Trucking company owners searching for MCA debt relief need firms that understand the unique financial pressures of the freight industry — volatile fuel costs, delayed shipper payments, FMCSA compliance requirements, equipment maintenance cycles, and the critical importance of keeping trucks on the road. A frozen bank account that would be painful for most businesses can ground an entire fleet overnight. Here are the three best MCA settlement options for trucking companies in 2026.
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 COJ challenges, usury defenses, UCC lien disputes, funder negotiations, and settlement execution on behalf of business owners across all 50 states. Their attorney network understands the trucking industry’s unique vulnerabilities — the Bureau of Transportation Statistics reports that trucking moves 72.6% of all U.S. freight by weight, yet small carriers operate on razor-thin margins of 3–7% that leave almost no room for aggressive MCA repayment schedules.
Delancey Street’s attorneys have handled hundreds of trucking MCA cases and understand how to use the industry’s financial realities against funders. They demonstrate to MCA funders that daily ACH debits exceeding 15% of revenue make the carrier insolvent — and an insolvent carrier with grounded trucks pays nothing. That pressure, combined with legal challenges to usury violations, COJ procedural defects, and overbroad UCC filings against fleet assets, consistently delivers settlements of 30–60% off the balance. Over $100M in commercial debt settled. No upfront fees. Results-based pricing.
Important: National Debt Relief is not a law firm and is not an MCA defense specialist. They are the largest debt settlement company in the United States, with over $1 billion in debt settled and 550,000+ clients served. For trucking companies whose debt is primarily traditional unsecured business debt — credit cards used for repairs, vendor accounts for parts suppliers, or business lines of credit — National Debt Relief is a proven option. But they do not challenge confessions of judgment, file usury defenses, or dispute UCC liens. If your fleet is facing active MCA collections with frozen accounts or daily ACH debits, you need a firm with MCA-specific attorney involvement.
Important: CuraDebt is not a law firm and is not an MCA defense specialist. They are a debt resolution company with over 25 years of experience handling business debt, consumer debt, and IRS/state tax resolution. Many trucking companies that fall behind on MCA payments also accumulate payroll tax liabilities and IFTA tax arrears. CuraDebt can address the tax side of your financial crisis 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.
The trucking industry is uniquely vulnerable to predatory merchant cash advance lending. According to the American Trucking Associations, the U.S. trucking industry generates over $940 billion in annual revenue and employs 8.4 million people in trucking-related jobs. Yet the average small carrier operates on profit margins of just 3–7%, and a single unexpected event — a major engine failure, a spike in diesel prices, or a slow freight season — can create an immediate cash crisis.
The fundamental problem is timing. Trucking companies deliver loads today but get paid 30–90 days later. Meanwhile, they must cover diesel fuel (which the U.S. Energy Information Administration tracks at volatile prices that can swing 30% in a quarter), driver wages, insurance premiums, truck maintenance, tolls, and compliance costs. This cash flow gap is the entry point for MCA funders.
Traditional banks understand the trucking industry’s volatility, which is why approximately 70% of small fleet loan applications are rejected by conventional lenders. The SBA offers programs for small businesses, but the application process takes weeks or months — an eternity when you need to fuel your trucks tomorrow. MCA funders approve carriers in 24–48 hours with minimal documentation, but at factor rates of 1.2–1.5 that translate to effective APRs of 60–350%.
The freight recession of 2023–2025 made the situation dramatically worse. Spot rates plummeted while operating costs remained high, and thousands of small carriers took on MCA debt to survive. The FMCSA recorded a record number of carrier authority revocations during this period, many driven by financial distress from stacked MCA obligations that carriers could not sustain as freight volumes declined.
Trucking companies operate on a fundamentally different cash flow cycle than most businesses. A carrier delivers a load on Monday, submits an invoice, and may not receive payment for 30–90 days depending on the shipper or broker. Meanwhile, fuel, driver wages, and tolls are due immediately. Many carriers use freight factoring to bridge this gap, selling their invoices at a 2–5% discount to get paid within 24–48 hours.
