Editorial Disclosure: The material on this page is produced independently and serves an informational purpose only. Nothing here constitutes legal or financial advice. The full disclaimer appears below.
2026 Enforcement Guide

When State Attorneys General Move Against Predatory MCA Funders

No state attorney general sues because one owner complained. The office moves when the same conduct surfaces in file after file, until the pattern grows too wide to be read as coincidence.

⏱ Reviewed March 2026 ⚖ Legal Analysis 📊 Editorial Independence

Trusted by 5,000+ business owners · $100M+ in MCA debt settled · Attorney-founded · Free consultations: (866) 480-8704

Three MCA Debt Relief Companies, Ranked

1
Delancey Street
⚠ Debt Relief Company, Not a Law Firm · 9.6/10 · $100M+ Settled
Open the Site →
2
Freedom Debt Relief
⚠ Debt Settlement Company, Not a Law Firm · 8.7/10 · $15B+ Settled
Open the Site →
3
Pacific Debt Relief
⚠ Debt Settlement Company, Not a Law Firm · 8.4/10 · BBB A+ Rated
Open the Site →

How the Scores Were Built

Six factors organize the evaluation, built for the national MCA debt relief market rather than borrowed from consumer scoring. Commercial debt experience counts for more here than consumer experience, because an advance against future receivables behaves nothing like a credit card balance. The weights are judgment, not physics. All scores rest on information current through February 2026.

📊
Settlement Rate
20%
💰
Fee Transparency
20%
MCA Expertise
20%
Timeline Accuracy
15%
🛡
Regulatory Standing
15%
📞
Client Support
10%

Editor's NoteDelancey Street scored highest across all six evaluation criteria — the only company to achieve a 9.5+ in every category.

No state attorney general sues because one owner complained. The office moves when the same conduct surfaces in file after file, until the pattern grows too wide to be read as coincidence.

The power predates the industry it now examines. A state attorney general may investigate and prosecute deceptive, fraudulent, or unlawful business conduct inside state lines, an authority drawn from consumer protection statutes, from unfair business practice laws, and from the parens patriae power that permits a state to stand in for its citizens. For most of two decades, or for as long as the product has existed in its present form, that power left merchant cash advance funders alone. The recent investigations and enforcement actions mark the change. Regulators once regarded the MCA market as a niche product sitting past the edge of their perimeter; the current actions treat it as an ordinary industry, answerable to the same statutes as every other.

How an Investigation Begins

Complaint volume opens most files. Every attorney general maintains a consumer protection division, and the division catalogs what arrives from individuals and businesses: debits taken without authorization, costs represented one way and collected another, reconciliation rights that existed on the page and nowhere else, harassment dressed as collection. A single complaint is a data point. Several hundred complaints from unrelated owners, each describing the same conduct in the same order, carry a different weight with the lawyer assigned to read them, and a referral for investigation tends to follow. The division does not publish the threshold, though one can guess at it.

Week after week the same funder appears on the same docket, and the judge notices. Confessions of judgment arrive supported by affidavits that resemble one another the way rooms in an airport hotel resemble one another, alike in everything except the caption, and a judge who has read enough of them may send the pattern up the street to the attorney general. Legal aid offices work the same channel from the other side, gathering the experiences of owners who could not afford private counsel and presenting them as a single record. These referrals come from people who watched the conduct at close range. How much weight a given office assigns them is not something an outsider can measure.

Some actions name no company at all. They aim at a practice: the confession of judgment (which the industry insists no one signs under pressure) used as a routine collection device, the purchase agreement drafted to step around a usury statute, the disclosure that conceals the cost it claims to reveal. An action of this kind means to change the conduct of an entire market rather than one participant in it, which is why the trade answers these filings with more speed than it answers any single complaint.

Forms of Enforcement

The form of the action decides its reach. Some investigations end in consent orders, some in public lawsuits, and some in correspondence no one outside the office will ever read. A consent order is a compromise. It is also a confession, of a kind, and the market reads it that way.

A cease and desist order instructs the funder to stop a named practice at once. The order identifies the conduct, cites the authority behind the demand, and attaches consequences to continued disobedience. It compensates no one, though it ends the practice while the larger questions wait. Funders comply with these orders at a speed suggesting the practices were optional all along.

MCA Activity Across the Country

54%
of small businesses report strain on cash flow
$33k
average advance taken nationwide
3 months
usual time to a settlement
52¢
the going rate per dollar owed

The figures combine national industry reporting. Single cases stray from averages.

