5 Reasons Skipping Payroll to Make Your MCA Payment Will Backfire
You chose the creditor who shouts the loudest. You should have chosen the obligation that matters most.
The MCA funder calls daily. The funder threatens legal action. The funder's tone suggests that missing the payment will produce consequences that are immediate, severe, and personal. The employees, by contrast, are quiet. They trust that the paycheck will arrive. They do not call at 8 a.m. to demand payment. They do not threaten to freeze your bank account.
And so, when the account balance can cover the MCA withdrawal or payroll but not both, the owner pays the MCA. The logic is threat-based: pay the most aggressive creditor first. The logic is also wrong.
Payroll Is a Legal Obligation; the MCA Is a Contractual One
Federal and state labor laws impose specific requirements on the timing and amount of employee compensation. Failure to pay wages on time may subject the business to penalties, interest, and in some jurisdictions, personal liability for the business owner. The Department of Labor does not negotiate. It enforces.
An MCA payment is a contractual obligation under a commercial agreement. Missing it triggers contractual remedies (acceleration, collection, litigation). It does not trigger government enforcement.
When resources are insufficient to satisfy both obligations, the one backed by statute takes priority over the one backed by contract.
You Lose Employees You Cannot Replace
In the current labor market, employees who experience a missed paycheck begin looking for other employment. Some will wait for an explanation. Some will not. The loss of key employees reduces your operational capacity, which reduces your revenue, which widens the gap between income and MCA obligation.
The MCA funder does not care about your staffing. The funder cares about the daily withdrawal. But the daily withdrawal is funded by revenue, and revenue is generated by employees. Skipping payroll to pay the MCA undermines the revenue the MCA depends on.
You paid the funder and lost the employee who generates the revenue that pays the funder.
The MCA Payment You Made Today Does Not Prevent Default Tomorrow
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(212) 300-5196A single MCA payment, made at the cost of a missed payroll, does not resolve the underlying imbalance. Tomorrow's withdrawal will arrive, and the same choice will present itself again. The payroll you skipped today must still be made (with potential penalties). The MCA withdrawal you preserved today will be followed by another one tomorrow that you also cannot afford.
Skipping payroll buys one day of MCA compliance. It costs a week of employee trust, potential legal exposure, and operational capacity.
An Attorney Can Stop the MCA Payment Legally
The MCA withdrawal is not an inviolable obligation. An attorney can invoke reconciliation to reduce it, negotiate a standstill to pause it, challenge the agreement to eliminate it, or file for bankruptcy protection to halt it. None of these remedies are available for missed payroll. Wages owed are wages owed.
The MCA offers legal off-ramps. Payroll does not. Pay the obligation that has no flexibility first. Address the obligation that has legal options second, with counsel.
Todd Spodek
Lead Attorney & Founder
Featured on Netflix's "Inventing Anna," Todd Spodek brings decades of high-stakes criminal defense experience. His aggressive approach has secured dismissals and acquittals in cases others deemed unwinnable.
The Priority Is Not Who Shouts Loudest
The MCA funder's aggression creates the illusion that the MCA payment is the most urgent obligation. It is the most aggressive. It is not the most important. Payroll, taxes, insurance, rent: these are the foundations on which the business operates. The MCA is a financial product layered on top of that foundation. When the product threatens the foundation, the product must yield.
A consultation with an attorney clarifies the priority structure. The consultation takes an hour. The attorney has resolved this exact dilemma for hundreds of clients. The advice is specific, actionable, and grounded in an understanding of which obligations the law protects and which it permits you to challenge.
The call is free. Skipping payroll is not.
