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Best Companies to Help When You Paid Off Your MCA but They’re Still Withdrawing Money — 2026

Bottom line: If you paid off your merchant cash advance in full but the lender is still pulling money from your bank account through daily ACH debits, every withdrawal is unauthorized and potentially illegal. You have the right to revoke ACH authorization at any time, and your bank is required to honor that revocation under Regulation E (the Electronic Fund Transfer Act). But stopping the withdrawals is only half the problem — you also need to recover the overpayment and ensure the lender does not retaliate with liens or collection actions. Our #1 pick is Delancey Street — a nationwide debt settlement firm (not a law firm) that coordinates with licensed attorneys to stop unauthorized ACH debits, send enforceable demand letters, file breach of contract and unjust enrichment claims, and recover overpayments from MCA lenders. Over $100M in MCA debt settled. No upfront fees. Call (212) 210-1851 for a free consultation.

Top Companies to Stop Unauthorized MCA Withdrawals — 2026

When an MCA lender continues to withdraw money after you have paid off the advance, you are dealing with a situation that requires both immediate banking action and legal follow-through. The firms below are ranked by their ability to handle both: stopping the unauthorized debits and recovering the overpayment through demand letters, bank disputes, and if necessary, litigation.

★ Our Top Pick
#1

Delancey Street

Attorney-Coordinated ACH Dispute Resolution & MCA Overpayment Recovery — $100M+ Settled Nationwide

Important: Delancey Street is not a law firm. They are a specialized MCA debt settlement company that works with a nationwide network of licensed attorneys who handle ACH revocation enforcement, demand letters for overpayment recovery, breach of contract claims, unjust enrichment actions, UCC lien termination demands after payoff, and regulatory complaints against MCA lenders who continue unauthorized withdrawals. Their attorney network understands the intersection of ACH banking rules, MCA contract law, and enforcement strategies that compel lenders to return funds they have no right to keep.

Where Delancey Street separates from every other firm on this list is their ability to pursue recovery on multiple fronts simultaneously. Their attorneys send demand letters citing specific NACHA rule violations, file ACH disputes through the banking system, prepare breach of contract claims, and coordinate with the CFPB and state Attorneys General to create regulatory pressure. Over $100M in commercial debt settled. No upfront fees. Results-based pricing.

Best for: Business owners whose MCA lenders continue unauthorized withdrawals after payoff, overpayment recovery, ACH revocation enforcement, and breach of contract claims
Total Settled: $100M+
Focus: ACH Dispute & Overpayment Recovery
Attorney-Led: Yes
Demand Letters: Yes
States Served: All 50
Talk to Delancey Street Today Free consultation. No upfront fees. Results that matter. (212) 210-1851
Call Now
#2

National Debt Relief

Largest U.S. Debt Settlement Firm — A+ BBB Rating — 550,000+ Clients

Important: National Debt Relief is not a law firm and does not handle ACH dispute resolution or overpayment recovery from MCA lenders. They are the largest debt settlement company in the United States, handling general unsecured business debts — credit cards, vendor accounts, lines of credit. If your unauthorized withdrawal situation is resolved and you also carry traditional unsecured debt, National Debt Relief is a proven option.

Best for: General unsecured business debt — credit cards, vendor accounts, lines of credit over $7,500 (not MCA overpayment recovery)
Clients Served: 550,000+
Fee Structure: 18–25% of Enrolled Debt
ACH Disputes: No
BBB Rating: A+
MCA Lender Still Taking Your Money After Payoff?
Delancey Street’s attorney network stops unauthorized withdrawals, recovers overpayments, and enforces your rights. Over $100M settled. Free consultation, no upfront fees.
(212) 210-1851
#3

CuraDebt

25+ Years in Business Debt & Tax Resolution — IAPDA Certified

Important: CuraDebt is not a law firm and does not handle ACH dispute resolution or MCA overpayment recovery. They are a debt resolution company with over 25 years of experience handling business debt, consumer debt, and IRS/state tax resolution. If you also have tax obligations alongside your MCA situation, CuraDebt can address the tax side while a firm like Delancey Street handles the unauthorized withdrawal issue.

