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You’ve read the five steps. Here’s the reality — executing all of this while also running a kitchen, managing a staff, and keeping your doors open is nearly impossible on your own. The smartest move you can make today is getting the right team in your corner. Here are the firms that consistently deliver results for restaurant owners fighting MCA debt.
Delancey Street isn’t a generalist firm that dabbles in MCA — this is all they do. Their attorney-led team has settled over $100M in business debt nationwide, including significant work with restaurant and hospitality operators. They understand the unique pressures of restaurant ownership — seasonal revenue swings, thin margins, POS holdback traps, equipment liens, and the brutal reality that every day of unresolved MCA debt brings you closer to closing your doors. They move fast because they know restaurants can’t afford to wait. No upfront fees. No fluff. Just results. (Delancey Street is not a law firm — they work with a nationwide network of licensed attorneys who handle negotiations, legal filings, and settlement execution.)
National Debt Relief is the biggest name in debt settlement — period. Over $1 billion settled, 550,000+ clients served, and an A+ BBB rating. They’re a strong option for restaurant owners who carry significant unsecured personal debt alongside their MCA obligations — think maxed-out credit cards you used to cover payroll during the slow season, or personal loans you took to keep the restaurant afloat. Their scale means deep creditor relationships and well-tested negotiation playbooks. For general business debt and unsecured balances, they’re a reliable choice.
CuraDebt has been in the debt relief game for over 25 years, and they bring something most firms don’t: tax debt resolution alongside business debt settlement. If your MCA crisis has also created IRS or state tax problems — which happens constantly with restaurant owners who fall behind on payroll taxes, sales tax remittances, or quarterly estimated payments — CuraDebt can address both under one roof. They’re not MCA-only specialists, but their breadth across business, consumer, and tax debt makes them a versatile option for restaurant owners juggling multiple types of financial pressure.
Before anything else, you need a brutally honest picture of where your money is going. Not a rough estimate. Not “I think we’re okay until summer.” An exact, line-by-line breakdown. Pull your bank statements from the last 90 days and identify every single ACH debit tied to an MCA funder. Then pull your POS reports — because here’s where it gets ugly for restaurant owners specifically: some MCA funders don’t just pull ACH debits from your bank account. They take a percentage holdback directly through your credit card processor or POS system. If you’re on Toast, Clover or Square, check whether any split-funding or holdback arrangements are siphoning a cut of every card transaction before the money even hits your account.
Here’s what the numbers typically look like for a restaurant in MCA trouble: food costs at 28–35% of revenue, labor at 25–35%, rent and overhead at 15–20%, and then MCA debits gobbling another 20–40% on top. Add it up and you’re operating at a loss every single day — you just might not realize it because revenue keeps flowing in. That’s the trap. The daily cash movement in a restaurant creates an illusion of solvency while the business is actually bleeding out. Write down every MCA funder’s name, the original advance amount, the factor rate, the daily or weekly debit amount, and the remaining balance. Then calculate your true daily cost of operations versus your true daily net revenue after MCA debits.
If you have stacked MCAs — and roughly 40% of MCA defaults involve stacking — list them by daily debit amount, highest first. That’s your priority target list. Many restaurant owners discover they’re paying effective annual rates of 150–300% across multiple advances they took out to cover shortfalls from the previous advance. It’s a death spiral, and recognizing it is the first step to breaking it. This audit document becomes the foundation for every conversation you’ll have with an attorney, a debt settlement specialist, or a funder.
This is the step most restaurant owners don’t know about — and it can change everything. Most MCA agreements contain a reconciliation clause (sometimes called a “true-up” clause) that requires the funder to adjust your payment amount based on your actual revenue. Courts have identified reconciliation provisions as one of three “quintessential factors” that distinguish a legitimate purchase of future receivables from an illegal loan. Here’s why this matters so much for restaurants: your revenue is inherently seasonal and variable. January is not July. Tuesday lunch is not Saturday dinner. A slow winter, a health inspection closure, a bad Yelp review, construction on your block — any of these can crater your revenue. And if your revenue drops, you have a contractual right to demand that your MCA payments drop too.