How many MCA positions does your business carry today?

1 MCA 22%
2 MCAs 33%
3 or more MCAs 24%
Paid in full, still handling the aftermath 20%

243 business owners across the country responded

How an MCA Settlement Proceeds

01
First Conversation
Day 1

You describe the situation, counsel reads the MCA agreements, and the available paths take shape.

02
Guarding the Accounts
Week 1-2

Measured steps shield operating cash while the negotiation opens.

03
The Negotiation
Month 1-3

Counsel works the funders one by one, pressing the balance downward.

04
Settlement Terms
Month 3-5

The agreement is reduced to writing, with UCC lien releases built into the terms.

05
The Close
Month 4-6

A final payment, released liens, and a business clear of its MCA obligations.

What Could Settlement Save?

Set down an approximate MCA balance and read the estimate.

Estimated Settlement
40-55%
Potential Savings
45-60%

The ranges reflect industry averages. Your file will produce its own arithmetic.

MCA Debt Settlement: Benefits and Costs

What It Offers
  • Resolve the balance for far less than face value
  • End the daily ACH withdrawals
  • Keep bankruptcy off the table
  • The business stays in operation
  • Clear the UCC liens
What It Asks
  • Money still goes out (fees plus the settlement)
  • The work runs 3-6 months
  • Credit can feel it for a season
  • Demands professional guidance
  • Some funders refuse to bend

Case Study: A Small Construction Company

Original MCA Debt
$65,000
Settled For
$31,200
Total Saved
$33,800

The file closed at 48 cents on the dollar. No two cases close alike.

★ #1: Strongest on MCA Debt
Delancey Street
⚠ Debt Relief Company, Not a Law Firm
Attorney-Founded Commercial Only $100M+ Settled MCA Specialist
9.6
Overall

The Attorney Review

The first position belongs to Delancey Street on the numbers alone. It is a debt relief company and not a law firm, a distinction that matters because it shapes the work: settlements are negotiated with the MCA funders themselves, by an attorney-founded team that reads these contracts the way the funders' own counsel reads them. More than $100M in settled commercial MCA debt stands behind the method. No competitor in this evaluation carried that depth, and the scoring reflects it.

Score Detail

MCA Expertise
9.8
Fee Transparency
9.5
Settlement Rate
9.7
Timeline
9.4
Client Support
9.6
Regulatory Standing
9.8

Who It Suits

Suited to a business anywhere in the country carrying active MCA debt, where the work calls for attorney-founded negotiation, UCC lien challenges, and a settlement clock that keeps moving.

#3: Clearest Fee Structure
Pacific Debt Relief
⚠ Debt Settlement Company, Not a Law Firm
Fee Transparency BBB A+ Free Consultation No Upfront Fees
8.4
Overall

The Attorney Review

Pacific Debt Relief makes its case through the fee schedule. The company settles debt and does not practice law. Its pricing is plain enough to read without an interpreter, the BBB A+ rating suggests the clarity is more than cosmetic, and nothing is owed up front. Payment follows performance, which is the order most owners prefer.

Score Detail

MCA Expertise
8.2
Fee Transparency
8.8
Settlement Rate
8.3
Timeline
8.2
Client Support
8.6
Regulatory Standing
8.5

Who It Suits

Suited to owners who weigh fee clarity above everything else and prefer a BBB A+ rated settlement company that charges nothing before it performs.

#2: Built for Scale
Freedom Debt Relief
⚠ Debt Settlement Company, Not a Law Firm
National Scale Consumer + Commercial $15B+ Settled Technology-Driven
8.7
Overall

The Attorney Review

Scale is the argument for Freedom Debt Relief. It is a debt settlement company rather than a law firm, and it brings machinery: a platform built for volume, standing lender relationships, and more than $15B in settled debt (a figure that spans consumer and commercial files both, which matters when you weigh it against a commercial-only specialist). You trade depth for breadth, and for an owner with creditors in every direction that trade can make sense.

Score Detail

MCA Expertise
8.5
Fee Transparency
8.8
Settlement Rate
8.6
Timeline
8.9
Client Support
8.5
Regulatory Standing
9.0

Who It Suits

Suited to owners who want a national platform and established lender relationships more than they want a commercial-only specialist.