MCA funders exploit this cash flow structure aggressively. They base the advance amount on the carrier’s gross revenue, which looks impressive — a carrier doing $50,000/month in revenue seems like a strong borrower. But after fuel (30–40% of revenue), driver pay (25–35%), insurance (10–15%), and maintenance (5–10%), the actual margin is often under $2,500/month. An MCA requiring $800/day in ACH debits exceeds what the carrier can sustain within weeks.
The freight industry’s seasonal patterns make this worse. According to DAT Freight Analytics, freight volumes and spot rates typically peak in summer and fall, then decline significantly in January and February. A carrier that took an MCA during a strong freight season may find the daily debits impossible to cover during the winter slowdown when loads are scarce and rates are depressed.
While some MCA contracts include a “reconciliation provision” that should adjust payments based on actual revenue, courts have found that many funders never actually reconcile. If your MCA contract promises reconciliation but your funder has never reduced your payments during slow freight periods, your attorney can argue that the MCA should be reclassified as a loan subject to state usury laws — and if the effective APR exceeds 25%, the contract may be void under New York’s criminal usury statute.
MCA debt does not just affect a trucking company’s balance sheet — it attacks the operational fundamentals that keep trucks on the road. Here is how:
Fleet grounding. When an MCA funder freezes your bank account, you cannot buy diesel. Without fuel, your trucks sit idle. Every day a truck is grounded costs the average owner-operator $500–$1,000 in lost revenue and fixed costs that continue regardless. For a 10-truck fleet, a frozen account can mean $5,000–$10,000/day in losses within 24 hours.
Insurance lapses. The FMCSA requires minimum insurance coverage of $750,000–$5,000,000 depending on cargo type. When MCA debits drain your operating account to the point where you cannot pay your insurance premium, your coverage lapses. The FMCSA will revoke your operating authority (MC number) after an insurance lapse, and reinstating it requires proving financial responsibility — a process that can take weeks. Without operating authority, you legally cannot haul freight.
Driver loss. Truck drivers hold all the cards in the labor market. The Bureau of Labor Statistics reports ongoing driver shortages across the industry. When payroll bounces or is delayed because MCA debits consumed the operating account, drivers leave immediately — often to competitors who are actively recruiting. Replacing experienced, CDL-holding drivers can take months and cost $8,000–$12,000 per hire in recruiting and training.
Factoring company conflicts. Many trucking companies use freight factoring, where they sell unpaid invoices to a factoring company for immediate cash. MCA funders often file UCC-1 liens that conflict with the factoring company’s security interest in the carrier’s receivables. This creates a legal collision under UCC § 9-322 priority rules that can freeze all invoice payments and cut off the carrier’s primary cash flow lifeline.
DOT compliance failures. Trucks require regular maintenance and inspections to comply with FMCSA regulations. When cash flow is strangled by MCA payments, maintenance gets deferred. Failed DOT inspections lead to out-of-service orders that ground vehicles, and a poor safety rating from the FMCSA can effectively shut down the entire operation.
Defending a trucking company against MCA debt requires strategies tailored to the industry’s specific financial realities. Here are the approaches that Delancey Street’s attorney network uses for trucking clients:
Strategy 1: Revenue Volatility and Reconciliation Failure. Trucking revenue fluctuates dramatically based on freight market conditions, seasonal demand, and fuel costs. If your MCA contract includes a reconciliation provision but the funder has never adjusted your payments during slow freight periods, this is powerful evidence that the MCA is a disguised loan. Your attorney presents freight rate data from DAT or similar sources alongside your actual revenue to prove the funder failed to reconcile as required.
Strategy 2: UCC Lien Priority Disputes with Factoring Companies. Most trucking companies that use factoring have already granted the factoring company a first-priority lien on their receivables. When an MCA funder files a subsequent UCC-1 lien on the same receivables, it creates a legal conflict under UCC Article 9. Your attorney uses this conflict to argue that the MCA funder’s lien is subordinate and therefore less enforceable, which weakens the funder’s position.
Strategy 3: Essential Industry and Public Interest Arguments. Trucking is critical infrastructure. Your attorney frames the case to demonstrate that forcing a carrier into closure through aggressive MCA collections results in job losses for drivers and dispatchers, disruption to supply chains, and ultimately zero recovery for the funder. This “live horse versus dead horse” argument is particularly effective because courts recognize trucking’s role in the national freight network.
