The contract gives the funder broad rights. The law imposes limits the contract does not mention.
MCA funders operate in a regulatory space that is less restrictive than traditional lending. The agreements they draft reflect this freedom: confessions of judgment, blanket UCC liens, personal guarantees, waiver-of-defense clauses, and fixed daily withdrawals that do not adjust for revenue. The contract, as written, appears to give the funder unlimited enforcement power.
It does not. The law imposes constraints that the contract does not disclose and that the funder has no obligation to mention.
They Cannot Freeze Your Bank Account Without a Judgment
A restraining notice on a bank account requires a court judgment. The funder cannot freeze your account merely because you missed a payment. If the funder holds a confession of judgment, it can obtain the judgment quickly (sometimes within days), but the judgment must be entered before the freeze. If the COJ is defective or the funder lacks jurisdiction, the freeze is unauthorized.
They Cannot File a Confession of Judgment Against an Out-of-State Business in New York
Since the 2019 amendments to CPLR 3218, confessions of judgment cannot be filed in New York against businesses that are not located in New York and do not conduct business in the state. If your business operates entirely outside New York and the funder filed a COJ in New York, the filing may be unenforceable.
They Cannot Charge Interest Rates That Exceed Usury Limits (If the Agreement Is a Loan)
MCA funders claim exemption from usury statutes because the advance is structured as a purchase of receivables, not a loan. If a court determines that the agreement is, in substance, a loan (based on the three-factor test: reconciliation, bankruptcy recourse, risk allocation), the statutory interest rate caps apply. In New York, the civil cap is sixteen percent and the criminal cap is twenty-five percent.
An agreement with an effective APR of one hundred fifty percent, or three hundred, or eight hundred, violates both.