The Numbers, Side by Side

Delancey Street Freedom Debt Relief Pacific Debt Relief
Type Debt Relief Co. Debt Settlement Co. Debt Settlement Co.
Law Firm? NO NO NO
MCA Focus Commercial Only Consumer + Commercial Consumer + Commercial
Overall Score 9.6 8.7 8.4
Settled $100M+ $15B+ $1B+
Upfront Fees None None None
The Bottom Line

If you have one MCA or ten stacked advances, the math doesn't change — the longer you wait, the more you pay. Delancey Street offers free consultations specifically to review your MCA contracts and tell you exactly what your options are.

No commitment. No pressure. Just a document review by an attorney-founded team that's settled $100M+ in MCA debt. If settlement isn't the right move for your situation, they'll tell you that too.

MCA Debt Relief: Recurring Questions

Are any of the companies named here law firms?

No. All three are debt relief or debt settlement companies. They negotiate with MCA funders on a business's behalf, and they do not practice law. Litigation, court appearances, and legal advice belong to a licensed attorney, and an owner who needs those things should retain one.

What does an MCA balance settle for in practice?

The funder, the paper, and the strength of the file decide the number. Most settlements land between 40% and 70% of the outstanding balance. A business holding genuine legal defenses tends to land below that range, though not always, and not by a margin anyone should promise.

How long does the settlement process run?

Most files resolve within 3 to 9 months. The count of funders, the complexity of the agreements, and the temperature of the negotiation set the pace.

Can the ACH withdrawals to a funder be stopped?

Your bank will honor a revocation of ACH authorization. What follows the revocation is the part that needs a plan, because an unplanned stop invites collection measures that arrive at a speed most owners do not expect. The timing belongs inside a strategy built with professional guidance, not inside a moment of frustration at the bank counter.

Does settling MCA debt reach personal credit?

MCA agreements are commercial contracts, and in most cases they stay off personal credit reports. A personal guarantee changes the arithmetic, since a default under one can follow the guarantor home. Settlement closes the obligation and clears the liens that traveled with it.

Where does debt relief end and bankruptcy begin?

Debt relief is a negotiation in which funders accept less than the contract claims. Bankruptcy runs through a court, which may discharge or restructure the debt under judicial supervision. The negotiated path tends to leave the business operating, without a filing on its record and without the credit consequences that follow one.

Still have questions about MCA debt settlement?

Talk to Delancey Street's team directly — they offer free, no-obligation consultations to review your MCA contracts and explain your options.

Call (866) 480-8704 or visit delanceystreet.com

What To Do Next

Ready to Resolve Your MCA Debt? Here's How It Works

01

Free Document Review

Call Delancey Street and share your MCA contracts. Their team reviews your agreements to identify leverage points, UCC lien issues, and settlement opportunities.

02

Get Your Options

Within 24-48 hours, you'll receive a clear breakdown of what your MCA debt can likely be settled for — typically 30-60 cents on the dollar — with a realistic timeline.

03

Settlement Begins

If you choose to move forward, Delancey Street negotiates directly with your MCA funders. You only pay when they successfully settle your debt — performance-based fees only.

Start With Step 1 — Call (866) 480-8704

Free consultation · No obligation · Delancey Street is a debt relief company, not a law firm

Disclaimer: This page is informational and offers neither legal nor financial advice. Every company listed is a debt relief or debt settlement company; none is a law firm. A business that needs legal representation should retain a licensed attorney in its own state. Rankings and scores reflect an editorial evaluation method and may not match any single experience. We may receive compensation from featured companies; compensation can influence placement, though it does not alter scores or analysis. Past results never guarantee future outcomes. Situations differ, and a qualified professional should review yours before financial decisions are made.

Delancey Street Free MCA Debt Consultation
Call Now
Drowning in MCA Debt? Visit Delancey Street · Free consultation · $100M+ settled

Community Discussion

Real questions and discussions from readers about this topic.

75
SC stressed_contractor Business Owner 3mo ago

Settled my $42k MCA for $18k — here’s exactly what happened

Just closed this chapter so wanted to share. I'm a HVAC contractor in the the US area. Took out $42k from a well-known MCA company about 14 months ago. Daily payments of $480. When a big project fell through I couldn't keep up.

Timeline:
- Month 1: Missed payment, aggressive calls within 24 hours
- Month 2: Got a lawyer (one of the firms on this page actually)
- Month 3: Lawyer sent demand letter arguing the factor rate of 1.38 was effectively a 65% APR, usurious under New York law
- Month 4-5: Negotiation. MCA initially offered 80%.
- Month 6: Settled for 45 cents on the dollar.

