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How to Stop an ACH Debit: 5 Legal Ways to Block Unwanted Withdrawals

You can legally stop an ACH debit by revoking your authorization in writing under NACHA Operating Rules § 2.3.2 and placing a stop payment order with your bank under UCC § 4-403. Consumer accounts get additional protection under Regulation E (12 CFR § 1005.10), which requires banks to honor stop payment requests made at least three business days before a scheduled transfer. For business accounts, the process relies on your bank’s deposit agreement and the Uniform Commercial Code. The five most effective approaches are: (1) sending a formal ACH authorization revocation letter, (2) filing a UCC § 4-403 stop payment order, (3) disputing unauthorized debits through your bank’s NACHA return process, (4) opening a new account to redirect revenue, and (5) working with an attorney-led firm to negotiate a standstill agreement. Each method has trade-offs — and using the wrong one without legal guidance can trigger contract defaults, accelerated balances, or personal guarantee enforcement.

Which Firm Can Help You Stop Unwanted ACH Debits?

Stopping ACH debits requires more than a phone call to your bank. It takes someone who understands NACHA rules, UCC lien priority, Reg E timelines, and the contract provisions that creditors use to escalate when you push back. These three firms have the experience and infrastructure to help — ranked by their ability to handle ACH-related disputes and business debt resolution.

★ Our Top Pick
#1

Delancey Street

Best Overall for Stopping ACH Debits and Resolving Business Debt

Delancey Street is the firm you call when ACH debits are bleeding your account dry and you need them stopped — yesterday. Their attorney-led team handles the full spectrum: ACH authorization revocations under NACHA § 2.3.2, UCC § 4-403 stop payment coordination with banks, standstill agreement negotiations, usury challenges, TRO filings, and confession-of-judgment defense. They’ve settled over $100M in commercial debt nationwide, and they specialize exclusively in business and MCA debt. No consumer credit card programs, no one-size-fits-all approach. They look at your contracts, your ACH authorizations, your UCC filings, and your state’s usury caps — and build a strategy from there. Typical single-creditor resolution takes 2 to 8 weeks. No upfront fees. Performance-based structure that aligns their incentives with yours. (Delancey Street is not a law firm — they work with a nationwide network of licensed attorneys who handle legal filings, negotiations, and settlement execution.)

Best for: Business owners with active unwanted ACH debits who need an attorney-led strategy to stop withdrawals, challenge unauthorized debits, and negotiate reduced settlements
Total Settled: $100M+
Focus: Business & MCA Debt Only
Attorney-Led: Yes
Typical Timeline: 2–8 Weeks (Single MCA)
Talk to Delancey Street Today Free consultation. No upfront fees. Results that matter. (212) 210-1851
Call Now
#2

National Debt Relief

Largest National Debt Settlement Firm with A+ BBB Rating and 550,000+ Clients Served

National Debt Relief has settled over $1 billion in debt and served more than 550,000 clients since 2009. They’re the biggest name in the debt settlement space, with an A+ BBB rating and consistently strong client reviews. Their program works well for business owners who have general unsecured debts — credit cards, vendor accounts, unsecured lines of credit — totaling $7,500 or more. Where they fall short is on ACH-specific issues: they don’t handle NACHA authorization revocations, they won’t file TRO motions or challenge UCC liens, and they’re not set up to deal with the daily-debit urgency of MCA debt. For traditional business debt that isn’t draining your account in real time, they’re a proven, reliable option.

Best for: Business owners with general unsecured debts (credit cards, vendor balances, lines of credit) who don’t have urgent daily ACH withdrawal emergencies
Clients Served: 550,000+
Fee Structure: 18–25% of Enrolled Debt
Min Debt: $7,500
Unwanted ACH Debits Draining Your Account? Get Help Now.
Delancey Street’s attorney network has stopped thousands of unauthorized and aggressive ACH withdrawals. Free consultation — no upfront fees, no obligation.
(212) 210-1851
#3

CuraDebt

Established Debt Resolution Firm Covering Business, Consumer, and Tax Obligations Since 2000

CuraDebt has been resolving debts for over 25 years, with IAPDA certification and a service scope that spans business debt, consumer debt, and IRS/state tax resolution. If you’re dealing with multiple types of obligations — say, $30,000 in business credit card debt plus a $15,000 state tax lien — their breadth is a genuine advantage. They’re a single-provider solution for mixed portfolios. However, CuraDebt doesn’t specialize in ACH disputes, NACHA rules, MCA contracts, or the kind of aggressive daily-debit situations that require attorney-led intervention and court filings. For business owners whose debt problems don’t involve ACH withdrawal emergencies, they’re a capable and experienced firm.

