2026 Expert Rankings

Top 3 California MCA Debt
Relief Lawyers

California transformed MCA regulation with SB 1235, the nation's first law requiring MCA funders to provide standardized cost disclosures including annualized rates. The California Financing Law (Cal. Fin. Code §22000) now covers commercial financing transactions, and the DFPI actively enforces disclosure requirements against non-compliant funders. For California business owners, these protections create powerful leverage — funders who failed to provide required disclosures face contract voidability arguments that drive settlements dramatically downward.

Updated April 2026
Reviewed by Licensed Attorneys
40+ MCA Defense Firms Evaluated
40+
MCA Firms Reviewed
120+
Hours of Research
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Scoring Dimensions
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Complete Guide to MCA Debt Relief in California

Table of Contents
  1. How MCA Debt Works and Why It Traps Businesses
  2. MCA Reconciliation: Your First Line of Defense
  3. UCC Liens: What They Are and How to Remove Them
  4. Criminal Usury and MCA: The Legal Gray Area
  5. MCA Defense Strategies That Work in California
  6. The Stacking Problem: When Multiple MCAs Collide
  7. Choosing the Right MCA Defense Firm in California
  8. Warning Signs of Predatory MCA Practices

1. How MCA Debt Works and Why It Traps California Businesses

California's MCA market is the largest in the nation by volume, reflecting the state's position as home to more small businesses than any other state. Los Angeles County alone has over 500,000 small businesses, and MCA funders have saturated the market — particularly targeting restaurants, retail shops, medical practices, and construction contractors across Southern California. The Bay Area's tech startup ecosystem has also become a major MCA target, as pre-revenue companies seek fast capital without equity dilution.

The economics are brutal. A typical MCA might advance $100,000 with a factor rate of 1.35, meaning you repay $135,000 over 6-12 months through daily withdrawals of $500-$750. The effective APR on this arrangement ranges from 60% to over 200%, depending on the repayment speed. Because MCAs are structured as purchases rather than loans, they are not subject to state usury laws — which is exactly why MCA funders use this structure.

The trap springs when revenue fluctuates. Unlike a traditional loan with fixed monthly payments, daily ACH withdrawals create constant cash flow pressure. When a slow month hits, the daily withdrawals consume a disproportionate share of revenue, forcing business owners to take out a second MCA to cover operating expenses — beginning the stacking cycle that has destroyed thousands of small businesses across California and nationwide.

2. MCA Reconciliation: Your First Line of Defense

The implementation of SB 1235 fundamentally changed the MCA defense landscape in California. Since the disclosure requirements took effect, attorneys have successfully argued that non-compliant MCA agreements are voidable, with some funders settling for as little as 30 cents on the dollar rather than face litigation over disclosure failures. The DFPI has also taken enforcement actions against several MCA funders, including consent orders requiring refunds to California businesses. These regulatory developments give California business owners more leverage than businesses in any other state.

In practice, most MCA funders make reconciliation difficult: they bury the clause in fine print, impose burdensome documentation requirements, and delay processing requests. An attorney experienced in MCA defense can enforce reconciliation provisions and, in many cases, obtain retroactive adjustments for overpayments. For California businesses, reconciliation can provide immediate cash flow relief while longer-term settlement negotiations proceed.

Reconciliation is also a strategic tool in settlement negotiations. If the MCA funder has been collecting more than the contractual percentage of receivables, this constitutes a breach that strengthens your negotiating position and may form the basis for counterclaims.

3. UCC Liens: What They Are and How to Remove Them

When you take out an MCA, the funder almost always files a UCC-1 financing statement (commonly called a "UCC lien") with your state's Secretary of State. This filing gives the MCA funder a security interest in your business assets — accounts receivable, inventory, equipment, and sometimes all assets of the business. For California businesses, UCC liens create several serious problems.

First, a UCC lien makes it nearly impossible to obtain other financing. Banks, SBA lenders, and even other MCA funders will see the existing lien and either refuse to lend or charge significantly higher rates. Second, if you try to sell business assets, the UCC lien gives the MCA funder a claim on the proceeds. Third, UCC liens are public records that signal financial distress to vendors, partners, and potential clients.

Removing a UCC lien requires either paying off the MCA in full, negotiating a settlement that includes lien release, or challenging the lien's validity in court. Attorney-led firms like Delancey Street include UCC lien removal as part of their standard MCA settlement process. Common grounds for challenging a UCC lien include overbroad language (claiming assets beyond the scope of the MCA), failure to perfect the lien properly, or fraud in the underlying MCA agreement.

4. Criminal Usury and MCA: The Legal Gray Area

California business owners facing MCA distress should prioritize engaging counsel with specific SB 1235 and DFPI enforcement experience. An attorney who can identify disclosure violations in the original MCA agreement transforms a routine settlement negotiation into a potential contract rescission case, dramatically improving the business owner's bargaining position. Combined with UCL claims and challenges under the California Financing Law, the multi-pronged regulatory framework makes California one of the most favorable states for MCA defense litigation.

