Not every settlement offer is what it appears to be. Some offers resolve the problem. Some create new ones. The difference is in the details, and the details are where the red flags hide.
When an MCA funder offers to settle, the natural response is relief. The negotiation is working. The end is in sight. The instinct is to accept quickly before the offer disappears. That instinct is dangerous. Settlement offers from MCA funders can contain provisions that undermine the value of the settlement, create new obligations, or leave you exposed to future claims. Identifying the red flags before you sign is the difference between a resolution and a trap.
No Written Release
The most fundamental red flag is a settlement that does not include a full written release of all claims. A settlement without a release means the funder accepts your payment and retains the right to pursue additional claims in the future. The funder may argue that the settlement covered only the principal balance, not the fees. Or that the personal guarantee was not included in the release. Or that the release applied only to the specific MCA, not to related claims. Without a comprehensive written release, the payment reduces the balance without eliminating the dispute.
No UCC-3 Termination
If the settlement agreement does not require the funder to file a UCC-3 termination statement within a specified number of days, the lien on your business assets remains on file even after the settlement is paid. The lien continues to impair your ability to obtain financing, and removing it after the fact requires additional legal effort. The UCC-3 obligation should be explicit in the agreement, with a defined timeline — typically within ten to twenty days of payment.
Confession of Judgment Not Addressed
If a confession of judgment has been filed against you, the settlement agreement must require the funder to vacate the judgment and release any restraints based on it. A settlement that resolves the debt but leaves the judgment on the record is incomplete. The judgment remains a lien on your property. It remains on your credit record. It remains a weapon the funder should no longer possess. If the settlement agreement does not address the judgment, the omission is a red flag.
For more on this topic, see How to Negotiate with MCA Funders Without a Lawyer.
Accelerated Payment Timeline
Some settlement offers require payment within an unreasonably short timeframe — 48 hours, five business days, or similarly compressed windows. The compressed timeline is a pressure tactic. It prevents you from reviewing the terms carefully, consulting an attorney, or securing the best financing for the settlement payment. A legitimate settlement can accommodate a reasonable payment timeline — typically 14 to 30 days, or a structured payment plan if a lump sum is not immediately available.