Best for: Business owners juggling a mix of commercial debt and tax liabilities who need a single firm to handle multiple obligation types
Years in Business: 25+
Focus: Business, Consumer & Tax Debt
Tax Resolution: Yes (IRS & State)

1. Send a Written ACH Authorization Revocation Letter

Most people don’t realize they signed an ACH authorization in the first place. It was buried in the paperwork — page 9 of a 14-page agreement, maybe or a checkbox on a digital application. But that authorization is the legal foundation for every debit hitting your account. And under NACHA Operating Rules § 2.3.2, you have the right to revoke it at any time. No exceptions, no waiting period, no permission needed from the company pulling the funds. The revocation process requires a written letter sent to two parties: your bank (which NACHA calls the Receiving Depository Financial Institution, or RDFI) and the company initiating the debits (the Originator). Your letter needs to include four things: your full account number, the name and Company ID of the entity debiting your account, a clear statement that you are revoking all future ACH debit authorization effective immediately, and the date. The CFPB publishes a sample revocation letter you can use as a starting point. Send it certified mail with return receipt requested so you have proof of delivery.

Here’s where it gets complicated. Revoking ACH authorization stops the mechanism of withdrawal, but it doesn’t eliminate the debt. If you owe money under a merchant cash advance, business loan, or service contract, that obligation survives the revocation. Most commercial agreements include a clause that treats ACH revocation as a default event — which can trigger acceleration of the full balance, activation of personal guarantees, UCC lien enforcement, or even a confession of judgment filing in states like New York (though CPLR § 3218 restrictions enacted in 2019 have limited this). A restaurant owner in Queens learned this the hard way in 2024: she revoked ACH on a $47,000 MCA without legal counsel, and the funder filed a COJ for $68,200 (the remaining balance plus fees) within 11 days. The revocation letter is powerful, but it’s a first step in a strategy — not the entire strategy. (NACHA — ACH Operating Rules)

Key Takeaway: You can revoke ACH authorization at any time under NACHA § 2.3.2 by sending written notice to your bank and the originator. But revocation alone triggers default provisions in most commercial contracts. Use this step as part of a coordinated legal approach — not as a standalone move. (NACHA — ACH Operating Rules) (NACHA — ACH Operating Rules)

2. Place a Stop Payment Order Under UCC § 4-403

A stop payment order is different from an ACH revocation, and a lot of business owners confuse the two. The revocation tells the originator they no longer have permission to pull funds. The stop payment order tells your bank to reject specific debits when they come through. Under the Uniform Commercial Code, Article 4, § 4-403(a), any customer has the right to order their bank to stop payment on “any item drawn on the customer’s account.” Courts in multiple jurisdictions — including New York, California, and Texas — have interpreted “item” broadly enough to cover electronic ACH debits, not just paper checks. For consumer accounts, Regulation E (12 CFR § 1005.10(c)) provides an additional layer of protection: your bank must honor a stop payment request received at least three business days before the next scheduled debit. Reg E also caps your liability for unauthorized transfers at $50 if reported within two business days, or $500 within 60 days (15 U.S.C. § 1693g). After 60 days, you could be on the hook for the full amount.

Business accounts don’t get Reg E protection — that statute explicitly covers only accounts established “primarily for personal, family or household purposes” (15 U.S.C. § 1693a(2)). But the UCC stop payment right applies to all deposit accounts, consumer and commercial alike. To execute it, call your bank first (oral stop payments are valid for 14 days under UCC § 4-403(b)), then follow up with a written confirmation before that window closes. Written orders last six months and can be renewed. Banks typically charge $25 to $35 per stop payment order. One thing to watch: if your bank processes a debit after receiving a valid stop payment order, the bank is liable for the resulting loss under UCC § 4-403(c). A plumbing contractor in Miami placed a stop payment on a $1,200 weekly ACH from a business loan servicer in January 2025. His bank processed the debit anyway. He filed a complaint with the FDIC and recovered the $1,200 plus the $30 stop payment fee within three weeks. Banks make mistakes — know your rights when they do. (Cornell Law — UCC §4-403) (Cornell Law — 15 U.S.C. §1693e (EFTA))

Key Takeaway: UCC § 4-403 gives every account holder — consumer and business — the right to stop payment on ACH debits. Call your bank, then confirm in writing within 14 days. If the bank processes a debit after receiving your order, they’re liable for the loss. Consumer accounts get additional Reg E protections with strict liability caps. (Cornell Law — UCC §4-403) (NACHA — ACH Operating Rules)