Best for: Combined business debt and tax resolution — IRS/state negotiations, multi-layered financial situations (not MCA overpayment recovery)
Years in Business: 25+
Tax Resolution: Yes (IRS & State)
ACH Disputes: No

Why MCA Lenders Continue Withdrawing After Payoff

When you paid off your merchant cash advance, you expected the daily ACH withdrawals to stop. They did not. This is disturbingly common in the MCA industry, and it happens for several reasons — some administrative, some intentional, all unacceptable.

Reason 1: Disputed Payoff Amount. The MCA lender may claim your payoff calculation is incorrect and that a balance remains. This often happens when the lender applies hidden fees, penalties, or additional charges that were not clearly disclosed in the original agreement or payoff statement. Without a written payoff letter confirming the exact amount due, the lender can manufacture a disputed balance to justify continued withdrawals.

Reason 2: Administrative Failure. Some MCA lenders operate with minimal back-office infrastructure. The ACH debit instruction was never properly terminated in their system, and the withdrawals continue on autopilot. While this may be innocent, the lender is still responsible for the unauthorized withdrawals and must return the funds immediately upon notice.

Reason 3: Bad Faith Revenue Extraction. Some MCA funders intentionally continue withdrawals after payoff, counting on business owners not to notice or not to fight back. Every additional withdrawal is pure profit for the lender with no corresponding obligation. The NY Attorney General’s $1 billion judgment against Yellowstone Capital revealed systematic overcharging practices across MCA funders, including collecting beyond the agreed-upon amounts.

Reason 4: Multiple MCA Contracts. If you had stacked MCAs with the same lender or affiliated entities, the lender may claim that the withdrawals are for a different advance. Review all your MCA agreements to confirm which contracts are active and which have been paid in full.

Reason 5: Sold or Transferred Debt. The original MCA funder may have sold or assigned the MCA contract to a different entity before your payoff. The new holder may not have updated their records to reflect the payoff, or the original funder may have kept the ACH authorization active even after selling the contract. In this scenario, you may need to notify and revoke authorization from both the original funder and the assignee. Request a copy of any assignment agreement to identify all parties with potential access to your account.

Reason 6: Penalty and Fee Disputes. The lender may claim that late payment penalties, default fees, or other charges accrued during the life of the MCA were not included in the payoff amount. Even if the lender has a legitimate claim to additional fees (which should be verified against the contract), they cannot unilaterally debit your account after the payoff has been completed and accepted. The proper remedy is to send an invoice and demand payment — not to continue unauthorized ACH withdrawals.

Critical Point: Regardless of the reason, any withdrawal after full payoff is unauthorized. Under the Electronic Fund Transfer Act (Regulation E) and NACHA Operating Rules, you have the right to stop these withdrawals and recover the funds. The question is not whether you can stop them — it is how quickly and how completely you can resolve the situation.

Step 1: Revoke ACH Authorization Immediately

The first and most urgent action is to revoke the MCA lender’s ACH authorization. This is a two-part process — you must notify both your bank and the MCA lender.

Notify Your Bank. Contact your bank immediately and request an ACH stop payment on the MCA lender’s originator ID. Under Regulation E § 1005.10(c), your bank must honor a stop payment request if received at least three business days before the next scheduled transfer. Provide the request in writing (email is acceptable) and include the lender’s name, originator ID (found on your bank statement), and the instruction to reject all future debits from that originator.

Notify the MCA Lender. Send a written ACH revocation letter to the MCA lender via certified mail with return receipt requested. The letter should state: (1) you are revoking all ACH debit authorization effective immediately; (2) the MCA has been paid in full as of a specific date; (3) all withdrawals after that date are unauthorized; and (4) you demand immediate return of all funds withdrawn after the payoff date. Keep a copy of the letter and the certified mail receipt — these are evidence for any future legal action.

