MCA Debt Relief for Trucking and Transportation Companies
The advance was supposed to cover a new truck, a repair bill, or a gap between loads. The daily withdrawal is now consuming the revenue from the loads the truck was supposed to haul. The math is circular, and the circle is tightening.
Trucking and transportation companies are among the most heavily targeted industries for merchant cash advances. The business model is capital-intensive, the cash flow cycles are irregular, and the need for equipment maintenance, fuel, and insurance creates constant demand for working capital. MCA brokers understand the trucking industry’s cash flow patterns and exploit them. The pitch is always the same: fast funding, no hard credit pull, repayment based on revenue. The reality is always the same too: fixed daily withdrawals that do not adjust when loads dry up, fuel prices spike, or a truck goes down for repairs.
Why Trucking Companies Are Vulnerable
Trucking revenue is inherently lumpy. A carrier may have a strong week followed by a slow week. A broker load may pay well but not for 30 to 45 days. A contract carrier may lose a lane or a customer. A fuel price spike may eliminate the margin on existing loads. The MCA’s daily withdrawal does not adjust for any of this. The payment is the same whether the truck hauled five loads or sat idle in the yard.
Equipment costs create additional vulnerability. A major repair — an engine overhaul, a transmission replacement, a DOT inspection failure — can cost tens of thousands of dollars and take the truck out of service for days or weeks. During the downtime, the truck generates no revenue, but the MCA withdrawal continues. The advance that was taken to keep the truck running is now being paid by a truck that is not running.
Owner-operators and small fleets are particularly exposed because they often lack the financial reserves to absorb the combined impact of MCA withdrawals and operational disruptions. A single-truck owner-operator with a $50,000 MCA and a $15,000 engine repair faces a cash flow crisis that threatens the entire operation.
Industry-Specific Challenges
Trucking companies face additional challenges in MCA disputes because the MCA’s UCC lien may encumber the trucks themselves. The UCC-1 filing typically covers all business assets, including equipment. If the funder has a blanket lien on the company’s assets, selling or refinancing a truck may require the funder’s consent or the lien’s termination. The lien traps the equipment inside the MCA relationship.
Factoring companies — which purchase freight invoices to provide immediate cash for hauled loads — search the UCC database before onboarding a new client. An existing MCA lien on the trucking company’s receivables may prevent the company from obtaining factoring, which is the most common working capital tool in the trucking industry. The MCA lien blocks the trucking company’s access to the very financing product designed for its business model.
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Relief Options for Trucking Companies
Settlement negotiations for trucking companies leverage the funder’s awareness that a trucking company with no working capital is a trucking company with parked trucks. Parked trucks generate no revenue. No revenue means no recovery for the funder. The funder’s interest is in a settlement that keeps the trucks moving and generates at least a partial recovery, rather than an enforcement action that parks the fleet and produces nothing.
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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.
UCC lien removal or subordination is particularly important for trucking companies that need to access factoring or equipment financing. The settlement negotiation should include the UCC-3 termination as a priority term. Reconciliation requests supported by load documentation, fuel receipts, and settlement statements from brokers or shippers provide strong evidence of revenue variability. An attorney experienced in MCA disputes for transportation clients understands the industry’s specific cash flow patterns, the interaction between MCA liens and factoring relationships, and the leverage points that produce the best outcomes for trucking companies.
For owner-operators and small fleet owners, the MCA’s impact is existential. A single truck generating $15,000 to $25,000 per month in revenue cannot sustain daily MCA withdrawals of $500 to $1,000 while also covering fuel, insurance, maintenance, and the driver’s compensation. The math does not work, and the funder knows it. This mathematical reality is itself a form of leverage: the funder can pursue the full balance and receive nothing when the truck is parked and the owner-operator files personal bankruptcy, or the funder can accept a settlement that preserves the operation and generates a partial recovery.
The trucking industry’s reliance on factoring as a primary working capital tool means that UCC lien removal is often the most important term in the settlement, sometimes more important than the settlement amount itself. A trucking company that settles its MCA and clears its UCC liens can immediately access factoring, which provides the ongoing working capital the business needs to operate. The lien removal is not just a legal housekeeping item. It is the gateway to financial recovery.