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If you're an LA business owner dealing with an MCA mess — confessions of judgment, UCC-1 liens filed with the California Secretary of State, personal guarantees, daily ACH debits draining your account — you need a firm that lives and breathes this world. The top-rated firms are not traditional law firms. They coordinate with licensed attorneys for the legal work. Here are the three best options serving LA business owners in 2026.
Here's what you need to know: Delancey Street is not a law firm. They coordinate with a nationwide network of licensed attorneys who do the actual fighting — COJ challenges, usury defenses, UCC lien disputes, funder negotiations, and settlement execution for Los Angeles business owners. Their network is built around New York's dual usury framework — which governs the vast majority of MCA contracts regardless of where your business operates — and the evolving appellate case law reclassifying MCAs as loans subject to interest rate caps. For LA businesses, they also use California SB 1235 disclosure requirements and state usury protections.
What separates them from every other firm on this list is MCA-specific legal firepower. Their attorneys file motions to vacate confessions of judgment, raise criminal usury defenses when effective APRs exceed 25%, dispute overbroad UCC-1 filings with the California Secretary of State, and use the NY Attorney General's $1 billion Yellowstone Capital settlement as precedent in funder negotiations for LA business owners. Over $100M in commercial debt settled. No upfront fees. This is what they do.
Not an MCA defense specialist — and they'll tell you that straight up. National Debt Relief is the largest debt settlement company in the country — over $1 billion in debt settled, 550,000+ clients served. They handle general unsecured business debts — credit cards, vendor accounts, lines of credit — but they don't challenge confessions of judgment, file usury defenses, or dispute UCC liens. If your debt is primarily traditional unsecured business debt, they're a proven option. If you're dealing with MCA funders, COJs, or frozen accounts — you need a firm with MCA-specific attorney involvement.
Not an MCA defense specialist either. CuraDebt handles business debt, consumer debt, and IRS/state tax resolution — they've been doing it for over 25 years. If your situation involves both MCA debt and California Franchise Tax Board (FTB) or IRS obligations, CuraDebt can handle the tax side while a firm like Delancey Street handles the MCA fight. They don't challenge COJs, raise usury defenses, or file legal motions against MCA funders.
Let's cut to it. MCA defense is about one thing — stopping funders from destroying the business you built. They use confessions of judgment, UCC Article 9 liens, personal guarantee enforcement, and aggressive daily ACH withdrawals. For Los Angeles business owners, the problem is compounded by the city's high operating costs — commercial rents, labor costs under California's $16/hour minimum wage, and regulatory compliance expenses — which make daily MCA debits especially devastating to cash flow.
LA's economy is dominated by industries that are prime MCA targets, as tracked by the SBA Los Angeles District Office: restaurants and hospitality, entertainment and production services, retail, construction, and professional services. These businesses have strong daily revenue but thin margins — exactly what MCA funders exploit. When a funder pulls 15–25% of daily revenue through ACH debits, an LA restaurant or retail store can go from profitable to insolvent within weeks.
The MCA agreement you signed is written entirely in the funder's favor and almost certainly designates New York as the governing jurisdiction. That's why you need an attorney who knows both New York MCA law — usury challenges, COJ procedures — and California's own borrower protections: SB 1235 disclosure requirements, the state constitution's usury cap, and California Code of Civil Procedure provisions governing COJ enforcement.
Here's what happens — and it happens fast. The moment your LA business misses a merchant cash advance payment, the funder starts collection. MCA default is governed by Uniform Commercial Code (UCC) Article 9 provisions, and many funders use confessions of judgment to obtain judgments without notice. Good news first: the 2019 CPLR §3218 amendment banned COJ enforcement against out-of-state defendants in New York courts. Since your business is in California, any COJ filed against you in New York after August 2019 is voidable.
But funders adapt. They pursue restraining notices through domesticated judgments, file UCC-1 liens with the California Secretary of State, and use aggressive ACH withdrawal strategies to collect before you can respond. The consequences for LA businesses are immediate: frozen accounts at major banks, liens that block new financing, revenue diversion that can shut down operations. An experienced MCA defense attorney can challenge these actions, negotiate settlements, and use both New York usury law and California's borrower protections.
Good news first: as a Los Angeles business owner, you have a significant legal advantage. New York Senate Bill S6395, signed in August 2019, banned COJ filings against out-of-state defendants in New York courts. Any COJ filed against your LA business in New York after that date is voidable. Period.
Strategy 1: Challenge the COJ as Voidable. Your attorney files an Order to Show Cause to vacate the judgment as a matter of law. And California Code of Civil Procedure §1132–1134 imposes its own requirements for COJ enforcement within the state — giving you a secondary defense if the funder tries to domesticate a New York judgment in California courts.
Strategy 2: Negotiate Post-Default. Funders prefer repayment over cross-jurisdictional litigation. The cost of pursuing an LA business owner through both New York and California courts is significant — and funders know that enforcing judgments across state lines adds months of delay and legal expense. Offer a lump-sum settlement (30–50% of the balance). Funders often accept because the alternative is a costly multi-state collection fight.
You took a second MCA to pay the first. Then maybe a third. Now the daily payments eat 30% of your revenue — and you can't make payroll. This is increasingly common among Los Angeles businesses — particularly restaurants on the Westside, retail shops in the Fashion District, construction companies in the Valley, and entertainment services firms across the city. Under UCC § 9-607, each funder has filed UCC-1 liens on your receivables with the California Secretary of State, creating a lien stack that blocks all new financing.