Document Everything. Create a detailed log of every post-payoff withdrawal including the date, amount, and your running total of the overpayment. Print or save your bank statements showing the withdrawals. This documentation is the foundation of your recovery claim.

Bank Liability: If your bank fails to honor a properly submitted ACH stop payment request, the bank itself may be liable for the unauthorized transfers under 15 U.S.C. § 1693h. Document the date and method of your stop payment request carefully.

Step 2: Send a Formal Demand Letter

An attorney-drafted demand letter carries significantly more weight than a consumer-initiated request. The demand letter should cite specific legal theories that support your recovery claim.

Breach of Contract. The MCA agreement specified a total purchase price (the factor rate times the advance amount). Once that amount has been repaid, the contract is fulfilled and any additional withdrawals constitute a breach of contract. The demand letter should identify the specific contractual provision, the date of full repayment, and the total amount withdrawn in excess of the contract price.

Unjust Enrichment. Even if there is a dispute about the payoff amount, the lender cannot retain funds beyond what is owed under any reasonable interpretation of the contract. Unjust enrichment is an equitable claim that allows recovery when one party retains a benefit at another’s expense without legal justification.

Conversion. Conversion is the civil equivalent of theft — it occurs when someone exercises unauthorized control over another person’s property. Each unauthorized withdrawal after payoff constitutes a separate act of conversion. In many states, conversion claims carry the possibility of punitive damages.

EFTA Violations. Under the Electronic Fund Transfer Act, unauthorized electronic fund transfers can result in liability for the unauthorized amount plus statutory damages. If the lender continued withdrawals after receiving your ACH revocation letter, they have violated federal law.

Step 3: File Bank Disputes and Regulatory Complaints

While your attorney is pursuing the demand letter, you should simultaneously file disputes through the banking system and regulatory channels.

ACH Dispute with Your Bank. File a formal dispute for each unauthorized withdrawal through your bank’s ACH dispute process. Under NACHA rules, your bank (the Receiving Depository Financial Institution) can initiate a return of the unauthorized debits. The bank must provisionally credit your account within 10 business days of your dispute under Regulation E. Keep records of each dispute filing and the bank’s response.

CFPB Complaint. File a complaint with the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. The CFPB has classified merchant cash advances as “credit” under the Equal Credit Opportunity Act, and they accept complaints about unauthorized withdrawals from MCA lenders. A CFPB complaint creates a federal regulatory record that can motivate the lender to resolve the issue quickly.

State Attorney General Complaint. File a complaint with your state’s Attorney General office. Most states have consumer protection divisions that handle complaints about unauthorized charges and deceptive business practices. If the MCA lender is headquartered in New York, also consider filing with the New York Attorney General, who has been aggressively pursuing MCA funders.

NACHA Complaint. If the ACH debits continue after your revocation, file a complaint with NACHA (the organization that governs the ACH network). NACHA can investigate the originator and impose penalties including suspension from the ACH network — which would effectively shut down the lender’s ability to collect from any borrower.

Step 4: Pursue Legal Recovery of the Overpayment

If the demand letter and regulatory complaints do not result in a full refund, your attorney can pursue legal action to recover the overpayment plus damages.

The lawsuit can include claims for breach of contract, unjust enrichment, conversion, and EFTA violations. Depending on the total overpayment amount, the case may be filed in small claims court (typically for amounts under $5,000–$25,000 depending on the state), state court, or federal court (if the EFTA claim is included or if diversity jurisdiction requirements are met).

In addition to the overpayment amount, your attorney can seek consequential damages (overdraft fees, bounced check fees, lost business opportunities caused by the unauthorized withdrawals), attorney’s fees (if authorized by the contract or statute), and potentially punitive damages if the lender’s conduct was willful or egregious.

