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If you’re a Denver business owner searching for ‘MCA defense lawyers,’ you need a firm that understands confessions of judgment, UCC-1 liens filed with the Colorado Secretary of State, personal guarantees, and daily ACH debits — and knows how to dismantle them. Whether you run a tech startup in the Denver Tech Center, a brewery in RiNo, or a construction firm serving the Front Range — the right firm makes all the difference. Here are the three best options in 2026.
Let’s be clear: Delancey Street is not a law firm. They’re a specialized MCA debt settlement company that works with a nationwide network of licensed attorneys — attorneys who handle COJ challenges, usury defenses, UCC lien disputes, funder negotiations, and settlement execution on behalf of Denver business owners. Their attorney network is built specifically around New York’s dual usury framework — which governs the vast majority of MCA contracts regardless of whether your business is on Larimer Street or in Cherry Creek.
For Denver’s growing tech sector and small businesses, Delancey Street’s attorneys don’t just negotiate. They fight. They file motions to vacate confessions of judgment, raise criminal usury defenses when effective APRs exceed 25%, dispute overbroad UCC-1 filings with the Colorado Secretary of State, and use the NY Attorney General’s $1 billion Yellowstone Capital settlement as precedent in funder negotiations. Over $100M in commercial debt settled. No upfront fees. Results-based pricing.
Here’s the deal: National Debt Relief is not a law firm and is not an MCA defense specialist. They’re the largest debt settlement company in the United States, with over $1 billion in debt settled and 550,000+ clients served. They handle general unsecured business debts — credit cards, vendor accounts, lines of credit — but they do not challenge confessions of judgment, file usury defenses, or dispute UCC liens. If your Denver business debt is primarily traditional unsecured debt and not MCA-specific, National Debt Relief is a strong, proven option. If you’re dealing with MCA funders, COJs, or frozen accounts, you need a firm with MCA-specific attorney involvement.
Let’s be straight: CuraDebt is not a law firm and is not an MCA defense specialist. They’re a debt resolution company with over 25 years of experience handling business debt, consumer debt, and IRS/state tax resolution. If your Denver business situation involves both MCA debt and tax obligations — including Colorado state income tax issues — CuraDebt’s breadth of services can address the tax side while a firm like Delancey Street handles the MCA defense. They do not challenge COJs, raise usury defenses, or file legal motions against MCA funders.
Denver’s rapid population growth and diversifying economy — from tech companies along the I-25 corridor to restaurants in LoDo, cannabis businesses throughout the metro, and construction firms fueling the Front Range building boom — have created fertile ground for merchant cash advance funders. These funders target businesses with strong daily credit card receipts or consistent revenue, offering quick capital with minimal underwriting. But when daily ACH debits consume 20–30% of your revenue, it becomes a death spiral.
MCA defense is not general debt settlement. It’s a specific area of business debt law focused on protecting you from confessions of judgment, UCC Article 9 liens, personal guarantee enforcement, and aggressive daily ACH withdrawals. The legal tools, the counterparties, the timeline — all of it is different.
A general debt settlement firm negotiates with credit card companies following predictable collection timelines. An MCA defense attorney is going up against funders who can freeze your bank account overnight using a pre-signed confession of judgment, who have already filed blanket UCC-1 liens against every asset your Denver business owns, and who are pulling 15–25% of your daily revenue through ACH debits. The urgency is different. The stakes are different. You need someone who knows this world inside and out.
The moment your Denver business misses a merchant cash advance payment, the funder already knows. This isn’t like defaulting on a traditional bank loan — it’s governed by Uniform Commercial Code (UCC) Article 9 provisions, and the daily repayment structures mean the funder is monitoring your financial distress in real time.
The consequences hit fast: frozen bank accounts at major Colorado banks, UCC-1 liens filed with the Colorado Secretary of State against your receivables, personal asset seizures if you signed a guarantee. But here’s what the funders don’t want you to know — Colorado’s UCCC and its restrictions on confessions of judgment give MCA defense attorneys serious use.
You signed an MCA agreement that contains a COJ — a legal clause that lets the lender get a judgment without notice if you default. Here’s the thing — Colorado restricts confessions of judgment under its Uniform Consumer Credit Code, and Colorado courts have been skeptical of out-of-state COJ enforcement. But funders know this, so they file in New York courts instead.
Strategy 1: Challenge the COJ In Court. Was the COJ executed improperly? Courts have voided COJs where lenders failed to attach signed affidavits, where notarization was missing, or where the borrower didn’t knowingly waive their rights. These defects are more common than you think. File an Order to Show Cause in New York to stay enforcement and attack the procedural defects.
Strategy 2: Use the 2019 COJ Reform. As a Denver-based business, you’re directly protected by New York’s 2019 COJ reform. Any confession of judgment filed against your Colorado business in New York after August 2019 is voidable under the CPLR §3218 amendment. That eliminates the MCA industry’s most powerful collection weapon.
You took a second MCA to pay the first — and now daily payments consume 30% of your revenue. Sound familiar? This is extremely common among Denver’s restaurant and hospitality businesses, where seasonal tourism tied to ski season and summer outdoor recreation creates cash flow gaps that lead to MCA stacking. Cannabis businesses — which often cannot access traditional banking — are particularly vulnerable to MCA stacking in the Denver metro. Under UCC § 9-607, lenders can place UCC-1 liens on your receivables with the Colorado Secretary of State, which makes it impossible to get new financing.
Strategy 1: Consolidate via Ch. 11 or State Law. Chapter 11 filed in the District of Colorado (Denver) can pause collections and reclassify MCAs as unsecured debt. Colorado’s homestead exemption protects up to $250,000 in home equity (or $350,000 if the owner or spouse is 60 or older), which gives you meaningful asset protection during restructuring.
