6 Things a Legit MCA Debt Relief Company Will Never Ask You to Do
The Requests That Should End the Conversation
Desperation inverts judgment. When MCA payments are consuming your revenue, your bank account is under threat, and the funder’s calls arrive before your morning coffee has cooled, the willingness to follow instructions increases in proportion to the fear. A legitimate MCA debt relief company understands this dynamic and will not exploit it. The following six requests, if made by a company claiming to help you, should terminate the engagement.
They Will Never Ask You to Lie to Your Funder
The first request that a legitimate company will never make is to fabricate or misrepresent information to the MCA funder. This includes inflating your financial distress, understating your revenue, or claiming your business has closed when it has not. Misrepresentation to a creditor can constitute fraud, and fraud transforms a civil debt dispute into a criminal matter. Any company that asks you to provide false information to a funder is asking you to assume criminal exposure to resolve a civil debt. The trade is not favorable.
They Will Never Ask You to Close Your Bank Account
The second request concerns the bank account the funder debits. Closing the account feels like an emergency brake. It is, in most MCA agreements, a trigger for accelerated default and, in agreements containing a confession of judgment, the beginning of an enforcement process that can freeze your other accounts, personal accounts included. A legitimate company will not advise account closure as a first‑line strategy. It may, in limited circumstances, advise opening a new operating account at a different institution while the dispute is being resolved, but that advice will come with a legal framework for managing the transition, not a panicked instruction to shut everything down.
They Will Never Ask You to Wire Money to an Individual
The third request is the most unambiguous. If a company claiming to provide MCA debt relief asks you to wire funds to a person (not to a business escrow account, not to a law firm’s trust account, but to an individual), the company is committing fraud or facilitating it. Settlement funds and retainer payments should be directed to verified business accounts with verifiable ownership. A wire to a personal account is a wire you will not recover.
They Will Never Tell You to Ignore Court Documents
The fourth request (or, more precisely, the fourth instruction) involves legal process. If you have been served with a lawsuit, received a restraining notice, or discovered that a confession of judgment has been filed, a legitimate company will address the legal filing immediately. It will not tell you to ignore it, wait it out, or treat it as a scare tactic. Court filings are not scare tactics. They are legal instruments with deadlines, and missing those deadlines forfeits defenses that may have been available. A company that treats a summons as unimportant is a company that does not understand the consequences of what it is ignoring.
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The fifth characteristic of a fraudulent request is certainty. We will reduce your debt by sixty percent. We will eliminate your personal guarantee within ninety days. We guarantee the funder will accept our offer. These statements are not promises. They are fabrications, because no company controls the funder’s decision. A legitimate firm will describe its track record, its typical outcomes, and the factors that influence settlement results. It will not tell you what will happen, because the honest answer is that it depends on variables no one fully controls.
They Will Never Discourage You From Getting a Second Opinion
The sixth request is the absence of a request. A legitimate company does not ask you to refrain from consulting other firms or independent attorneys. Confidence in one’s own work produces openness to comparison. Insecurity produces exclusivity demands, nondisclosure requirements, and urgency designed to prevent you from learning that other options exist.
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.
If a company tells you that its process is proprietary, that discussing your case with another attorney will compromise the negotiation, or that you must decide today, the company is not protecting your interests. It is protecting its fee.
The six items above form a negative checklist. Any company that passes it (by not requesting any of these things) may be worth engaging. Any company that fails even one is a company you should leave, quickly and without apology.