Here’s the process: send a formal written reconciliation request to your MCA funder via certified mail. Include your actual revenue numbers — bank statements, POS reports, tax filings — showing the decline. If the funder collected more than the agreed-upon percentage of your actual receivables, they are contractually obligated to credit the overage, refund it, or reduce future debits accordingly. This isn’t a favor you’re asking for. It’s a contractual right. Document every interaction — date, time, who you spoke with, what they said.
Now, the reality: many MCA funders will stall, demand excessive documentation, or flat-out ignore your reconciliation request. And that’s actually where the leverage shifts to you. When a funder refuses a legitimate reconciliation request, they potentially undermine the “purchase of future receivables” structure of the entire agreement. A court may reclassify the MCA as a loan — and if the effective interest rate exceeds your state’s usury cap, the funder is suddenly in violation of lending laws. That reclassification can void penalties, reduce what you owe, or give your attorney a nuclear option at the negotiating table. This is why you need a specialist, not a DIY approach.
This is not optional. It’s the single most important step on this list. And for restaurant owners specifically, you need an attorney who understands both MCA law and the unique financial reality of running a restaurant. Not a general business attorney. Not a debt consolidation company which found you through a Facebook ad. You need someone who knows what a factor rate is, what a confession of judgment does, how reconciliation provisions work in court — and who also understands that your Tuesday revenue looks nothing like your Saturday revenue, that your food costs spike when your beef supplier raises prices, and that a slow January doesn’t mean your business is failing.
Here’s what a qualified MCA attorney does in the first 48 hours for a restaurant client: reviews every MCA agreement you’ve signed, identifies usury violations or unconscionable terms, checks whether confessions of judgment in your contracts are enforceable in your state, evaluates whether your POS holdback arrangements create additional legal issues, and begins crafting a strategy — whether that’s reconciliation demands, negotiated settlement, or litigation. They also take over all communication with the MCA funders. That means the threatening calls stop. The aggressive emails stop. The constant anxiety of wondering whether today is the day they freeze your bank account — that stops too.
Delancey Street’s team is attorney-led and focuses exclusively on business debt and MCA settlement. They’ve settled over $100M in debt, they know the playbook these funders use, and they’ve helped restaurant and hospitality operators from New York City pizza shops to Miami beach bars to Nashville BBQ joints. They offer a risk-free consultation with no upfront fees — and they get it. They understand that a restaurant owner calling for help isn’t someone who made bad decisions. It’s someone who needed capital to survive, took the only option available, and got crushed by terms that would make a loan shark blush. The consultation is free. The cost of waiting another week is something your business can’t afford.
This is the restaurant-specific trap that most generic MCA advice completely misses. Many restaurant owners didn’t just sign an ACH authorization when they took their MCA — they signed a split-funding or holdback agreement tied directly to their POS system or credit card processor. That means the MCA funder gets a percentage of every single credit and debit card transaction before the money even reaches your bank account. On Toast, Clover or Square, this can happen invisibly — you see your daily deposits are lower than expected, but you might not immediately connect it to the MCA holdback eating 10–20% of every swipe.
Here’s why this is so dangerous for restaurants specifically: credit and debit cards account for 70–80% of revenue in most modern restaurants. If a funder is holding back 15% of your card transactions and also pulling a daily ACH debit from your bank account, you’re getting hit from both sides. And if you have multiple MCAs — which is common — you might have overlapping holdback agreements where two or more funders each claim a percentage of the same card revenue. The math collapses fast. One funder takes 12%, another takes 10%, and suddenly 22% of your card revenue vanishes before you can buy produce for tomorrow’s service. (NACHA — ACH Operating Rules)
An experienced MCA attorney can review your POS contracts and processing agreements to determine whether these holdback arrangements are legally valid, whether they conflict with each other, and whether they can be challenged or modified. In some cases, the holdback was never properly authorized, or the terms exceed what the original MCA agreement specified. Your attorney can also advise on whether switching POS systems or processors is a strategic option — though this must be done carefully, because some MCA contracts include “change of processor” default triggers that give the funder an excuse to accelerate the entire balance. Bottom line: don’t touch your POS setup without legal guidance first.