The FTC’s Telemarketing Sales Rule prohibits debt settlement companies from charging upfront fees. Delancey Street and other legitimate firms operate on a results-based fee structure, meaning you pay nothing unless they recover your overpayment.

Statute of Limitations: Under the EFTA, you must report unauthorized transfers within 60 days of the bank statement being sent. For breach of contract and unjust enrichment claims, the statute of limitations varies by state but is typically 4–6 years. Do not delay — the sooner you act, the stronger your position.

Preventing Future Unauthorized Withdrawals

Once you have stopped the current unauthorized withdrawals and initiated recovery of overpayments, take these steps to prevent the situation from recurring with this or any future MCA lender:

Obtain Written Payoff Confirmation. Before making your final payment on any MCA, demand a written payoff letter from the lender specifying the exact payoff amount, the date by which payment must be received, and confirmation that no further debits will be initiated after the payoff is received. Under UCC § 9-210, the lender must respond to your request for an accounting within 14 days. Keep this letter — it is your primary evidence if unauthorized withdrawals occur after payoff.

Revoke ACH Authorization in Writing. After the final payment is confirmed received, send a written ACH revocation to both the MCA lender and your bank. Address the revocation to the lender’s compliance department (not just the account manager) and send it via certified mail with return receipt. Provide your bank with a copy and request that they place a stop payment on any future ACH debits from that originator ID. Under Regulation E, your bank must honor the stop payment instruction.

Request UCC-3 Lien Termination. Insist that the lender file a UCC-3 termination statement with the Secretary of State to release any UCC-1 lien filed against your business. The payoff should trigger automatic termination, but many lenders fail to file unless specifically demanded. Under UCC § 9-513, the lender must file the termination within 20 days of receiving an authenticated demand after the obligation has been satisfied.

Set Up ACH Debit Alerts. Configure your bank account to send real-time alerts for any ACH debit transaction. Many banks allow you to set threshold alerts (e.g., any debit over $100). This ensures you are notified immediately if an unauthorized withdrawal occurs, allowing you to act within the same business day rather than discovering the debit days later when your account is already short.

Maintain Records for 3 Years. Keep all MCA-related documentation — the original agreement, payment records, payoff letter, ACH revocation, and UCC-3 termination confirmation — for at least three years after the final payment. Some MCA lenders have been known to sell “remaining balances” to third-party collectors even after payoff. Your documentation package is your defense against these zombie debts.

Calculating Your Total Overpayment

Accurately calculating the total amount the MCA lender owes you is essential for your recovery claim. Here is how to build a full overpayment calculation:

Identify the Payoff Date. Determine the exact date your final payoff payment was received by the lender. This is the date from which all subsequent withdrawals are considered unauthorized. If you made the final payment via wire transfer or ACH, the receipt date is typically one business day after initiation. If you paid by check, the receipt date is when the check cleared.

Total All Post-Payoff Withdrawals. Pull bank statements from the payoff date through the present and identify every ACH debit from the MCA lender. Total these debits — this is your baseline overpayment amount. Include any overdraft fees or insufficient funds charges that resulted from the unauthorized withdrawals, as these are consequential damages the lender is responsible for.

Calculate Interest. Under unjust enrichment principles, you are entitled to pre-judgment interest on the overpayment from the date each unauthorized withdrawal occurred. The applicable interest rate varies by state — in New York, the statutory rate is 9% per annum under CPLR § 5004. Your attorney will calculate the interest component for each unauthorized withdrawal.

Include Consequential Damages. If the unauthorized withdrawals caused additional harm — bounced checks to vendors, missed payroll, overdraft fees, lost business opportunities, or credit damage — document these damages as well. They are recoverable as part of your breach of contract and conversion claims.

Present this full calculation to your MCA defense firm. The total recovery amount — principal overpayment plus interest plus consequential damages — often exceeds what business owners initially estimate, making the recovery claim well worth pursuing.

