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5 Reasons Taking a New MCA to Pay Off an Old One Will Destroy Your Business

The new advance does not retire the old debt. It relocates it, at a higher price, to a different creditor who now owns a larger portion of your future.

Every broker who calls with this offer describes it as a solution. "We will pay off your existing MCA and give you one lower payment." The arithmetic, when you perform it yourself rather than accepting the broker's version, tells a different story. The payoff amount on your current advance includes the funder's remaining profit on the original factor rate. The new advance must be large enough to cover that payoff and the new funder's factor rate. You are paying a premium to exit a premium. The total cost of capital has not decreased. It has compounded.

This is the single most destructive financial decision a small business owner can make in the MCA space, and it is the decision that is most aggressively marketed to owners who are already in distress.

The Factor Rate Compounds Against You

A factor rate is not an interest rate, though it functions like one with a critical difference: it does not adjust for early repayment. If you received $50,000 at a 1.4 factor rate, you owe $70,000 regardless of how quickly you repay. The $20,000 cost is fixed from the moment the contract is signed.

When a new MCA pays off the old one, the payoff amount is the remaining balance at the original factor rate. If you have repaid $40,000 of the $70,000, the payoff is $30,000. The new advance must cover that $30,000 plus whatever additional capital you receive, and the new factor rate applies to the entire new principal.

If the new advance is $80,000 at a 1.45 factor rate, you now owe $116,000. You received $50,000 in usable capital (the $30,000 went to the old funder), and you owe $116,000 for it. The effective cost of the original $50,000, after two rounds of factoring, is $66,000. That is a cost of capital that would be recognizable as predatory in any other context.

It is recognizable here, too. Most people simply do not perform the calculation until after they have signed.

The New Funder Inherits the Old Funder's Contractual Rights (And Adds Its Own)

The new MCA agreement is a new contract with new terms, a new UCC-1 filing, a new personal guarantee, and frequently a new confession of judgment. The old funder's lien is released upon payoff (if it is released at all; in some cases, the old UCC-1 remains on file until manually terminated). The new funder's lien replaces it.

But here is the detail that matters: the new contract was drafted for a higher-risk borrower. You. The terms reflect the funder's assessment of your current position, which is the position of a business that could not sustain its previous MCA. The default triggers may be broader. The reconciliation clause may be more restrictive. The personal guarantee may be more expansive.

You signed the first contract as a borrower. You signed the second as a risk.

Each successive agreement is calibrated to the funder's increasing certainty that default is probable. The contractual protections available to you narrow with each round, because the funder who extends credit to a business already struggling with MCA debt does not do so out of generosity. They do so because the terms of the new agreement compensate them for the risk, and those terms are paid by you.

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You Lose the Legal Defenses That Applied to the Original Agreement

This is the consequence that almost no one discusses, and it is, I believe, the most damaging.

If your original MCA agreement contained a defective confession of judgment, if its reconciliation clause was illusory, if the structure of the agreement would have supported a reclassification as a usurious loan under New York law, those defenses belonged to that contract. When the new MCA pays off the old one and the old agreement is satisfied, those defenses evaporate. The new contract is a new document, presumably drafted to avoid the deficiencies of the old one.

In three cases we reviewed last year, the original agreement had strong grounds for a usury challenge. The effective APR exceeded two hundred percent, the reconciliation provision was never honored, and the funder retained full recourse through a personal guarantee. Had the business owner retained counsel before accepting the payoff offer, the attorney could have challenged the original agreement, potentially reducing the balance or voiding the contract entirely.

Instead, the owner signed a new agreement. The old contract, with all its vulnerabilities, was retired. The new contract, drafted by attorneys who had learned from the old one's weaknesses, was tighter.

The legal defenses were not lost to litigation. They were surrendered voluntarily, by a business owner who did not know they existed.

The Broker's Incentive Is Not Aligned with Your Survival

The broker who arranges the new MCA earns a commission. That commission is a percentage of the funded amount, typically between eight and twelve percent. The larger the new advance, the larger the commission. The broker is not compensated for reducing your total cost of capital. The broker is not compensated for advising you to retain an attorney instead. The broker is compensated for closing the deal.

Todd Spodek
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This does not make the broker malicious. It makes the broker's incentive irrelevant to your welfare. The advice you receive from someone whose income depends on your signature is not advice. It is a sales presentation formatted to resemble advice, and distinguishing between the two when you are under financial pressure is a task that requires more detachment than most people possess.

I have yet to encounter a case in which a broker recommended that a struggling merchant consult an attorney before signing a second MCA. There are exceptions, though in practice they tend to confirm the rule.

The Cycle Terminates in One of Two Places

A business that takes a new MCA to pay off an old one will, with near certainty, arrive at one of two outcomes. The first is that the new advance proves equally unsustainable, and the business faces the same default it was trying to avoid, except now with a larger balance, a tighter contract, and fewer legal options. The second is that the business takes a third advance to pay off the second, and then a fourth, until the total obligation exceeds annual revenue and the question is no longer how to repay but how to dissolve.

There is a third option, but it does not involve another signature. It involves a conversation with an attorney who can evaluate the existing agreements, determine whether the original MCA was enforceable, assess whether the daily payment amounts reflected a genuine purchase of receivables or a disguised loan, and construct a strategy for reducing or restructuring the debt on terms that the business can survive.

That conversation happens once. The alternative, the cycle of payoff advances that feels like progress and functions like erosion, happens until it cannot.

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Todd Spodek

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With decades of experience in high-stakes federal criminal defense, Todd Spodek has built a reputation for aggressive, strategic representation. Featured on Netflix's "Inventing Anna," he has successfully defended clients facing federal charges, white-collar allegations, and complex criminal cases in federal courts nationwide.

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