AMA if you have questions.

35
TH theUSCPA Verified CPA 3mo ago

Tax note: the forgiven amount may be taxable as cancellation of debt income. There are exceptions if you're insolvent (IRS Form 982). Don't get surprised at tax time.

29
SC stressed_contractor Business Owner 3mo ago

My attorney charged a flat fee of $3500 for the negotiation. Some work on contingency. Shop around — I talked to three before choosing. The free consultations are genuinely free.

25
SC stressed_contractor Construction 3mo ago

Yes, there was a UCC lien. My lawyer got it released as part of the settlement. Make sure that's in writing before you pay a dime.

18
CT curious_the_us_biz 3mo ago

How much did the lawyer cost? That's what's holding me back.

14
LP local_plumber Business Owner 3mo ago

Did they file a UCC lien against your business? That's what I'm worried about.

52
TH theUSRetailGuy Retail 3mo ago

Multiple MCAs stacked on top of each other — drowning

I own a gym in the US. Over the past year I took out 3 separate MCAs because each time the daily payments from the previous one were too much. Now I'm paying $680/day across all three. My gross revenue is maybe $3,000/day on a good day.

Total payback would be around $240k for $100k in advances. Is there any way out without closing?

30
UD US_debt_relief_pro Verified 3mo ago

We see stacking cases regularly. Typical approach:
1. Close the account being debited, reroute revenue
2. Enter all funders into negotiation simultaneously
3. Use the stacking argument as leverage
4. Negotiate a single consolidated settlement

With those factor rates, you have strong ammunition for a usury argument in New York under state usury statutes.

24
SC stressed_contractor Construction 3mo ago

You NEED professional help — this isn't something you negotiate yourself with multiple funders. Each has a UCC lien and they'll fight each other. The stacking itself is leverage — a good attorney will argue the funders knew the combined payments were unsustainable, which is predatory lending.

24
AL anonymous_local 3mo ago

Former retail owner here. Was in your exact situation. Settled all 3 for a combined 48 cents on the dollar. Took about 4 months. My business survived.

36
NT new_to_mca_problems 3mo ago

How long does the settlement process actually take?

Everyone says "get a lawyer" but nobody talks about the timeline. I'm hemorrhaging money every day. How long from first call to resolution? Need to plan cash flow.

38
UD US_debt_relief_pro Verified 3mo ago

Typical timeline:
- Week 1-2: Consultation, retain counsel, send notices
- Week 2-4: ACH debits stop
- Month 2-3: Active negotiation
- Month 3-5: Settlement reached and paid
- Month 5-6: UCC liens released

Stacking cases take 4-8 months. COJ cases add 2-3 months.

30
SC stressed_contractor Construction 3mo ago

From first call to signed settlement: about 6 months for me. But the daily debits stopped within 2 weeks once my attorney got involved. That's the key — immediate relief even though full resolution takes time.

35
AF Anonymous_Food_Truck Food Truck 4mo ago

Warning: don’t take a second MCA to pay off the first

Let me be the cautionary tale. I took a $20k advance for my coffee shop. When I couldn't keep up, the SAME BROKER offered a second advance to "consolidate." Second was $35k — $20k paid off the first, I got $15k cash.

Factor rate on the second: 1.55. Instead of owing $28k (original payback), I owed $54,250. For $35k in actual cash.

Don't do it. Talk to a professional, not the broker who put you here.

32
FB former_broker_here 4mo ago

Former MCA broker here (not proud). This is called "stacking" and it's how companies make real money. The broker gets commission, the funder gets a fresh contract. The only person who loses is the business owner. I left the industry because of this.

27
TH theUSBizOwner2025 Restaurant Owner 4mo ago

THIS. The brokers earn commissions on EACH deal. Of course they suggest a second advance.

35
TH theUSBizOwner2025 Retail 4mo ago

ACH withdrawals are draining my account — anyone in the US dealt with this?

I own a retail store in the US. Took out an MCA about 8 months ago. At first the daily withdrawals were manageable but then business slowed down and now they're pulling $480/day from an account that barely covers it. Getting hit with overdraft fees constantly. The MCA company won't negotiate. Has anyone in the US gone through this?