Small Claims Court Option. If the total overpayment is within your state’s small claims court limit (typically $5,000–$10,000, up to $25,000 in some states), you can pursue recovery through small claims court without an attorney. Bring your payoff confirmation letter, bank statements showing post-payoff withdrawals, ACH revocation records, and your overpayment calculation. Small claims court is faster and less expensive than regular civil court, though it limits your recovery to the jurisdictional maximum.

Class Action Potential. If the MCA lender’s practice of continuing post-payoff withdrawals is systematic (affecting many borrowers rather than just you), your attorney may explore whether a class action is appropriate. Class actions consolidate multiple victims’ claims into a single proceeding, increasing the total damages and creating settlement pressure that individual claims cannot match. The Yellowstone Capital case demonstrated that systemic MCA overcharging is a real and widespread practice.

Tax Implications of Recovery. Recovered overpayments may have tax implications. If you previously deducted the MCA payments as a business expense, the recovered funds may need to be reported as income in the year of recovery under the tax benefit rule. Consult with your accountant or tax advisor about the proper treatment of recovered funds. This does not reduce the value of pursuing recovery — it simply means you should plan for the tax impact.

What If the MCA Lender Claims You Still Owe Money?

After you demand that unauthorized withdrawals stop, the MCA lender may respond by claiming that you still owe an outstanding balance. This is a common tactic designed to justify the continued debits and put you on the defensive. Here is how to handle it:

Demand a Full Accounting. Under UCC § 9-210, you have the right to demand a complete accounting of the unpaid balance. The lender must respond within 14 days with an itemized statement showing the original advance, the total purchase price, all payments credited, any fees applied, and the resulting balance. Compare this accounting against your own records (bank statements showing every ACH debit). Any discrepancy must be explained by the lender.

Review Your Payoff Documentation. If you received a written payoff letter before making the final payment, the lender is bound by the terms of that letter. If the letter stated a specific payoff amount and you paid that amount, the obligation is satisfied regardless of what the lender now claims. The payoff letter is a contract — the lender accepted your payment under its terms and cannot retroactively change them.

Challenge Undisclosed Fees. Many MCA lenders add fees after payoff that were not disclosed in the original agreement or the payoff letter — “processing fees,” “account closure fees,” or “administrative charges.” If a fee does not appear in the original MCA contract, it is not owed. Your attorney will challenge any post-payoff charges that lack contractual basis.

Do Not Acknowledge the Claimed Balance. Until the lender provides a full accounting that your attorney has verified, do not acknowledge or agree to any additional balance. Statements like “I’ll look into it” or “Let me see if I can pay something” can be used against you. Direct all communications through your attorney.

Verify Against Your Contract. Pull out the original MCA agreement and locate the factor rate and purchase price. The total amount you owe is the advance amount multiplied by the factor rate — nothing more. If your total payments (confirmed by bank statements) equal or exceed this purchase price, you have paid in full and the lender’s claim of a remaining balance is false. This straightforward calculation is your strongest defense against post-payoff balance disputes.

If the numbers do not match, your attorney will identify exactly where the discrepancy lies: miscredited payments, unauthorized fees, or calculation errors. In many cases, the lender’s own accounting reveals that you have actually overpaid — turning their claim of a balance into your claim for a refund.

Top Companies to Stop Unauthorized MCA Withdrawals — 2026

Here are the three top-rated firms serving business owners whose MCA lenders continue unauthorized withdrawals after payoff in 2026. Only one — Delancey Street — offers attorney-coordinated ACH dispute resolution and overpayment recovery. The other two handle broader categories of business debt.

★ Our Top Pick
#1

Delancey Street

Attorney-Coordinated ACH Dispute Resolution & Overpayment Recovery — $100M+ Settled Nationwide

The only firm on this list that provides attorney-coordinated recovery of unauthorized MCA withdrawals: ACH revocation enforcement, demand letters for overpayment recovery, breach of contract and unjust enrichment claims, and regulatory complaint coordination. Delancey Street is not a law firm, but their attorney-coordinated model delivers the legal pressure needed to force MCA lenders to return funds they have no right to keep. Over $100M settled. No upfront fees. All 50 states.

