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7 Things Your MCA Company Will Do the Moment You Miss a Payment

The funder was ready for this before you were.

The MCA agreement you signed was not drafted for the months when payments cleared on schedule. It was drafted for this morning, the morning the withdrawal fails, the morning the funder's automated system registers the insufficient balance and initiates a protocol that was designed, tested, and refined long before you applied for the advance.

Here is what happens, in the order it happens.

They Retry the Withdrawal

The first response is mechanical. The funder's ACH processor reattempts the withdrawal, sometimes within hours, sometimes the following business day. Some agreements authorize the funder to attempt the withdrawal multiple times on the same day. Each failed attempt generates an NSF or overdraft fee from your bank ($25 to $35 per attempt, per most commercial account agreements), and each attempt creates a documentary record of the default.

The retries are not optimistic. They are strategic. The funder needs a record of failed withdrawals to support the affidavit of default that accompanies enforcement action.

They Flag Your Account Internally

Your account transitions from "current" to "default" status in the funder's system. This flag triggers automated processes: a notification to the collections team, an alert to the legal department, and in some operations, a freeze on any pending reconciliation or modification request you may have submitted.

You will not receive notice of this status change. The funder's internal classification is invisible to you.

They Call

Within twenty-four to seventy-two hours, the collections call arrives. The representative will state the accelerated balance (the full remaining amount, not the missed payment), inquire about your intentions, and attempt to extract a commitment: a payment date, a partial payment, or an agreement to discuss a new advance.

The call is not a negotiation. It is a data-gathering exercise. The funder is assessing your financial position, your emotional state, and whether you are represented by counsel. Your responses inform the funder's enforcement strategy.

What the caller will not disclose: your right to reconciliation, your potential usury defenses, or the vulnerabilities in the agreement that an attorney would identify on first reading.

They Evaluate the Confession of Judgment

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If your contract contains a confession of judgment, the funder's legal team reviews the document to confirm it meets the jurisdictional and procedural requirements for filing. For out-of-state merchants, the funder assesses whether the 2019 New York amendments prohibit filing. For in-state merchants, the funder prepares the affidavit.

The time between default and COJ filing is typically ten to twenty-one days. In aggressive operations, it is shorter. The filing produces a judgment without notice, without a hearing, and without your participation. The first indication you receive may be a frozen bank account.

The judgment was entered on a Tuesday. The owner learned about it on Thursday, from his bank.

They Contact Your Payment Processor

If your MCA agreement authorized the funder to redirect credit card receipts, the funder may notify your payment processor to begin diverting a percentage of your card transactions directly to the funder. This bypasses your bank account entirely. Revenue that would have reached your operating account is intercepted at the processor level.

In businesses that depend heavily on card transactions (restaurants, retail, service providers), this diversion can reduce daily revenue by the holdback percentage overnight. You discover the shortfall when the daily deposit from your processor is smaller than expected.

They Enforce the UCC Lien

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The UCC-1 financing statement, filed when the advance was originated, gives the funder a security interest in your business assets. Upon default, the funder can enforce this lien. In practice, enforcement means contacting your customers to redirect payments (asserting the lien over your accounts receivable), placing claims on inventory or equipment, and notifying other creditors that the funder holds a prior interest.

The most disruptive form of UCC enforcement is the notification to your customers. A letter from the funder informing your client that payments should be directed to the funder, not to you, damages the commercial relationship in ways the contract does not measure.

They Assess Whether to Sue

Not every funder litigates. Litigation is expensive, and MCA funders are economic actors who weigh the cost of filing a complaint against the probability of recovery. If the funder concludes that your assets are sufficient to justify the expense, the breach-of-contract complaint follows. If not, the funder may sell the debt to a collection agency, write off the loss, or settle for less than the accelerated balance.

This assessment is the window. Before the funder decides to litigate, the cost of settlement is lower and the leverage of representation is higher. An attorney's letter, received during this evaluation period, changes the calculus. The funder expected an unrepresented merchant. A represented one introduces costs, delays, and the possibility of counterclaims.

The funder's seven steps are automatic. Your response does not have to be. A consultation with counsel, conducted this week, converts the funder's protocol from an inevitability into a negotiation.

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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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