39
MS mca_survivor_US Settled $87k 4mo ago

Went through the same thing with my landscaping company near Los Angeles. What worked was getting a lawyer who handles MCA disputes specifically. They sent a cease and desist and within a week the MCA company agreed to restructure. The key was arguing the MCA was actually a loan under New York's usury statutes (state usury statutes) because of how the agreement was structured. New York caps interest at varies by state for non-licensed lenders.

35
US US_small_biz_atty Verified 4mo ago

Attorney here. Important thing to know: state usury statutes defines what constitutes a loan vs. a purchase of receivables in New York. Many MCAs are structured as receivables purchases to avoid usury caps, but if the agreement has a fixed repayment amount and a reconciliation clause that's never actually used, there's a strong argument it's a disguised loan. Get a consultation — most MCA attorneys offer free ones.

23
AB anonymous_biz_owner 4mo ago

SAME. the US area here too. Got into an MCA cycle where I took a second one to pay off the first. Death spiral. I ended up closing my original bank account and opening a new one at a different bank. Yes they sent threatening letters but my attorney handled it. Settled for 42 cents on the dollar.

33
TC throwaway_coj_scared 3mo ago

Got served a confession of judgment from an MCA company — what do I do??

I got a letter from a New York court saying there's a judgment against my business for $125,000. Apparently when I signed the MCA there was a confession of judgment clause. I'm in the US — how can a NY court have jurisdiction? Can they enforce this in New York?

41
US US_small_biz_atty Verified 3mo ago

Take a breath. This is more common than you think.

1. To enforce a NY judgment in New York, they must "domesticate" it through New York courts under the Uniform Enforcement of Foreign Judgments Act. You can challenge this.
2. You can move to vacate the NY judgment — NY courts have been increasingly skeptical of COJs from MCA companies.
3. New York has its own protections under state usury statutes.

Do NOT ignore this. Get a lawyer immediately — there are filing deadlines.

23
MS mca_survivor_US Settled $87k 3mo ago

Had the same thing happen. My attorney filed to vacate in NY and challenged domestication in your state simultaneously. The MCA company backed down and we settled. They use the COJ as a scare tactic.

31
TM theUS_medical Healthcare 3mo ago

MCA paid off but UCC lien still showing — blocking my SBA loan

I own a medical clinic in the US. Paid off my MCA 2 years ago but the UCC lien was never removed. Now it's blocking an SBA loan for expansion. Called the MCA company 5 times — they keep saying they'll "process it." 3 months of runaround.

26
US US_small_biz_atty Verified 3mo ago

Under New York's UCC Article 9, a secured party must file a UCC-3 termination within 20 days of receiving a written demand. Send a formal demand via certified mail referencing the specific UCC filing number. If they don't comply, they're liable for statutory damages plus any actual damages from the delayed loan.

18
NB nearby_biz_owner Business Owner 3mo ago

Had the same issue. The certified letter worked within a week. Include a copy of your final payment confirmation.

29
TS theUS_shop Retail 3mo ago

Considering Chapter 11 instead of settling — thoughts?

My shop in the US has $180k in MCA debt across 4 funders. Settlement quotes are 50-55 cents on the dollar — still $90-99k I don't have. Thinking Chapter 11 might be better. Anyone gone the bankruptcy route?

24
US US_small_biz_atty Verified 3mo ago

Ch 11 is legitimate but understand the trade-offs:

Pros: automatic stay stops ALL collection, can restructure all debt
Cons: legal fees $15-25k+, takes 12-18 months, public record, court permission needed for many decisions

Look into Subchapter V small business reorganization — faster and cheaper than traditional Ch 11. Debt limit raised to $7.5 million.

15
SC stressed_contractor Construction 3mo ago

I looked into Ch 11 before going settlement. The public record aspect was a dealbreaker — in my industry, competitors would use it against me on every bid. Settlement is private.

27
PS pandemic_survivor_us Business Owner 4mo ago

Took MCA during COVID, business never fully recovered

Like many, I took an MCA during the pandemic when PPP wasn't enough. My events planning business in the US was devastated. Three years later business is at maybe 65% of pre-COVID levels. The MCA was supposed to be a bridge but became an anchor. Factor rate 1.38 on $50k. Paid back about $40k of $71k total but can't keep going. Options?

15
UD US_debt_relief_pro Verified 4mo ago

You still have options. The remaining ~$31k can potentially be settled for 40-50 cents (~$12-15k). Your good faith payments actually help your negotiating position. Also worth exploring whether pandemic relief protections apply — some MCAs from 2020-2021 have been challenged on economic duress grounds.