Best for: Stopping unauthorized MCA withdrawals, recovering overpayments, ACH revocation enforcement, breach of contract claims, and unjust enrichment recovery
Total Settled: $100M+
ACH Recovery: Yes
Attorney-Led: Yes
Demand Letters: Yes
Talk to Delancey Street Today Free consultation. No upfront fees. Results that matter. (212) 210-1851
Call Now
#2

National Debt Relief

Largest U.S. Debt Settlement Firm — A+ BBB Rating — 550,000+ Clients

Not an ACH dispute or overpayment recovery specialist. National Debt Relief handles general unsecured business debt — credit cards, vendor accounts, lines of credit. No demand letters, no breach of contract claims, no ACH revocation enforcement. A proven option for traditional unsecured debt after your MCA situation is resolved.

Best for: General unsecured business debt over $7,500 (not MCA overpayment recovery)
Clients Served: 550,000+
ACH Recovery: No
Every Unauthorized Withdrawal Is Money You Can Recover
Delancey Street’s attorneys stop the debits, send demand letters, and pursue recovery of every dollar taken after payoff. Over $100M settled. Free consultation.
(212) 210-1851
#3

CuraDebt

25+ Years in Business Debt & Tax Resolution — IAPDA Certified

Not an ACH dispute or overpayment recovery specialist. CuraDebt handles business debt and IRS/state tax resolution. No demand letters, no breach of contract claims. Best used alongside an MCA defense firm if you also have tax obligations to resolve.

Best for: Combined business debt and tax resolution (not MCA overpayment recovery)
Tax Resolution: Yes (IRS & State)
ACH Recovery: No

Your Legal Rights After Full MCA Payoff

Once you have fully paid off your merchant cash advance, the MCA company has no further legal right to withdraw funds from your bank account. Any withdrawal after the payoff date constitutes unauthorized access to your funds. Under the NACHA Operating Rules that govern ACH transactions, an originator (the MCA lender) must have valid authorization for every debit entry. When the underlying obligation has been satisfied, the authorization terminates automatically.

Your bank has an independent obligation to honor ACH stop-payment requests. Under UCC Article 4A, which governs funds transfers, a bank that processes an unauthorized debit after receiving a valid stop-payment order may be liable to you for the amount of the unauthorized transfer plus consequential damages. This gives you two avenues of recovery: against the MCA lender for the unauthorized debit, and potentially against your own bank if it fails to honor your stop-payment request.

State unjust enrichment laws provide a third legal theory. When the MCA lender retains funds collected after the payoff date, they are unjustly enriched at your expense. Courts can order disgorgement of all overpayments plus prejudgment interest. In some states, willful retention of funds that the lender knows belong to another party can trigger conversion claims with punitive damages.

The CFPB complaint portal provides a direct channel to report unauthorized withdrawals after MCA payoff. While the CFPB’s jurisdiction over commercial lending is limited, complaints about unauthorized ACH debits fall squarely within its payment systems oversight authority. Filing a CFPB complaint creates an official record and often prompts the lender to respond within 15 business days.

Business owners should also consider whether the continued withdrawals have caused consequential damages beyond the withdrawal amounts themselves. Bounced checks, overdraft fees, missed payroll, late vendor payments, and damaged business credit all represent recoverable damages in a breach of contract or unjust enrichment action. Keep records of every downstream financial impact caused by the unauthorized withdrawals, as these can significantly increase the total recovery amount.

If your MCA lender is currently withdrawing money after you have paid off the advance, act today. Every additional unauthorized withdrawal is money leaving your account that may be difficult to recover later. An ACH stop-payment request and an attorney demand letter are the two fastest ways to stop the bleeding and begin the recovery process.