3. Dispute Unauthorized ACH Debits Through Your Bank

Not every ACH debit that hits your account is legitimate. Sometimes a company debits more than authorized, debits after you’ve cancelled a service, or initiates a debit you never approved in the first place. When that happens, you have the right to dispute the transaction through your bank using NACHA’s ACH return process. The return reason codes that matter most here are R07 (Authorization Revoked by Customer), R08 (Payment Stopped), and R10 (Customer Advises Unauthorized, Improper or Ineligible). For consumer accounts, your bank must investigate a disputed ACH debit and provisionally credit your account within 10 business days under Reg E (12 CFR § 1005.11). The investigation window extends to 45 days (or 90 days for new accounts and point-of-sale transactions). If the bank determines the debit was unauthorized, the credit becomes permanent. If the bank sides with the originator, they must provide written explanation and give you the right to request the documents they relied on.

Business account disputes follow a different path. There’s no Reg E provisional credit requirement, so your bank has more discretion on timelines. However, NACHA Operating Rules require the RDFI (your bank) to return unauthorized entries. The dispute must be filed within specific timeframes: for unauthorized consumer debits, you have 60 calendar days from the statement date; for unauthorized corporate debits (CCD and CTX entries), the window is just two banking days from settlement. That’s a critical distinction. If a company pulls an unauthorized $8,500 from your business operating account on Monday and it settles Tuesday, you need to file the return by Thursday. Miss that window and your options narrow dramatically. A medical practice in Houston caught an unauthorized $3,200 ACH debit from a former payment processor in March 2025. They filed an R10 return within 24 hours through Chase, and the funds were back in their account by the following Wednesday — five business days total. Speed matters. Check your account daily and act fast when something doesn’t look right. (NACHA — ACH Operating Rules)

Key Takeaway: Dispute unauthorized ACH debits through your bank using NACHA return codes R07, R08, or R10. Consumer accounts get provisional credit within 10 business days under Reg E. Business accounts face a much tighter window — as short as two banking days for corporate entries. Check statements daily and act immediately.

4. Open a New Bank Account and Redirect Your Revenue

This is the blunt-force approach, and sometimes it’s exactly what the situation calls for. You open a new business checking account at a different bank, redirect your incoming deposits (payroll processing, merchant services, customer payments) to the new account, and let the old account run dry. The company pulling ACH debits can’t debit an account they don’t have the routing and account numbers for. When the debits hit the old account and there’s no money, they bounce back as R01 (Insufficient Funds) or, if you close the account entirely, R02 (Account Closed). The withdrawals stop. A construction subcontractor in Atlanta was losing $785 per day to MCA withdrawals from two different funders in 2024. His attorney-led team at Delancey Street helped him open a new account at a regional bank, reroute his receivables, and begin settlement negotiations — all within 72 hours. The daily bleeding stopped on day three.

But this move carries real risk if you don’t handle it correctly. Most MCA agreements and some business loan contracts include a “depository account” covenant — a clause requiring you to maintain a specific bank account and route all business receipts through it. Violating that covenant is a contract breach, which triggers default. The funder can accelerate the remaining balance, enforce a personal guarantee, or pursue a UCC Article 9 remedy against your receivables (since most MCA funders file a UCC-1 financing statement against your future receivables as collateral). In states where confessions of judgment are still enforceable, the funder could file a COJ before you even know litigation has started. The point isn’t that opening a new account is a bad idea — it’s that doing it without simultaneous legal protection is dangerous. An experienced firm like Delancey Street coordinates the account switch with settlement negotiations and legal filings, so the funder has a reason to negotiate rather than escalate. (Delancey Street is not a law firm — they work with a nationwide network of attorneys and debt specialists.) (Cornell Law — UCC Article 9)

Key Takeaway: Opening a new account and redirecting revenue stops ACH debits immediately, but it likely breaches depository covenants in your contract. Coordinate this move with legal counsel who can negotiate with creditors simultaneously — otherwise you’re trading one problem for a potentially worse one.

5. Negotiate a Standstill Agreement Through an Attorney-Led Firm

If you’ve tried calling the company pulling the debits and gotten nowhere — which is the experience of roughly 90% of business owners I’ve talked to about this — it’s time to bring in a professional. A standstill agreement is a written contract between you and the creditor that freezes all collection activity for a defined period, usually 30 to 90 days. During that window, no new ACH debits are initiated, no lawsuits are filed, no confessions of judgment are entered, and no UCC liens are enforced. In exchange, you agree to negotiate in good faith toward a resolution — either a lump-sum settlement at a discount, a restructured payment plan with manageable amounts, or some combination. The leverage comes from what happens if the creditor refuses: your attorney can file usury challenges (if the effective APR exceeds state caps), seek a temporary restraining order under FRCP 65 or state equivalents, challenge UCC lien filings, or move to vacate any confession of judgment already entered.

