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Questions to Ask Before Taking a Second Merchant Cash Advance

The first advance created a cash flow gap. The second advance is being offered to fill it. Before you sign, ask the questions the broker does not want you to ask. The answers will determine whether the second advance helps or accelerates the problem.

Taking a second MCA while the first is still active is one of the most consequential financial decisions a small business owner can make. It is also one of the most common. MCA brokers actively solicit businesses with existing advances, offering additional capital that sounds like relief but may be the first step into a stacking cycle that the business cannot sustain. Before accepting, ask these questions and demand honest answers.

What Is the Combined Daily Withdrawal?

Add the daily payment on the existing MCA to the daily payment on the proposed second advance. Compare the combined total to your average daily revenue. If the combined withdrawals exceed 10% of daily revenue, the structure is likely unsustainable. If they exceed 15%, the business will be under severe cash flow pressure within weeks. If they exceed 20%, the business is signing its own financial distress order. The broker will not perform this calculation for you. Perform it yourself.

What Is the Effective Cost on the Net New Capital?

If the second advance includes a payoff of the first advance’s remaining balance, calculate the net new capital — the total funded amount minus the payoff. Then calculate the total repayment on the new advance. The difference between the total repayment and the net new capital is the true cost of the money you actually receive. Express it as a percentage. Express it as an APR. If the effective cost on the net new capital exceeds the cost of the original advance — and it almost always does when a payoff is involved — the second advance is more expensive than the first.

Why Do I Need More Capital?

This is the most important question and the one the broker is least interested in answering. If the answer is that the first MCA’s daily withdrawal created a working capital shortage, the second advance is treating the symptom of the first. The second advance will create its own daily withdrawal, which will create a new shortage, which will create pressure for a third advance. The cycle has a name: stacking. The cycle has a destination: unsustainable debt.

If the answer is a genuine, identifiable business need — a specific equipment purchase, a specific inventory buy, a specific project with a defined return — evaluate whether the MCA is the right product for that need. Equipment financing, invoice factoring, a line of credit, or an SBA loan may serve the same need at a fraction of the cost.

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What Happens If I Default on Either Advance?

Review the cross-default provisions. Many MCA agreements provide that a default on any other financial obligation constitutes a default on the MCA. If the first and second advances contain cross-default provisions, a default on either one triggers a default on both. Both funders can accelerate simultaneously. Both can file confessions of judgment. Both can freeze your accounts. The cascading effect of cross-default provisions turns a single problem into a dual crisis.

Have I Explored Alternatives?

Before taking a second MCA, have you applied for a business line of credit from a community bank or credit union? Have you explored invoice factoring? Have you contacted your existing MCA funder to request reconciliation? Have you consulted an attorney about the enforceability of the first MCA? Each of these alternatives is less expensive and less risky than a second advance. If you have not explored them, you are not making an informed decision. You are accepting the option presented by the person with a commission on the line.

The second MCA should be the last resort, not the first call returned. The questions above take an hour to answer. The second advance’s consequences last months. The hour is the best investment of time the business owner can make before signing.

Todd Spodek
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Todd Spodek

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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.

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The broker offering the second advance earns a commission regardless of your answers to these questions. The broker’s incentive is to close the deal, not to evaluate whether the deal is in your interest. Your incentive is to evaluate the deal before you close it. The questions above provide the framework for that evaluation. The answers determine whether the second advance is a strategic move or the beginning of a stacking cycle that the business cannot sustain.

If the answers to these questions suggest that the second advance will create unsustainable daily obligations, will cost more on a net-new-capital basis than the first advance, and will be used primarily to cover a cash flow gap created by the first advance, the second advance is a trap, not a solution. The solution is to address the first advance — through reconciliation, settlement, or legal challenge — not to layer a second obligation on top of it.

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Todd Spodek

Managing Partner

With decades of experience in high-stakes federal criminal defense, Todd Spodek has built a reputation for aggressive, strategic representation. Featured on Netflix's "Inventing Anna," he has successfully defended clients facing federal charges, white-collar allegations, and complex criminal cases in federal courts nationwide.

Bar Admissions: New York State Bar New Jersey State Bar U.S. District Court, SDNY U.S. District Court, EDNY
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