How Long Does MCA Debt Settlement Take
The timeline depends on complexity, leverage, and the funder’s internal process. Some settlements close in weeks. Some take months. The variable is not your patience. The variable is what the funder needs to see before it agrees.
There is no standard timeline for MCA debt settlement. The duration depends on the number of MCAs being settled, the complexity of the legal issues, the funder’s internal approval process, whether litigation or arbitration is pending, and the negotiation dynamics between the parties. Understanding each of these variables helps set realistic expectations and prevents premature concessions driven by frustration with the pace.
Simple Cases: Two to Six Weeks
A single MCA with a single funder, where the legal issues are clear and the settlement range is narrow, can sometimes be resolved in two to six weeks. The initial assessment takes a few days. The demand letter or initial communication goes out. The funder responds. A few rounds of negotiation follow. The settlement agreement is drafted, reviewed, and signed. The payment is made. The UCC lien is terminated.
This timeline assumes the funder has internal settlement authority, the legal issues are straightforward, and neither party has an incentive to delay. It is the best case, not the typical case.
Moderate Cases: Two to Four Months
Most MCA settlements fall into the two-to-four-month range. The additional time is consumed by the complexity of the legal analysis, multiple rounds of negotiation, the funder’s internal review process, and the logistics of drafting and executing the settlement agreement.
If a confession of judgment has been filed and needs to be vacated as part of the settlement, the court’s schedule adds time. If bank accounts have been frozen and emergency relief is being sought simultaneously with settlement negotiations, the dual-track process adds complexity. If the funder’s legal department needs to approve the settlement terms, the internal approval cycle may add weeks.
During this period, the business continues to operate — or struggles to operate — under the weight of the MCA obligation. The negotiation must balance the urgency of relief with the discipline of not accepting an inadequate settlement simply to end the process faster.
Complex Cases: Four to Eight Months or More
Stacked MCAs involving multiple funders, each with different legal positions and different settlement dynamics, can take four to eight months or longer. Each funder must be negotiated with separately. The settlement with one funder may affect the negotiation with another — particularly if the funders hold different priority positions on UCC liens.
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(212) 300-5196Cases involving active litigation add the litigation timeline to the settlement timeline. A lawsuit or arbitration proceeding may need to advance through discovery before the funder has sufficient incentive to settle. The discovery process reveals documents and information that strengthen or weaken each side’s position, and the settlement percentage often moves after key discovery milestones.
Cases involving federal or state regulatory investigations may also take longer, as the regulatory process can affect the funder’s willingness to settle and the terms available.
What You Can Do to Accelerate the Process
Preparation accelerates everything. A business owner who walks into the settlement process with organized documents, a calculated effective APR, an understanding of the legal claims available, and a clear target settlement range gives the attorney or negotiator the tools to move quickly. Disorganized records, missing agreements, and incomplete payment histories slow the process because the assessment phase takes longer.
Responsiveness accelerates the process. When the attorney or negotiator needs information, documents, or decisions, prompt responses keep the negotiation moving. Delays on your side create delays in the overall timeline.
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.
Realistic expectations accelerate the process. A business owner who understands that the first offer will not be the final offer, that the funder will counter, and that patience is a negotiation tool rather than a weakness is better positioned to navigate the timeline without making premature concessions. The settlement that takes three months and saves $80,000 is better than the settlement that takes three weeks and saves $30,000.
External factors can also affect the timeline. If the funder is undergoing its own financial difficulties, a regulatory investigation, or a change in management, the internal approval process may be delayed or accelerated unpredictably. If the legal landscape shifts — a new court decision recharacterizing MCAs in your jurisdiction, a state AG enforcement action against your funder — the settlement dynamics may change mid-negotiation. An attorney monitoring these developments can adjust the strategy in real time.
The overall timeline also depends on whether you are settling a single MCA or multiple stacked advances. A single MCA with a single funder is faster. Multiple MCAs with multiple funders require parallel negotiations, each on its own timeline, each influenced by the others. The multi-funder settlement is inherently more complex and typically takes longer, but the total debt reduction often justifies the additional time and effort.