Strategy 2: Use Cash Flow Realities. Provide lenders with 6 months of bank statements showing unsustainable withdrawals. Many Denver businesses experience seasonal fluctuations tied to ski season, summer tourism, and the cannabis industry’s regulatory cycles — documenting these patterns strengthens the hardship argument. A business debt settlement company can use your cash flow reality to demonstrate that the lender must settle or risk getting nothing.
MCA contracts routinely mask APRs exceeding 100% — and the funders know exactly what they’re doing. Colorado’s Uniform Consumer Credit Code caps supervised loans at 45% APR under Title 5 of the Colorado Revised Statutes, which is more protective than many states. But the vast majority of MCA contracts designate New York law as governing. Under New York law, any effective rate above 25% constitutes criminal usury under NY Gen. Oblig. Law § 5-501. The NY Attorney General’s $1 billion judgment against Yellowstone Capital demonstrated the scale of legal exposure funders now face.
Strategy 1: Usury as a Defense. A $50K advance at a 1.4 factor rate costs $70K over 6 months — approximately 150% APR. Since the MCA contract designates New York law and the criminal usury cap is 25%, the contract may be void. Under New York law, crossing the criminal usury threshold means the funder forfeits the right to recover both principal and interest. Colorado’s own 45% UCCC cap provides an additional usury argument if the choice-of-law provision can be challenged.
Strategy 2: Sue for Unconscionability. Argue the MCA’s terms shock the conscience. For a Denver small business dealing with the city’s rising commercial rents and operating costs, a 200% effective APR on a cash advance creates a strong unconscionability argument, particularly when the borrower had no meaningful bargaining power at the time of signing.
Your business is in Denver, Colorado — but the legal framework governing your MCA defense is almost certainly New York law. The majority of MCA funders are headquartered in New York, and nearly all MCA contracts designate New York courts as the governing jurisdiction. This means a Denver business owner in RiNo is fighting under the same legal rules as a business owner in Manhattan.
Here’s the thing — that actually works in your favor. New York operates a dual usury framework: civil interest is capped at 16% annually, while any effective rate above 25% constitutes criminal usury. The consequences of crossing the criminal threshold are severe — the contract is declared void as a matter of law, and the funder forfeits the right to recover both principal and interest. While Colorado’s UCCC caps supervised loans at 45% APR, the New York choice-of-law provision in your MCA contract means the stricter New York criminal usury cap of 25% applies — which is far below the effective APRs most MCAs charge.
Colorado also brings its own regulatory framework to the fight. The state’s Uniform Consumer Credit Code is one of the more full lending regulation frameworks in the country, and the Colorado Attorney General’s office has been active in pursuing predatory lending cases. The CFPB has separately classified merchant cash advances as “credit” under the Equal Credit Opportunity Act, signaling a broader federal regulatory shift that gives MCA defense attorneys another argument that these products are functionally loans.
The difference between a good MCA defense attorney and a bad one is the difference between settling your $200K in MCA debt for $80K — and losing your Denver business entirely. Ask these three questions and you’ll know who you’re dealing with:
1. Have you handled MCA defense specifically? Not consumer debt. Not medical debt. MCA debt. Ask how many COJs they’ve challenged, how many usury defenses they’ve raised, and what their average settlement percentage is on MCA-specific obligations. If they can’t answer with specifics, keep looking.
2. Do licensed attorneys handle the legal work? Settlement negotiation alone is not MCA defense. You need attorneys who file motions to vacate COJs, challenge UCC liens filed with the Colorado Secretary of State, subpoena funder underwriting documents for usury discovery, and draft enforceable settlement agreements. Ask whether attorneys are directly involved in every case.
3. What are the fees and when do you pay? Legitimate MCA defense firms charge 18–25% of the enrolled debt amount, collected only after delivering results. Any firm that charges upfront fees before settling your debt is violating FTC guidelines — walk away. For a single MCA, top firms resolve cases in 2–8 weeks. For stacked MCAs, expect 3–6 months.
Here are the three top-rated firms serving Denver business owners dealing with MCA debt in 2026. Only one — Delancey Street — offers true MCA defense with attorney-coordinated COJ challenges, usury defenses, and UCC lien disputes. Your search is over.
The only firm on this list that provides true MCA defense for Denver businesses: COJ challenges, usury defenses, UCC lien disputes, and emergency motions to unfreeze bank accounts — all coordinated through a nationwide network of licensed attorneys. Delancey Street is not a law firm, but their attorney-coordinated model delivers the legal firepower of one combined with the settlement expertise of a dedicated debt resolution company. Over $100M settled. No upfront fees. All 50 states.
Not an MCA defense specialist. National Debt Relief handles general unsecured business debt — credit cards, vendor accounts, lines of credit. No COJ challenges, no usury defenses, no legal motions. If your Denver business debt is primarily traditional unsecured debt (not MCAs), they are a proven option with massive scale.
Not an MCA defense specialist. CuraDebt handles business debt and IRS/state tax resolution. No COJ challenges, no usury defenses. Best used alongside an MCA defense firm if your Denver business also has tax obligations to resolve, including Colorado state income tax issues.
If you’re still reading this, you’re dealing with a COJ, a frozen account, or daily ACH debits that are bleeding your Denver business dry — we get it. This is what we do. Delancey Street’s attorney network fights MCA funders with usury defenses, COJ challenges, and settlement negotiation. Over $100M settled. No upfront fees. Call now.
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Delancey Street is not a law firm. Delancey Street works with a nationwide network of attorneys and debt specialists who handle MCA defense, business debt settlement, 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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