MCA Debt Relief Options in Georgia
Georgia’s industrial usury statute is one of the toughest in the country. A recharacterized MCA that exceeds the threshold does not merely create a defense. It creates a forfeiture of the entire interest charged — not just the excess, but all of it.
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Georgia’s economy — driven by logistics, hospitality, healthcare, construction, technology, and professional services in the Atlanta metro area and across the state — makes it a significant market for merchant cash advances. Business owners seeking fast working capital sign MCA agreements that carry effective costs far higher than traditional financing, often without understanding the true price until the daily withdrawals begin to compound against declining revenue.
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Georgia’s legal framework provides meaningful and powerful protections for MCA borrowers, anchored by one of the nation’s most consequential usury statutes and a consumer protection law that addresses deceptive lending and financing practices. The forfeiture remedy alone makes Georgia one of the strongest states for borrowers challenging MCA agreements.
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The Legal Landscape in Georgia
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Georgia’s Industrial Loan Act, O.C.G.A. § 7-3-14, imposes severe penalties for usurious lending. A lender who charges interest exceeding 5% per month (60% per annum) forfeits the entire interest on the loan. The borrower is required to repay only the principal. This is not a reduction in interest to the statutory maximum. It is a complete forfeiture of all interest charged. On an MCA where the borrower is repaying $140,000 on a $100,000 advance, the forfeiture eliminates the $40,000 premium entirely. The borrower repays only $100,000, less any payments already credited to principal.
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Georgia’s Fair Business Practices Act, O.C.G.A. § 10-1-390 et seq., prohibits deceptive and unfair practices in consumer and commercial transactions. The statute covers misrepresentation of the cost and terms of financial products, omission of material information, and deceptive collection practices. Prevailing plaintiffs can recover actual damages, attorney’s fees, and in some cases, additional penalties. The combination of the FBPA with the Industrial Loan Act’s forfeiture remedy creates a two-pronged legal framework that addresses both the deceptive conduct and the excessive cost.
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Georgia does not permit confessions of judgment. Any judgment entered against a Georgia business owner must be obtained through conventional litigation with full due process protections. The funder cannot bypass the court system to freeze accounts or seize assets without filing a lawsuit, serving the defendant, and giving the defendant the opportunity to defend. This prohibition levels the playing field and ensures that every MCA dispute in Georgia is resolved through a process where both sides are heard.
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Recharacterization and Usury
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The recharacterization analysis in Georgia follows the national risk-based framework. If the funder eliminated its downside risk through fixed payments, personal guarantees, non-functional reconciliation clauses, and aggressive collection mechanisms, the transaction is a loan. Georgia courts have the benefit of the analytical framework developed in New York and other jurisdictions, and the reasoning is directly applicable.
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When a recharacterized MCA produces an effective APR exceeding 60%, the Industrial Loan Act’s penalty provisions apply: the lender forfeits all interest. The borrower repays only the principal advanced. On a $100,000 advance with a factor rate of 1.40, the lender forfeits the $40,000 premium and recovers only the $100,000 principal, less payments already made. If payments already made exceed the principal, the borrower owes nothing and may have a claim for recovery of the excess payments.
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Many recharacterized MCAs produce effective APRs well above 60%, meaning the forfeiture provision is triggered easily and decisively. The 60% threshold, while high compared to traditional lending rates, is routinely exceeded by MCA products that carry effective rates of 100% to 300% or more. The mathematical exercise of calculating the effective rate and comparing it to the threshold is straightforward. The legal consequence — total interest forfeiture — is devastating to the funder’s claim.
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Your Relief Options
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Usury defense with interest forfeiture. Georgia’s forfeiture remedy is one of the strongest in the country. The lender loses all interest — not just the interest exceeding the 60% cap, but the entire interest component of the repayment. The borrower repays only the principal. This remedy can reduce a $140,000 obligation to $100,000 minus payments already made, and if payments already made exceed $100,000, the borrower owes nothing and may recover the excess.
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Fair Business Practices Act claims. Deceptive marketing, cost misrepresentation, omission of material terms, and illegal collection practices are actionable under the FBPA. The statute’s attorney’s fees provision makes it economically viable to pursue claims of moderate size, and the combination of FBPA damages with the Industrial Loan Act’s forfeiture can produce results that exceed the borrower’s expectations.
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Defense against out-of-state judgments. Georgia’s prohibition on confessions of judgment means any New York COJ must be domesticated through Georgia’s Uniform Enforcement of Foreign Judgments Act, which provides a full opportunity to challenge the judgment’s validity on jurisdictional, procedural, and substantive grounds. The domestication process is not a rubber stamp.
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Settlement negotiation is particularly effective in Georgia because the funder’s exposure to complete interest forfeiture under the Industrial Loan Act creates extraordinary incentive to settle at a deep discount rather than risk losing the entire interest component at trial. A funder facing total forfeiture of interest has every reason to negotiate, and the negotiation dynamics favor the borrower who has established the legal basis for the forfeiture claim.
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Practical Steps
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Gather your MCA agreement, payment history, and all communications with the funder and broker. Calculate the total amount repaid versus the amount advanced. This calculation is the starting point for assessing whether the interest forfeiture provision applies. If you have repaid more than the original advance amount, the excess may be recoverable.
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Consult a Georgia attorney experienced in commercial financing disputes. Georgia’s combination of the Industrial Loan Act’s forfeiture remedy, the Fair Business Practices Act, and the prohibition on confessions of judgment creates a legal environment that is exceptionally favorable to MCA borrowers. The strategy centers on the forfeiture remedy, which transforms the dispute from a negotiation over the discount amount into a legal question with a binary outcome: either the interest is forfeited or it is not. The answer to that question depends on the effective rate, and the effective rate depends on the math.