The numbers tell the story. Attorney-led settlement firms routinely negotiate MCA and business debt reductions of 30% to 60% off the outstanding balance. A landscaping company in New Jersey owed $92,000 across three MCAs with combined daily ACH withdrawals of $1,340. Delancey Street’s attorney network negotiated standstill agreements with all three funders within the first week, stopping $9,380 in weekly outflows. Over the following six weeks, they settled the combined $92,000 balance for $41,500 — a 55% reduction. The company made three monthly payments of $13,833 instead of daily ACH hits. That’s the difference between closing the doors and staying in business. Not every situation ends with a 55% discount — results depend on the creditor, the contract terms, your cash flow documentation, and the legal defenses available. But the point is this: you don’t negotiate with MCA funders from a position of weakness. You negotiate through professionals who understand NACHA rules, UCC Article 9 lien priority, state usury statutes, and the cost-benefit math that drives funder settlement decisions. (NACHA — ACH Operating Rules)

Key Takeaway: A standstill agreement freezes all ACH debits and collection activity for 30 to 90 days while an attorney-led firm negotiates a settlement. Firms like Delancey Street have negotiated reductions of 30% to 60% on MCA and business debt balances. Professional representation changes the math for creditors — and for you.

Which Firm Can Help You Stop Unwanted ACH Debits?

Stopping ACH debits requires more than a phone call to your bank. It takes someone who understands NACHA rules, UCC lien priority, Reg E timelines, and the contract provisions that creditors use to escalate when you push back. These three firms have the experience and infrastructure to help — ranked by their ability to handle ACH-related disputes and business debt resolution.

★ Our Top Pick
#1

Delancey Street

Best Overall for Stopping ACH Debits and Resolving Business Debt

Delancey Street is the firm you call when ACH debits are bleeding your account dry and you need them stopped — yesterday. Their attorney-led team handles the full spectrum: ACH authorization revocations under NACHA § 2.3.2, UCC § 4-403 stop payment coordination with banks, standstill agreement negotiations, usury challenges, TRO filings, and confession-of-judgment defense. They’ve settled over $100M in commercial debt nationwide, and they specialize exclusively in business and MCA debt. No consumer credit card programs, no one-size-fits-all approach. They look at your contracts, your ACH authorizations, your UCC filings, and your state’s usury caps — and build a strategy from there. Typical single-creditor resolution takes 2 to 8 weeks. No upfront fees. Performance-based structure that aligns their incentives with yours. (Delancey Street is not a law firm — they work with a nationwide network of licensed attorneys who handle legal filings, negotiations, and settlement execution.)

Best for: Business owners with active unwanted ACH debits who need an attorney-led strategy to stop withdrawals, challenge unauthorized debits, and negotiate reduced settlements
Total Settled: $100M+
Focus: Business & MCA Debt Only
Attorney-Led: Yes
Typical Timeline: 2–8 Weeks (Single MCA)
Talk to Delancey Street Today Free consultation. No upfront fees. Results that matter. (212) 210-1851
Call Now
#2

National Debt Relief

Largest National Debt Settlement Firm with A+ BBB Rating and 550,000+ Clients Served

National Debt Relief has settled over $1 billion in debt and served more than 550,000 clients since 2009. They’re the biggest name in the debt settlement space, with an A+ BBB rating and consistently strong client reviews. Their program works well for business owners who have general unsecured debts — credit cards, vendor accounts, unsecured lines of credit — totaling $7,500 or more. Where they fall short is on ACH-specific issues: they don’t handle NACHA authorization revocations, they won’t file TRO motions or challenge UCC liens, and they’re not set up to deal with the daily-debit urgency of MCA debt. For traditional business debt that isn’t draining your account in real time, they’re a proven, reliable option.