If you signed personal guarantees on your MCA agreements — and most restaurant owners did, often without fully understanding the implications — your personal assets are on the line. Your home, your car, your savings. But for restaurant owners, the asset exposure goes deeper than most businesses. Your commercial kitchen equipment — ovens, walk-in coolers, fryers, dishwashers — can represent $150,000–$500,000 in assets that a UCC lien attaches to. Your liquor license, which in some states and cities is worth tens of thousands of dollars (or more), may also be at risk. And if you have a lease with favorable terms in a high-traffic location, losing that lease in a forced closure means losing an asset that no dollar amount can replace.
Here’s how the exposure works: when you took the MCA, the funder almost certainly filed a UCC-1 financing statement, giving them a blanket security interest in your business assets — equipment, inventory, receivables and potentially your bank accounts. If you default and they obtain a judgment — either through litigation or through a confession of judgment clause — they can pursue enforcement against those assets. For restaurants, that means they could potentially force the sale of your kitchen equipment, garnish your receivables, or freeze your operating account. And if your contract contains a confession of judgment, in some jurisdictions the funder can obtain that judgment without a trial — though New York banned COJs against out-of-state borrowers in 2019, and other states have followed suit.
The goal of asset protection isn’t to hide assets or commit fraud. It’s to understand your exposure and take lawful steps — guided by an attorney — to protect what you’ve built. That might mean separating business and personal finances, understanding your state’s exemption laws, ensuring your liquor license is properly structured, or negotiating a settlement that includes UCC lien releases as part of the deal. Delancey Street’s team handles asset protection as part of their overall MCA settlement strategy for restaurant clients — because settling the debt means nothing if the funder still has a lien on every piece of equipment in your kitchen.
You’ve read the five steps. Here’s the reality — executing all of this while also running a kitchen, managing a staff, and keeping your doors open is nearly impossible on your own. The smartest move you can make today is getting the right team in your corner. Here are the firms that consistently deliver results for restaurant owners fighting MCA debt.
Delancey Street isn’t a generalist firm that dabbles in MCA — this is all they do. Their attorney-led team has settled over $100M in business debt nationwide, including significant work with restaurant and hospitality operators. They understand the unique pressures of restaurant ownership — seasonal revenue swings, thin margins, POS holdback traps, equipment liens, and the brutal reality that every day of unresolved MCA debt brings you closer to closing your doors. They move fast because they know restaurants can’t afford to wait. No upfront fees. No fluff. Just results. (Delancey Street is not a law firm — they work with a nationwide network of licensed attorneys who handle negotiations, legal filings, and settlement execution.)
National Debt Relief is the biggest name in debt settlement — period. Over $1 billion settled, 550,000+ clients served, and an A+ BBB rating. They’re a strong option for restaurant owners who carry significant unsecured personal debt alongside their MCA obligations — think maxed-out credit cards you used to cover payroll during the slow season, or personal loans you took to keep the restaurant afloat. Their scale means deep creditor relationships and well-tested negotiation playbooks. For general business debt and unsecured balances, they’re a reliable choice.
CuraDebt has been in the debt relief game for over 25 years, and they bring something most firms don’t: tax debt resolution alongside business debt settlement. If your MCA crisis has also created IRS or state tax problems — which happens constantly with restaurant owners who fall behind on payroll taxes, sales tax remittances, or quarterly estimated payments — CuraDebt can address both under one roof. They’re not MCA-only specialists, but their breadth across business, consumer, and tax debt makes them a versatile option for restaurant owners juggling multiple types of financial pressure.
Every day you wait, more cash drains out of your account and into an MCA funder’s pocket. Delancey Street’s MCA attorneys can stop the bleeding and fight for a settlement that keeps your doors open. Free consultation — no upfront fees — no obligation.
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