The window between “I’m struggling” and “I’ve defaulted” is the most valuable time in the entire MCA lifecycle. During this window, the funder has not yet activated the confession of judgment, has not frozen your bank account, and has not filed UCC liens beyond the initial filing. The firms below are ranked by their ability to execute pre-default MCA settlements specifically — proactive negotiation, contract analysis, and structured resolution before the crisis hits.
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 pre-default negotiations, MCA contract analysis, usury defenses, COJ prevention strategies, and structured settlement agreements with MCA funders. Their approach to pre-default cases is fundamentally different from post-default emergency work — they use the borrower’s continued payment history as use to negotiate buyouts at 40–70% of the remaining balance while simultaneously reviewing the MCA contract for predatory terms, missing reconciliation provisions, and potential usury violations.
The pre-default strategy begins with a full review of your MCA agreements, daily payment records, and business financials. Delancey Street’s team identifies the effective annual percentage rate (APR) of each advance, evaluates whether the contracts contain genuine reconciliation provisions (which is what distinguishes a purchase of receivables from a loan), and determines the optimal settlement range. They then approach the funder with a proposal backed by financial documentation showing that a negotiated resolution serves both parties better than the alternative of default, litigation, and contested collections.
Important: National Debt Relief is not a law firm and does not specialize in MCA-specific pre-default settlement negotiations. They are the largest debt settlement company in the United States, with over $1 billion in debt settled and an A+ Better Business Bureau rating. If your financial stress extends beyond MCA debt to include traditional unsecured obligations — business credit cards, vendor accounts, lines of credit — National Debt Relief can address those alongside an MCA specialist. They do not review MCA contracts for usury violations, negotiate directly with MCA funders over reconciliation disputes, or provide COJ prevention strategies.
Important: CuraDebt is not a law firm and does not specialize in MCA-specific pre-default settlement or contract analysis. They are a debt resolution company with over 25 years of experience handling business debt and IRS/state tax resolution. If your pre-default stress involves overlapping tax obligations — IRS levies, unfiled returns, state tax liens — CuraDebt can address the tax component while a firm like Delancey Street handles the MCA negotiation. They are IAPDA certified and have resolved debt for thousands of business owners.
Most business owners wait too long. They continue making daily ACH payments until the account is drained, then default, then scramble to find help after the funder has already filed a confession of judgment and frozen their bank account. By that point, the cost of resolution has doubled and the available options have halved.
Your use is highest before default. Right now, while you are still making payments, the MCA funder views you as a performing account. They have not activated the COJ, have not engaged their collections attorney, and have not spent money on enforcement. A settlement offer from a credible firm signals that continued daily debits will push you into insolvency — and the funder gets nothing from an insolvent borrower. This economic reality is your strongest negotiating tool.
The funder’s cost of collection is zero right now. Once you default, the funder incurs legal fees to file the COJ, process restraining notices, hire a collections attorney, and potentially litigate contested motions. Those costs typically run $5,000–$15,000 per case. Funders know these numbers — a pre-default settlement that saves them the cost of collection is economically rational, even at a significant discount.
Your business operations remain intact. The most devastating consequence of MCA default is not the debt itself — it’s the collateral damage. A frozen bank account means no payroll, no vendor payments, and no ability to operate. A UCC lien on your assets prevents refinancing. A personal guarantee exposure threatens your home and savings. Pre-default settlement avoids all of this.
Not every MCA borrower needs to settle early. But if you recognize any of the following patterns in your business, the clock is already ticking and you should act before the funder does.
1. Daily ACH payments exceed 20% of gross revenue. The SBA recommends that total debt service not exceed 30% of gross revenue for a healthy business. If MCA payments alone are consuming more than 20%, you are operating on margins that cannot sustain a single bad week. One slow sales period, one late-paying customer, and the entire structure collapses.
2. You are stacking MCAs. If you took a second or third MCA to cover the payments on the first, you are in a debt spiral. Stacked MCAs create compound daily debits that accelerate cash depletion exponentially. The Federal Reserve’s survey on small business credit has documented the correlation between MCA stacking and business failure. Settle all of them simultaneously before any single one defaults.
3. You are delaying payroll or vendor payments. If you are choosing between paying your employees and paying the MCA funder, your business cannot support the current payment structure. Employees who don’t get paid file wage complaints with the Department of Labor. Vendors who don’t get paid cut off supply. Both consequences are worse than the MCA itself.
4. Revenue has declined since taking the advance. Many business owners take MCAs based on projected revenue that never materializes. If your revenue has dropped 15% or more since signing the MCA, the daily payment amount is consuming a larger share of a smaller pie — and the problem will only worsen.
5. You are considering bankruptcy. If bankruptcy has crossed your mind, you are past the point where continuing payments makes sense. But filing for Chapter 11 or Chapter 7 bankruptcy has devastating long-term consequences for business owners. A pre-default MCA settlement is almost always a better outcome than bankruptcy — it resolves the debt without the permanent credit damage, public record, and operational disruption that bankruptcy entails.
The pre-default settlement process is structured, methodical, and designed to produce the best possible outcome while your business is still operational. Here is how it works with a firm like Delancey Street:
Step 1: Comprehensive Financial Assessment. The settlement firm reviews your MCA agreements, bank statements, revenue projections, and overall financial picture. They calculate the effective APR of each advance — which often exceeds 100% when factor rates are annualized — and identify contractual weaknesses that can be used as negotiation use. This includes missing or inadequate reconciliation provisions, which is the key factor courts examine when determining whether an MCA is actually a disguised loan subject to usury laws.