Strategy 1: Consolidate via Ch. 11 or California Law. Chapter 11 filed in the Central District of California can pause all MCA collections and reclassify MCAs as unsecured debt. California's SB 1235 requires commercial financing providers to disclose APR equivalents, total cost of financing, and payment amounts — if your funder failed to make these disclosures, that strengthens your defense and may give you grounds to void the contract.
Strategy 2: Use Your Cash Flow Reality as a Weapon. Here's what nobody tells you: funders assume you're lying about your finances. Every single time. Provide them with 6 months of bank statements showing unsustainable withdrawals. For LA businesses facing some of the highest commercial rents and labor costs in the country, showing that daily MCA debits make continued operations impossible is a powerful negotiating tool. Funders would rather settle for 40 cents on the dollar than risk getting nothing.
The best MCA defense firms have relationships with the New York-based funders who dominate the LA market. They know which funders will settle quickly and which will fight — and they adjust strategy accordingly.
Let's talk numbers. MCA contracts often mask APRs exceeding 100% — sometimes 200% or more. While your contract likely designates New York law, California gives you additional tools. The California Constitution (Article XV) caps interest at 10% for non-exempt lenders, and California's Finance Lenders Law requires licensing for entities making commercial loans. MCA funders that aren't properly licensed in California may be subject to these caps. The NY Attorney General's $1.065 billion judgment against Yellowstone Capital proved that MCA contracts can be voided at scale when the underlying economics constitute usury.
Strategy 1: Usury as a Defense. Do the math. A $50K advance at a 1.4 factor rate costs $70K over 6 months — approximately 150% APR. Under New York's criminal usury cap of 25%, the contract is void. Under California's 10% cap for non-exempt lenders, it may be doubly void. Discovery is key: subpoena the funder's underwriting docs and California licensing records. If they used credit scores or fixed repayment terms and lack proper California licensing, courts may deem it a usurious loan.
Strategy 2: SB 1235 Disclosure Violations. California SB 1235, effective December 2022, requires commercial financing providers to disclose the total dollar cost, APR, payment amounts, and other terms in a standardized format. If your MCA funder failed to provide these disclosures, an attorney can use that violation as ammunition in settlement negotiations or as the basis for a state regulatory complaint with the California DFPI (Department of Financial Protection and Innovation).
Here's why this matters: most MCA funders sit in New York. Your contract almost certainly designates New York courts as the governing jurisdiction. That means an LA business owner in Santa Monica, Downtown, or the Valley is fighting under New York legal rules.
Here's the thing — this actually works in your favor. New York's dual usury framework caps civil interest at 16% annually, and 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. As an out-of-state borrower, you also benefit from the 2019 CPLR §3218 reform banning COJ enforcement against California businesses in New York courts.
California's own regulatory framework gives you a second layer of defense. The CFPB has classified merchant cash advances as "credit" under the Equal Credit Opportunity Act — another signal that these products are functionally loans regardless of how the contract labels them. That gives MCA defense attorneys one more argument in their arsenal. California's Department of Financial Protection and Innovation (DFPI) has been increasingly active in regulating commercial financing providers. The best MCA defense attorneys use both New York and California law to build the strongest case for LA business owners.
Three questions. That's all you need to ask.
1. Do they actually do MCA defense? Not consumer debt. Not medical debt. MCA debt. Ask how many COJs they've challenged, how many usury defenses they've raised under New York law, whether they understand California SB 1235 disclosure requirements, and what their average settlement percentage is on MCA-specific obligations. If they can't answer with specifics, keep looking.
2. Are real attorneys involved? Settlement negotiation alone is not MCA defense. You need attorneys who file motions to vacate COJs, challenge UCC liens filed with the California Secretary of State, subpoena funder underwriting documents for usury discovery, and draft enforceable settlement agreements. Ask whether attorneys are directly involved in every case or only brought in for escalations.
3. What's the fee structure? 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 — that's prohibited by FTC guidelines. Walk away. Single MCA cases resolve in 2–8 weeks. Stacked MCAs with multiple funders, expect 3–6 months.
Your search is over. Of these three firms, only Delancey Street does real, attorney-coordinated MCA defense — COJ challenges, usury defenses, UCC lien disputes. Here's how they stack up for LA business owners in 2026.
The only firm on this list that does real MCA defense: COJ challenges, usury defenses under both New York and California law, UCC lien disputes, and emergency motions to unfreeze bank accounts — all coordinated through a nationwide network of licensed attorneys. Over $100M settled. No upfront fees. Serving LA business owners across all neighborhoods. This is what they do.
Not an MCA defense specialist — and they'll tell you that straight up. Handles general unsecured business debt — credit cards, vendor accounts, lines of credit. No COJ challenges, no usury defenses, no legal motions. Solid option for traditional unsecured debt if that's your situation.
Not an MCA defense specialist either. CuraDebt handles business debt and IRS/state tax resolution — they've been doing it for over 25 years. If your LA business also has California FTB or IRS tax obligations, they can handle that side while a firm like Delancey Street handles the MCA fight.
We get it. COJ filed against you. Bank account frozen. Daily ACH debits destroying your cash flow. This is what we do. Delancey Street's attorney network fights MCA funders with usury defenses under New York and California law, 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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