Strategy 4: Equipment Lien Challenges. MCA funders file blanket UCC liens covering “all assets,” but trucks and trailers financed through equipment loans or leases already have perfected security interests held by the equipment lender or lessor. Your attorney challenges the MCA funder’s ability to reach equipment that is already encumbered, significantly narrowing the funder’s collateral position and improving settlement terms.
The most dangerous pattern in trucking MCA debt is stacking — taking a second, third, or fourth MCA to cover payments on previous advances. According to industry data, approximately 60% of MCA borrowers take multiple advances, and trucking companies are disproportionately represented because their cash flow gaps are so frequent and severe.
Here is how the stacking spiral typically works for a carrier: The owner takes a $75,000 MCA at a 1.35 factor rate to cover a major engine overhaul and insurance premium renewal. The daily payment is $700, which is manageable when freight rates are strong. But when spot rates drop 20% during the winter slowdown, the $700/day payment becomes unsustainable. Rather than defaulting, the owner takes a second MCA for $50,000 at a 1.4 factor rate. Now the daily payments total $1,300. Within months, a third advance becomes necessary just to make driver payroll, and the daily obligations reach $2,100 — consuming 40–50% of daily gross revenue.
Under UCC § 9-607, each MCA funder files a separate UCC-1 lien on the carrier’s receivables and assets. The first funder has priority, which creates inter-funder conflicts. When a factoring company is also involved with its own UCC lien, the priority disputes multiply. Delancey Street’s attorneys use these inter-creditor conflicts as pressure, because each funder faces the risk of recovering nothing if the carrier is forced into bankruptcy.
Delancey Street’s attorneys handle stacked trucking MCAs by negotiating with all funders simultaneously, using the carrier’s actual financial data — fuel costs, insurance premiums, driver payroll, maintenance logs, and freight revenue — to demonstrate that the current repayment structure is mathematically impossible. The goal is a global settlement that reduces total obligations to a level the carrier can sustain while keeping trucks on the road.
Not all MCA settlement firms understand the trucking industry. Here are the questions you should ask before hiring anyone:
1. Have you handled trucking MCA cases specifically? Trucking MCA debt has unique characteristics — factoring company conflicts, FMCSA compliance implications, equipment lien priority issues, and seasonal freight rate volatility. A firm that only handles general business debt will miss these critical angles.
2. Can you stop daily ACH debits quickly? For a trucking company, every day that aggressive ACH debits continue is a day closer to fleet grounding. Ask the firm how quickly they can intervene to slow, pause, or renegotiate the daily debit structure. The best firms can take action within the first week of engagement.
3. Do licensed attorneys handle the legal work? Settlement negotiation alone is not enough for trucking MCA cases. You need attorneys who can file motions to vacate COJs, challenge UCC liens, resolve factoring company conflicts, subpoena funder underwriting documents, and draft settlement agreements that include UCC lien terminations. Ask whether attorneys are directly involved in every case.
4. What are the fees and when do you pay? Legitimate MCA settlement firms charge 18–25% of the enrolled debt amount, collected only after results are delivered. Any firm that charges upfront fees is violating FTC guidelines under the Telemarketing Sales Rule. Walk away.
Here are the three top-rated firms serving trucking companies 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 tailored to the trucking industry. The other two handle broader categories of business debt and may be appropriate depending on your specific situation.
The only firm on this list that provides true MCA defense for trucking companies: COJ challenges, usury defenses, UCC lien disputes, factoring company conflict resolution, and emergency motions to unfreeze bank accounts — all coordinated through a nationwide network of licensed attorneys who understand the trucking industry’s unique financial pressures. 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 trucking company’s 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. Trucking companies with both MCA debt and tax liabilities (payroll tax, IFTA, fuel excise tax) may benefit from CuraDebt’s tax resolution services alongside MCA defense from a firm like Delancey Street.
Daily debits draining your fuel money? Bank frozen? Stacked MCAs about to ground your trucks? Stop waiting and pick up the phone. Delancey Street’s attorney network fights MCA funders with usury defenses, COJ challenges, and real settlement results. Over $100M settled. This is what we do.
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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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