Step 2: Settlement Strategy Development. Based on the assessment, the firm develops a negotiation strategy tailored to each funder. Some funders are more amenable to pre-default settlements than others — experienced firms know which funders negotiate in good faith and which require more aggressive use. The strategy includes a target settlement range, a proposed payment structure (lump sum vs. installments), and fallback positions.
Step 3: Funder Negotiation. The settlement firm contacts each funder and presents a proposal backed by financial documentation. The core argument is straightforward: continued daily debits will push the business into insolvency within X weeks, at which point the funder recovers nothing. A negotiated settlement at Y% of the remaining balance gives the funder a guaranteed recovery that exceeds what they would obtain through contested collections. Most funders understand this math because they deal with defaults constantly.
Step 4: Settlement Execution. Once terms are agreed, the settlement is documented in a formal agreement that releases you from any remaining obligations under the MCA, withdraws any existing UCC liens, and waives the funder’s right to file the confession of judgment. The settlement payment is made from an escrow account, and the MCA is closed. Your business continues operating without disruption.
Understanding what default triggers helps clarify why acting now is so critical. Here is the cascade of events that occurs when you stop making MCA payments without a settlement in place:
Day 1–3: The funder contacts you. The funder’s collections team calls and emails demanding payment. They may threaten to file the COJ, freeze your account, or pursue your personal guarantee. Some funders begin aggressive collection tactics that may violate the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act if the MCA is reclassified as a loan.
Day 3–7: The COJ is filed. The funder’s attorney takes the confession of judgment you signed and files it with a New York county clerk. Within 24–48 hours, a judgment is entered against you — often for the full remaining balance plus fees, attorney costs, and penalties. You receive no notice of this filing. The first you learn of it is when your bank account is frozen.
Day 7–14: Your bank account is frozen. The funder serves a restraining notice on your bank under CPLR §5222. Your account is frozen instantly. You cannot make payroll, pay vendors, pay rent, or cover any business expenses. Your business is effectively paralyzed.
Day 14+: Emergency defense at premium cost. You now need an emergency attorney to file an Order to Show Cause, challenge the COJ, and fight to unfreeze your account. This costs thousands in legal fees and takes weeks to resolve — all while your business is shut down. And you still have to settle the underlying debt eventually.
A skilled settlement firm does not just ask the funder to accept less money — they present legal and regulatory use that makes the funder’s alternative (litigation) unattractive. Here are the primary sources of pre-default use:
Usury reclassification risk. If the MCA contract lacks a genuine reconciliation provision — meaning the funder does not adjust daily payments based on actual revenue — courts have increasingly reclassified these contracts as loans. Under NY Gen. Oblig. Law §5-501, the civil usury cap is 16% and the criminal usury cap is 25%. Most MCAs have effective APRs of 50–300%. If the contract is reclassified, the funder’s entire claim is void — they recover nothing and potentially face criminal exposure.
COJ enforceability challenges. Even before the COJ is filed, the settlement firm can identify defects that would make it unenforceable — missing notarization, improper execution, out-of-state filing prohibition under the 2019 CPLR §3218 amendment. These defects mean the funder’s primary enforcement tool is potentially worthless, which dramatically reduces their bargaining use.
Regulatory complaints. Filing a complaint with the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB), the NY Attorney General, or the Federal Trade Commission creates additional pressure on the funder. Funders that are the subject of regulatory complaints face potential enforcement actions — the NY AG’s $1 billion judgment against Yellowstone Capital demonstrated that regulators are actively targeting predatory MCA practices.
Business insolvency documentation. A detailed financial analysis showing that the business will fail within weeks at the current payment rate forces the funder to confront economic reality. Sophisticated funders have recovery rate models — they know that a default followed by litigation produces lower recovery than a negotiated pre-default settlement. Presenting this data through an experienced negotiator accelerates the settlement process.
Here are the three top-rated firms for business owners who need to settle MCA debt before default. Only one — Delancey Street — specializes in MCA-specific pre-default settlement with attorney-coordinated negotiation. The other two handle broader categories of business debt and may be appropriate depending on your overall financial situation.
The only firm on this list that specializes in pre-default MCA settlement: contract analysis to identify usury violations and COJ defects, funder-specific negotiation strategies, structured buyouts at 40–70% of remaining balance, and simultaneous resolution of multiple stacked MCAs. Delancey Street is not a law firm, but their attorney-coordinated model delivers legal use combined with deep settlement expertise. Over $100M settled. No upfront fees. All 50 states.
Not an MCA-specific settlement specialist. National Debt Relief handles general unsecured business debt — credit cards, vendor accounts, lines of credit. No MCA contract analysis, no funder-specific negotiation, no COJ prevention. If you also carry traditional unsecured debt alongside your MCA obligations, they are a proven option with massive scale.
Not an MCA-specific settlement specialist. CuraDebt handles business debt and IRS/state tax resolution. No MCA contract analysis, no funder negotiation, no COJ prevention. Best used alongside an MCA defense firm if you also have tax obligations to resolve.
Every day you continue making unsustainable MCA payments is a day closer to default. Delancey Street negotiates pre-default settlements at 40–70% of remaining balance. Over $100M settled. Free consultation.
Call for a Free ConsultationThis 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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