The Line Between the Business and You
Most business owners believe the debt belongs to the business. The LLC or the corporation carries the obligation, and personal assets remain behind a wall. This belief is correct in theory and wrong in practice, because most MCA agreements were designed to dismantle that wall before the first payment was ever made. The personal guarantee, the confession of judgment, the blanket UCC lien: each one is a door the funder installed in your corporate structure, and each one opens inward.
Your Bank Accounts Are Not as Separate as You Think
The first way an MCA default reaches your personal finances is through the personal guarantee you signed. Once the funder obtains a judgment on that guarantee, they can levy your personal bank accounts. In New York, this can happen through a confession of judgment filed with the county clerk, producing a restraining notice on your personal accounts before you receive any notice at all. You discover the freeze when your debit card declines at a gas station or a grocery store. In five cases we handled last year, the business owner learned about the personal account freeze from their spouse, who could not access funds for a household expense. The funder had filed on a Thursday. The freeze was in place by Monday.
Your Credit Report Will Reflect the Default
The second way is reputational, and it persists long after the debt itself is resolved. An MCA default, particularly one that results in a court judgment, will appear on your personal credit report if you were a personal guarantor. This is not a temporary notation. Judgments can remain on credit reports for years, and their effect on lending decisions, insurance premiums, and even rental applications is well documented. The business may recover. The credit report remembers longer.
Your Home May Be at Risk
The third way involves real property. A judgment lien can attach to real estate you own. In many states, the judgment creditor can record the judgment with the county recorder, creating a lien on your home that must be satisfied before the property can be sold or refinanced. Homestead exemptions exist in some states and provide varying degrees of protection, but the exemption amounts differ widely, and in states with low or no homestead protections, the equity in your home becomes the funder’s target.
Whether the funder can force a sale of your home depends on state law and the size of the judgment. Whether the funder can prevent you from selling without paying them first is a simpler question, and the answer is usually yes.
Tax Consequences Nobody Mentions
The fourth way is the one that arrives last and surprises most. If any portion of the MCA debt is forgiven or settled for less than the full amount, the forgiven amount may constitute taxable income. The IRS treats cancelled debt as income in most circumstances, and the funder may issue a 1099‑C reflecting the difference between what you owed and what you paid. A business owner who settles a $200,000 MCA obligation for $80,000 may receive a 1099‑C for $120,000 of cancellation of debt income. That income is real, the tax on it is due, and very few people plan for it during the settlement negotiation.