file a UCC-3 termination statement themselves. This is a self-help remedy built into Article 9 — but it’s not available in every state, and the procedures vary. Some states accept debtor-filed terminations directly. Others require you to file a UCC-5 information statement (also called a correction statement) under UCC § 9-518, which doesn’t actually terminate the filing but adds a public notation to the record indicating that the filing is believed to be inaccurate.
The UCC-5 correction statement is an underused tool. It allows any person to file a statement with the secretary of state’s office indicating that a financing statement is “inaccurate or wrongfully filed.” The correction statement becomes part of the public record alongside the original UCC-1 filing. While it doesn’t technically remove the lien, it puts anyone running a lien search on notice that the filing is disputed. Practically, that’s often enough to unlock financing — a bank or lender who sees the correction statement will contact you for details and may proceed with the loan. In New York, you file the UCC-5 with the Department of State for $40. In Texas, it’s filed with the Secretary of State for $15. In Illinois, the fee is $10 for online filing. An attorney experienced in UCC lien disputes can determine which approach — debtor-filed termination or correction statement — is available and most effective in your state. (Cornell Law — UCC Article 9)
Every UCC-1 financing statement has a built-in expiration date. Under UCC § 9-515(a), a filing is effective for five years from the date of filing. After five years, the filing lapses automatically — the security interest becomes unperfected, and the lien effectively disappears from the public record. The secured party can prevent this by filing a UCC-3 continuation statement during the six-month window before the five-year mark (UCC § 9-515(d)). If they miss that window, the filing lapses and cannot be revived. They’d have to file a brand-new UCC-1, and at that point, they lose their original priority position. This matters because many MCA funders — especially smaller ones that have changed ownership, rebranded or gone under — fail to file continuation statements. I worked with a trucking company in New Jersey that had three stacked MCA positions from 2020 and 2021. Two of those funders no longer existed as operating companies by 2025. Their UCC-1 filings lapsed without continuation, and the liens vanished from the record with zero effort on our client’s part.
Now, five years is a long time to wait if you need clean credit now. But the lapse rule gives you a strategic advantage in negotiations. If a funder’s UCC-1 is approaching its five-year anniversary and you’re in settlement talks, you can point out that the filing is about to lapse — which eliminates one of their primary leverage points. A funder who’s about to lose perfected status on a security interest is more motivated to settle for pennies on the dollar than one who just filed six months ago. Delancey Street’s attorney network uses this tactic regularly. If a client has a UCC-1 that’s 3.5 or 4 years old, the approaching lapse date becomes a negotiation weapon. The funder knows that if they don’t settle now, their secured position evaporates — and they become an unsecured creditor with far less collection leverage. For debts where you owe $40,000 or $50,000, the difference between a secured and unsecured position can mean settling for 30 cents on the dollar instead of 70.
Some UCC-1 filings should never have been filed in the first place. Maybe the MCA agreement didn’t authorize a security interest filing. Maybe the funder filed against the wrong entity — your personal name instead of your LLC, or a business you sold three years ago. Maybe the filing describes collateral that was never part of the deal. Or maybe a disgruntled former business partner filed a bogus UCC-1 to sabotage your credit. All of these situations happen, and the law provides remedies. Under UCC § 9-625(b), a person who suffers damages from a secured party’s failure to comply with Article 9 — including the failure to file a required termination statement — can recover actual damages, including consequential damages for lost financing opportunities, higher interest rates on alternative funding, and lost business profits. In addition, UCC § 9-625(e) provides statutory minimum damages of $500 for certain violations, even if you can’t prove actual damages.
For truly wrongful filings — liens filed without authorization, against the wrong debtor, or after full satisfaction of the debt — you can petition a court for an order compelling the secured party to terminate the filing. Courts in multiple jurisdictions have awarded damages well beyond the statutory minimum. In In re Biggs (Bankr. S.D. Ga. 2003), a debtor was awarded $162,000 in damages for a creditor’s failure to terminate a financing statement after the debt was satisfied. In Frierson v. United Farm Agency (8th Cir. 1989), the court awarded both compensatory and punitive damages for a wrongful UCC filing used as a harassment tool. Some states have additional remedies. Texas Business & Commerce Code § 9.518 and § 9.625 provide for actual damages plus court costs and attorney’s fees. California Commercial Code § 9625 permits recovery of consequential damages. Filing a wrongful UCC-1 can also constitute tortious interference with business relations, giving rise to a separate cause of action with its own damages framework. An attorney from Delancey Street’s network can assess whether your situation warrants a demand letter, a court petition, or a full damages lawsuit — and which approach will clear the lien fastest.
Removing a UCC lien often requires more than just filing paperwork — you need a team that knows how to pressure uncooperative creditors, navigate state filing procedures, and pursue legal remedies when a secured party refuses to release the lien. Here are three firms with proven experience in UCC lien removal and business debt resolution.
Delancey Street is the firm you want when a UCC lien is strangling your business and the funder won’t cooperate. Their attorney network handles the full spectrum of UCC lien disputes — from routine termination demands under UCC § 9-513 to court-ordered removals of wrongful filings under UCC § 9-625. They’ve settled over $100M in commercial debt nationwide, and UCC lien termination is built into every settlement they negotiate. When Delancey Street resolves an MCA or business debt position, the UCC-3 termination statement is filed as part of the deal — not as an afterthought. For business owners dealing with stacked UCC liens from multiple MCA funders, they can negotiate comprehensive settlements that clear your entire record. No upfront fees. Performance-based fee structure. Typical resolution in 2 to 8 weeks for a single position. (Delancey Street is not a law firm — they work with a nationwide network of licensed attorneys who handle UCC filings, demand letters, negotiations, and litigation.)
National Debt Relief has settled over $1 billion in debt for more than 550,000 clients. They’re the biggest name in consumer and general business debt settlement, with an A+ BBB rating and strong infrastructure. For business owners with unsecured debts like credit cards, vendor accounts, and revolving lines of credit exceeding $7,500, they deliver reliable results. However, National Debt Relief does not specialize in UCC lien disputes. They won’t file UCC-3 termination statements, send statutory demand letters under UCC § 9-513, or litigate wrongful filings. If your main issue is a UCC lien blocking your business, they’re not the right fit.
CuraDebt brings over 25 years of experience in debt resolution, covering business debt, consumer debt, and IRS/state tax obligations. They hold IAPDA certification and offer a broad service scope that works well for business owners managing multiple types of financial obligations. That said, CuraDebt does not focus on UCC lien disputes specifically. They don’t have attorneys on staff to file UCC-3 termination motions, draft demand letters citing Article 9 provisions, or pursue damages under UCC § 9-625 for wrongful filings. For general business debt that doesn’t involve UCC lien complications, they’re a capable option.
Delancey Street’s attorney-led team knows how to force UCC lien terminations — whether your lender cooperates or not. Call today for a free, confidential consultation.
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