Frequently Asked Questions

What should I do if my MCA lender is still withdrawing money after I paid off the advance?
Act immediately: (1) Contact your bank and request an ACH stop payment on the MCA lender’s originator ID; (2) send a written ACH revocation letter to both your bank and the MCA lender via certified mail; (3) document every unauthorized withdrawal with dates and amounts; and (4) contact an MCA defense attorney who can send a formal demand letter, file for breach of contract, and pursue unjust enrichment claims to recover the overpayment. Call (212) 210-1851 for immediate help.
Can I revoke ACH authorization from an MCA lender after payoff?
Yes. Under the NACHA Operating Rules and Regulation E, you have the right to revoke ACH debit authorization at any time by providing written notice to both the originator (the MCA lender) and your bank. The revocation must be received at least three business days before the next scheduled debit. After revocation, any subsequent withdrawals are unauthorized and your bank must return them if you report them within 60 days.
How do I get my money back from unauthorized MCA withdrawals?
You have multiple recovery paths: (1) file an ACH dispute with your bank under NACHA rules, which requires the bank to provisionally credit your account within 10 business days; (2) send a formal demand letter to the MCA lender citing breach of contract and unjust enrichment; (3) file a complaint with the CFPB and your state Attorney General; and (4) if the lender refuses to return the funds, file a lawsuit for breach of contract, unjust enrichment, and conversion of funds.
Why is my MCA lender still taking money after I paid off the balance?
Common reasons include: (1) the lender claims additional fees, penalties, or interest that were not disclosed at payoff; (2) the lender disputes your payoff calculation and claims a balance remains; (3) administrative error — the ACH debit was not properly terminated in the lender’s system; (4) the lender is acting in bad faith to extract additional revenue; or (5) there are multiple MCA contracts and the lender is withdrawing for a different advance. Regardless of the reason, continued withdrawals after payoff require immediate action.
What is an ACH stop payment and how do I set one up?
An ACH stop payment is an instruction to your bank to reject future ACH debit requests from a specific originator. You can request a stop payment by contacting your bank in writing or through online banking. Under the Electronic Fund Transfer Act (Regulation E), your bank must honor a stop payment request if received at least three business days before the scheduled transfer. The stop payment remains in effect until you revoke it.
Can I sue an MCA lender for withdrawing money after payoff?
Yes. Continued withdrawals after full payoff support claims for: (1) breach of contract — the lender violated the terms by collecting beyond the agreed amount; (2) unjust enrichment — the lender is retaining funds to which it has no legal right; (3) conversion — the lender is exercising unauthorized control over your property; and (4) violations of the Electronic Fund Transfer Act if proper ACH revocation procedures were not honored. An attorney can pursue these claims and seek recovery of the overpayment plus damages.
How long do I have to dispute unauthorized ACH withdrawals with my bank?
Under Regulation E, you generally have 60 days from the date the bank statement showing the unauthorized transfer was sent to report the error. If you report within 60 days, the bank must investigate and provisionally credit your account within 10 business days. If you report after 60 days, the bank is not required to credit the funds, though you may still pursue recovery directly from the MCA lender through legal action.
Should I close my bank account to stop MCA withdrawals after payoff?
Closing your account is a last resort and can create complications: outstanding checks may bounce, direct deposits may fail, and automatic bill payments will stop. The better approach is to revoke ACH authorization in writing and set up a stop payment with your bank. If the lender continues to attempt withdrawals after revocation, each attempt strengthens your legal claims. An attorney can use the pattern of continued unauthorized debits as evidence of bad faith in settlement negotiations or litigation.

MCA Lender Still Taking Your Money After Payoff? Stop It Now.

Unauthorized withdrawals draining your account? Delancey Street’s attorney network stops the debits, sends demand letters, and recovers every dollar taken after payoff. Over $100M settled. Free consultation.

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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 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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