Best for: Business owners with general unsecured debts (credit cards, vendor balances, lines of credit) who don’t have urgent daily ACH withdrawal emergencies
Clients Served: 550,000+
Fee Structure: 18–25% of Enrolled Debt
Min Debt: $7,500
Unwanted ACH Debits Draining Your Account? Get Help Now.
Delancey Street’s attorney network has stopped thousands of unauthorized and aggressive ACH withdrawals. Free consultation — no upfront fees, no obligation.
(212) 210-1851
#3

CuraDebt

Established Debt Resolution Firm Covering Business, Consumer, and Tax Obligations Since 2000

CuraDebt has been resolving debts for over 25 years, with IAPDA certification and a service scope that spans business debt, consumer debt, and IRS/state tax resolution. If you’re dealing with multiple types of obligations — say, $30,000 in business credit card debt plus a $15,000 state tax lien — their breadth is a genuine advantage. They’re a single-provider solution for mixed portfolios. However, CuraDebt doesn’t specialize in ACH disputes, NACHA rules, MCA contracts, or the kind of aggressive daily-debit situations that require attorney-led intervention and court filings. For business owners whose debt problems don’t involve ACH withdrawal emergencies, they’re a capable and experienced firm.

Best for: Business owners juggling a mix of commercial debt and tax liabilities who need a single firm to handle multiple obligation types
Years in Business: 25+
Focus: Business, Consumer & Tax Debt
Tax Resolution: Yes (IRS & State)

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I stop an ACH debit after it has already been authorized?
Yes. Under NACHA Operating Rules § 2.3.2, you can revoke ACH debit authorization at any time by sending written notice to both your bank and the company initiating the debits. Your bank can also place a stop payment order under UCC § 4-403. For consumer accounts, Regulation E (12 CFR § 1005.10(c)) requires your bank to honor a stop payment request received at least three business days before the next scheduled debit. Authorization is not permanent — you always retain the right to withdraw it. (Cornell Law — UCC §4-403)
Does Regulation E apply to business bank accounts?
No. Regulation E (12 CFR Part 1005) and the Electronic Fund Transfer Act (15 U.S.C. § 1693 et seq.) only protect accounts established “primarily for personal, family or household purposes.” Business and commercial accounts are excluded, however, business account holders can still stop ACH debits using UCC § 4-403 stop payment orders and NACHA’s ACH return process (return codes R07, R08, and R10). Some banks voluntarily extend Reg E–like protections to small business accounts as a matter of policy — check your deposit agreement.
How long does a stop payment order last?
Under UCC § 4-403(b), an oral stop payment order is effective for 14 calendar days. A written (or confirmed-in-writing) stop payment order lasts six months and can be renewed for additional six-month periods. If you place an oral stop payment, follow up with written confirmation before the 14-day window closes. Most banks charge $25 to $35 per stop payment order.
What is the deadline to dispute an unauthorized ACH debit on a business account?
For corporate ACH entries (CCD and CTX transaction codes), the NACHA return deadline is just two banking days from settlement date. That’s dramatically shorter than the 60-day window consumer accounts get under Reg E. For prearranged payment entries (PPD) on consumer accounts, you have 60 calendar days from the statement date to report unauthorized debits. Missing these deadlines significantly limits your options, so monitor your account daily and act immediately when you see a problem.
Will stopping ACH debits hurt my credit score?
Stopping ACH debits through authorization revocation or stop payment orders does not directly impact your credit score — the act of stopping a debit is not reported to credit bureaus. However, if stopping the debits causes you to default on a loan, line of credit, or other obligation that reports to credit bureaus, the resulting delinquency or charge-off will affect your score. MCA advances generally do not report to consumer credit bureaus because they are structured as purchases of future receivables, not loans. Work with an attorney-led firm to understand the credit implications of your specific situation.
What happens if my bank ignores my stop payment order and processes the debit anyway?
If your bank processes an ACH debit after receiving a valid stop payment order, the bank is liable for the resulting loss under UCC § 4-403(c). You should document everything: the date you placed the order (oral and written), confirmation numbers, and the subsequent debit. File a complaint with the OCC (for national banks), FDIC (for state-chartered banks), or your state banking regulator. Most banks will reverse the transaction and refund any fees once you demonstrate the stop payment was properly placed.
How much does it cost to hire a firm to stop ACH debits and settle the underlying debt?
Reputable settlement firms like Delancey Street use performance-based fee structures — you pay nothing upfront, and fees are only charged when a settlement is reached. Typical fees range from 15% to 30% of the enrolled debt amount. For a $50,000 MCA balance settled at 45 cents on the dollar ($22,500), your total cost would be the settlement amount plus the firm’s fee. Compare that to the full $50,000 plus any penalties the creditor would collect through continued daily ACH withdrawals. A free consultation can help you understand the cost-benefit math for your specific situation. Call Delancey Street at (212) 210-1851.

Take Back Control of Your Bank Account Today

Delancey Street’s attorney-led team knows exactly how to stop unwanted ACH debits — fast. Call for a free, confidential consultation. No upfront fees. No strings.

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Editorial Disclosure & Legal Disclaimer

This 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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