A bank account is a moving thing, money flowing in by day and out by night, and for most of the year you never watch the level because the level holds. The morning a merchant cash advance debit comes back marked insufficient, you are watching it. Something upstream changed, your card volume softened, or a big client paid late, or two funders happened to hit the same account inside the same forty-eight hours, and the flow that used to cover everything no longer does. That bounce is information. It tells you the current shifted, and it hands you a narrow stretch of days to do something about the direction before the funder does something about you.
You have this week, and the week matters more than the size of the balance, because MCA collections move fast and the funder’s playbook rewards your silence. These advances default far more often than bank credit, in the range of 11 to 20 percent against 1 to 7 percent for SBA and conventional loans, and major funders recently reported combined defaults jumping 59 percent, from about 1.4 billion dollars to 2.2 billion. Those numbers tell you funders are processing a flood of these files and have a routine for every one. The owners who do worst are the ones who wait for the phone to stop ringing on its own. The seven moves below fit inside seven days, and they are ordered so the early ones protect the later ones.
Step 1: Map every dollar leaving your account this week
You cannot negotiate a position you have not measured, so before you call anyone, build the actual picture: open your last sixty days of bank statements and write down every funder, the exact daily or weekly debit, the day it hits, and which advances are still pulling versus which already failed. Most owners in trouble carry more than one advance, and roughly a quarter of MCA borrowers are stacked across two or more positions at once, which is the single strongest predictor of the bounce you just had. When you can see the whole withdrawal stack on one page, you finally know the thing the funders have known all along, how much of your real revenue gets claimed every day, and whether the math was ever going to work.
Step 2: Call your bank before the next debit, not after
A returned debit sets off a small chain that gets expensive quietly: your bank charges a nonsufficient funds fee, the funder usually charges its own returned payment penalty, and a second or third bounce in the same window can flag the account for review or freeze. Talk to your banker this week and find out the exact fee per return, whether you can reorder which payments clear first, and what your bank does when a commercial creditor keeps attempting ACH pulls against a short balance. Knowing those mechanics keeps you out of the two ditches owners swing between, draining the account to zero to honor a debit you cannot afford, or ignoring the returns until the fees and the freeze arrive together. The steady move sits in the middle. You protect payroll and rent first, and from there you decide on purpose, return by return, which debits you actually let clear.
Step 3: Pull every contract and find the reconciliation clause
One word in your contract does more work than any phone call you can make this week, and that word is reconciliation, sometimes printed as true-up, or look-back, or adjustment of the remittance rate. It names your contractual right to have the daily payment recut to match what your business is actually bringing in, because an MCA is sold as a purchase of a percentage of your receivables, so when the receivables fall the payment is supposed to fall with them. Open each agreement, search for that section, and read precisely what it asks of you. The contract is the only document that governs your situation, and what your specific paper says is what decides what you can demand. For a deeper read on the weight this clause carries, see our breakdown of reconciliation clauses in MCA agreements.
What the clause actually requires
Most reconciliation clauses carry two conditions that quietly disqualify the people who need them, a timing window and a current-payment requirement. Many contracts say you must request reconciliation within a short period after the month closes, sometimes five business days, sometimes thirty, and many say you forfeit the right the moment you miss a debit. Read your own clause for both. If the window is open and you are close enough to current to qualify, you move now. If the clause reads as purely discretionary, written so the funder may adjust at its sole option instead of shall adjust on documented proof, you may be holding a different kind of argument, one your attorney can build into a challenge that the advance is functioning as an illegal loan.
Step 4: Send a written reconciliation request with proof
A reconciliation right sitting unused obligates no one, and the funder will keep treating your distress as your problem until you convert it into their duty by putting the request in writing. Gather three months of complete bank statements pulled straight from your bank as unaltered files, then calculate the specified percentage from your contract against your actual deposits so you can show the gap between what they were entitled to collect and what they actually pulled. Send it by email and certified mail the same day, name the exact section number, attach the documentation, and set a response deadline of about seven business days. The written record is what carries weight later, because a request the funder ignores or denies without basis becomes evidence, and that evidence has moved real settlements in the merchant’s favor.
Step 5: Reach the person who can actually change your terms
The first call most owners make is the wrong one, to the sales rep who originated the deal, a person who collected a commission and holds no authority over your ACH schedule and no incentive to lower it. Power over your payment sits with the funding company’s reconciliation, servicing, or legal department, and that is where your written request and your follow-up calls belong. Ask directly for the team that handles reconciliation and adjustments, get a name and a direct line, and keep your tone factual and unbothered, because the funder reads panic as a reason to accelerate and reads calm documentation as a reason to deal. Attorney Leslie Tayne, who works MCA debt, makes the same point: reach the funder early and work toward a solution instead of letting the missed payment sit. Carry it as what it is, the exercise of a contract term you both signed, and the way you carry that changes how they answer.
Step 6: Get an MCA attorney’s read before you revoke anything
Before you do the thing your gut is pushing toward, calling your bank to block the ACH or simply stopping payment, get an MCA defense attorney to read your specific contract, because the consequence of that move depends entirely on what your paper contains. Some agreements carry a confession of judgment or a personal guarantee that lets the funder convert a missed payment into a court judgment and a frozen bank account with startling speed, and revoking authorization can be the trigger that starts it. An attorney who works these contracts can tell you what your funder can actually do against what it merely threatens to do, whether your reconciliation clause is enforceable or cosmetic, and whether the structure of your advance opens a recharacterization argument. The cost of that read is small against the cost of guessing wrong about a document built to favor the other side. The same review covers any UCC lien the funder filed against your receivables.
Why revoking ACH can backfire
Cutting off the withdrawals feels like control, and sometimes it buys you a few days of breathing room, yet it can also read as an event of default under your contract and hand the funder the grounds it was waiting for. If your agreement contains a confession of judgment, the funder may file it in court without a trial and levy your accounts before you have made your case. Treat the decision to revoke as a legal step with a sequence around it, taken on advice, with your reconciliation request already on record, rather than a midnight reflex when the next debit is hours away.
Step 7: Choose your path from the numbers, not the fear
By the end of the week you will have enough to choose between four real paths, and your own numbers point to which one fits. If your revenue genuinely dropped and your contract has a working reconciliation clause, you press reconciliation and bring the payment back in line with sales. If you carry several stacked advances and the combined daily pull has left you with no working capital even on strong weeks, restructuring or reverse consolidation can fold the payments into one lower weekly number. As Matthew Elling of ReverseConsolidation.com put it, merchants often fail because “stacked withdrawals leave no working capital,” even when sales hold steady. If the balance is large, the hardship is documented, and the funder would rather take cash today than chase you, negotiated settlement often lands somewhere around thirty to sixty cents on the dollar. And if your contract is riddled with discretionary reconciliation language or a missing clause, the path runs through a lawyer and a challenge to the advance itself. The point of the week is to earn the right to pick on evidence rather than dread.
Move while there are still moves to make
Knowing all of this changes nothing until you act on it, and the act is small and specific: this week you pull the statements, you find the clause, you send the request, and you get one professional read before you touch the ACH. The owners who come out of an MCA crisis intact share one habit. They moved while moves were still available, early, on evidence, before the funder set the terms. Start with Step 1 today, and let each step buy you the next. If the stack has already grown past what reconciliation can fix, our team can walk your file through business debt settlement options.