6 Reasons Trucking Companies Default on MCAs More Than Any Other Industry
The Road to Default
Trucking companies appear in MCA default files with a frequency that exceeds their representation in the small business population. This is not coincidence. The structure of the trucking industry and the structure of MCA repayment are, in combination, a mechanism designed to produce distress. The six reasons below explain why, and each one contains the seed of the defense a trucking company owner should be raising.
Revenue Is Cyclical; MCA Payments Are Not
The first reason is structural. Trucking revenue fluctuates with freight demand, fuel costs, seasonal patterns, and contract cycles. A trucking company that grosses $40,000 in a strong week may gross $18,000 in a slow one. The MCA’s daily debit does not adjust to this reality unless the owner invokes the reconciliation clause, and most owners do not know the clause exists. The funder debits the same amount whether the trucks are running or parked. When the slow weeks accumulate, the account cannot sustain both the debits and the diesel.
Equipment Costs Create Cash Flow Cliffs
The second reason is operational. A single major repair (an engine rebuild, a transmission replacement, a DOT‑mandated brake overhaul) can cost more than a month’s MCA payments. These expenses are not predictable and not deferrable. A truck that cannot pass inspection does not generate revenue. The MCA funder does not pause debits while you replace a turbocharger. The collision between a $12,000 repair bill and a $700 daily debit is a collision that occurs with regularity in this industry, and the funder’s underwriting model treats it as the borrower’s problem.
Fuel Price Volatility Compresses Margins
The third reason is external. Diesel prices fluctuate in ways that MCA factor rates do not. A twenty‑cent increase per gallon across a fleet of eight trucks consuming five hundred gallons per week is an additional $800 per week in operating cost. The MCA payment remains fixed. The margin between revenue and expense, which was already thin, disappears. The trucking company that was marginally able to sustain the daily debit at $3.50 per gallon cannot sustain it at $4.20.
Payment Cycles Do Not Align With Daily Debits
The fourth reason is temporal. Trucking companies typically invoice on net‑30 or net‑45 terms. Revenue arrives in irregular intervals, concentrated around invoice payment dates. MCA debits arrive daily. The mismatch between when money comes in and when the funder takes it out creates a chronic cash flow deficit that no amount of operational efficiency can resolve. The trucking company is solvent on a monthly basis and insolvent on a daily one. The MCA agreement was structured around the daily basis.
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(212) 300-5196Stacking Is Endemic
The fifth reason is behavioral and industry‑specific. Trucking companies, because of their high revenue volume and tangible assets, are attractive to MCA brokers. A trucking company that has taken one advance will receive solicitations for a second, a third, a fourth. The Florida bankruptcy trustee who observed that nobody has just one was describing a pattern this industry exemplifies. In our experience, trucking companies that enter default typically carry between two and five active MCA agreements. The stacking was not a choice made in a vacuum. It was a response to the cash flow pressure the first advance created, facilitated by an industry that profits from the desperation it produces.
The Confession of Judgment Hits Harder
The sixth reason is legal and particular to this industry’s geography. Trucking companies operate across state lines but are often domiciled in states where confessions of judgment remain enforceable. A frozen bank account that paralyzes a retail store is an inconvenience. A frozen bank account that paralyzes a trucking company means trucks sit idle, loads go undelivered, contracts are breached, and the revenue necessary to resolve the MCA default cannot be generated. The confession of judgment, when deployed against a trucking company, does not merely enforce a debt. It can destroy the capacity to repay it.
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.
These six reasons explain why trucking companies default at higher rates than other industries. They also explain why trucking companies have, in many cases, the strongest defenses: the revenue fluctuation that caused the default is also the evidence that the MCA was not a true purchase of receivables, and the reconciliation clause the funder never honored is the contractual failure that undermines the agreement’s enforceability.
A consultation with an attorney who understands both the contracts and the trucks is where the defense begins.