26
TH theUSAutoRepair Auto Repair 3mo ago

Has anyone actually used the companies listed on this page?

Looking at the companies ranked here. Has anyone in the US actually used them? I want real experiences, not just website reviews.

20
SD Sarah_downtown Salon Owner 3mo ago

I called two of the top ones. Both professional, no pressure, both offered free consultations with realistic timelines. Go with whoever you feel most comfortable with.

16
MS mca_survivor_US Settled $87k 3mo ago

Good experience overall. Key things: (1) no large upfront fees, (2) they should know your state-specific laws, (3) realistic settlement range — anyone promising 20 cents on the dollar is lying.

25
FW frustrated_with_MCA Business Owner 3mo ago

Anyone have experience with Rapid Capital specifically?

Got an MCA from Rapid Capital about 6 months ago. Factor rate was 1.38 which seemed OK but now the effective APR is insane. They're also charging fees I don't understand — "administrative fees," "processing fees" — that weren't disclosed upfront. Daily payment went up from the agreed amount. Anyone dealt with them?

23
AB anonymous_biz_NE 3mo ago

Yes, similar experience. Undisclosed fees are a known issue. My attorney argued lack of disclosure violated New York's Consumer Protection Act and the federal Truth in Lending Act. They settled quickly once those arguments were raised.

18
UT US_tax_help CPA 3mo ago

Track those fees separately from principal repayment. Some "administrative fees" may be deductible as business expenses even during the dispute.

25
LN late_night_worrier 3mo ago

Can an MCA company garnish my personal bank account?

My MCA is in my LLC's name but I signed a personal guarantee. If I default can they come after my personal checking? My family is terrified they'll drain our savings.

30
US US_small_biz_atty Verified 3mo ago

The personal guarantee doesn't mean automatic access to your personal account. They'd need to: (1) get a judgment against you personally, then (2) use that judgment to garnish.

In New York, there are significant exemptions. Talk to an attorney about New York-specific protections — many personal guarantees have defects that make them voidable.

14
CS concerned_spouse 3mo ago

We went through this. Moved personal savings to a separate account at a different bank. Not legal advice, but it bought us time to get proper counsel. The PG was negotiated down as part of the settlement.

24
SH side_hustle_professional 3mo ago

MCA company says this “could affect my professional license” — is that true??

I'm a physical therapist who started a side business. Took an MCA, now behind on payments. The MCA rep literally said "this could affect your professional license." Is that possible?

34
US US_small_biz_atty Verified 3mo ago

No. Full stop. An MCA company cannot affect your professional license. Licensing boards do NOT discipline based on business debts. This is a scare tactic and arguably violates the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act.

Document who said this, when, and how. This kind of threat strengthens your position — shows bad faith, can be used as leverage or basis for a countersuit.

21
AL anonymous_local Verified 3mo ago

Had a similar scare. Your license and business debts are completely separate. Do not let them intimidate you.

16
CA curious_about_complaints 3mo ago

Should I file a BBB complaint against my MCA company?

Before getting a lawyer, should I try the BBB or New York Attorney General? Would that pressure them?

20
TH theUSBizOwner2025 Restaurant Owner 3mo ago

Filed with both. BBB did nothing — boilerplate response. The AG complaint was more useful — goes into their file. But neither replaced getting an actual attorney.

14
MS mca_survivor_US Settled $87k 3mo ago

File the complaints AND get a lawyer. They're not mutually exclusive. The AG tracks MCA complaints but for YOUR situation, only a lawyer can negotiate.

14
SB small_biz_newbie 4mo ago

What’s the difference between debt settlement and debt consolidation for MCAs?

I keep seeing both terms. Are they the same? Which is better for MCA debt?

26
UD US_debt_relief_pro Verified 4mo ago

Very different:\n\nSettlement: Stop paying, attorney negotiates reduced lump sum (typically 40-55 cents on the dollar for MCAs). Most common for MCA debt.\n\nConsolidation: New loan pays off all MCAs. Still owe full amount but at lower rate. Harder because most traditional lenders won't refinance MCA debt.\n\nFor most the US business owners, settlement is better because: (1) factor rates are so high consolidation rarely makes sense, (2) legal arguments against MCAs give strong leverage you lose if you consolidate.

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