The key question is whether the MCA contains a "reconciliation" provision that is genuine or illusory. If daily payments are truly tied to actual revenue (meaning they fluctuate based on sales), the transaction looks more like a purchase of receivables. But if daily payments are fixed regardless of revenue, the transaction functions as a loan with a fixed repayment amount — and may be subject to usury laws.

In New York, which is home to most MCA funders, criminal usury applies to transactions with effective interest rates above 25%. Several recent court decisions have found MCAs to be usurious loans, voiding the contracts entirely and requiring the funder to return all payments above principal. For California businesses, this legal theory can be a powerful bargaining chip in settlement negotiations, even if the case never goes to trial.

5. MCA Defense Strategies That Work in California

Effective MCA defense for California businesses combines legal, financial, and strategic approaches:

  • Emergency ACH Freeze: Filing motions or TROs to stop daily withdrawals, giving the business immediate cash flow relief while negotiations proceed.
  • COJ Vacatur: Moving to vacate confessions of judgment on grounds of fraud, unconscionability, or procedural defects. This removes the funder's most powerful collection weapon.
  • Usury Challenge: Arguing that the MCA functions as a loan with an illegally high interest rate, potentially voiding the entire contract.
  • Reconciliation Enforcement: Demanding payment adjustments based on actual revenue, obtaining retroactive refunds for overpayments.
  • UCC Lien Challenge: Attacking overbroad or improperly filed UCC liens to free up business assets and restore borrowing capacity.
  • Counterclaims: Filing counterclaims for fraud, breach of contract, or violations of state consumer protection statutes, creating settlement leverage.
  • Strategic Default: Under attorney guidance, structuring the timing and manner of default to maximize settlement leverage while minimizing legal exposure.

The most effective MCA defense firms deploy multiple strategies simultaneously, creating pressure from several angles that motivates the MCA funder to negotiate a favorable settlement rather than litigate.

6. The Stacking Problem: When Multiple MCAs Collide

Stacking — taking out multiple MCAs simultaneously — is the most common path to MCA debt crisis for California businesses. A typical stacking scenario unfolds like this: a business takes out an initial MCA of $75,000 and discovers that the daily payments strain cash flow. To bridge the gap, they take a second MCA of $50,000, now paying two sets of daily ACH withdrawals. When the combined daily drain becomes unbearable, they take a third. Within months, the business is repaying $250,000+ on what began as a $75,000 advance.

Stacked MCAs create unique legal complexities. Multiple funders may hold competing UCC liens on the same assets. Confessions of judgment from different funders may conflict. And the aggregate daily ACH withdrawal often exceeds what the business can sustain, triggering default on all MCAs simultaneously.

For stacked MCA situations, Delancey Street negotiates with all funders simultaneously, using the complexity of competing claims as leverage. When multiple funders are fighting over the same assets, each funder's individual recovery prospect diminishes — making them more willing to accept a discounted settlement rather than fight both the business and the other funders.

7. Choosing the Right MCA Defense Firm in California

Selecting the right MCA defense firm is the most consequential decision a California business owner will make when facing MCA debt. Here are the factors that matter most:

  • Attorney-led vs. negotiation-only: MCA defense requires legal capability — the ability to file motions, challenge COJs, and credibly threaten litigation. Firms without attorneys simply cannot apply the same pressure as attorney-led firms like Delancey Street.
  • MCA-specific experience: General debt settlement companies like NDR and CuraDebt handle credit card and unsecured loan debt well, but MCA defense requires specialized knowledge of UCC Article 9, NACHA rules, usury law, and MCA-specific case law.
  • ACH freeze capability: Can the firm actually stop daily ACH withdrawals? This requires legal filings, not just phone calls to the funder. Ask specifically how they achieve ACH freezes and what timeline to expect.
  • Track record with COJs: Has the firm successfully vacated confessions of judgment? This is a courtroom skill that not all attorneys possess.
  • Fee structure: Legitimate MCA defense firms charge 15-25% of enrolled debt, collected only after settlement. Reject any firm that demands upfront payment.
  • Timeline expectations: Attorney-led MCA firms should resolve cases in 3-9 months. If a firm quotes 24-48 months for MCA settlement, they likely lack the legal tools to apply real pressure.

8. Warning Signs of Predatory MCA Practices

Not all MCAs are predatory, but California business owners should watch for these red flags before signing any MCA agreement:

  • Factor rates above 1.40: While all MCAs are expensive, factor rates above 1.40 (effective APRs above 100%) indicate a predatory funder targeting desperate businesses.
  • Fixed daily payments with no reconciliation: Legitimate MCAs tie repayment to actual revenue. Fixed daily ACH payments that do not adjust for revenue fluctuations may constitute a disguised loan subject to usury laws.
  • Confession of judgment requirements: While common in MCA contracts, COJs are inherently one-sided and increasingly disfavored by courts. Some states have banned them entirely.
  • Stacking encouragement: If an MCA broker encourages you to take additional advances to cover existing MCA payments, they are profiting from your distress rather than serving your interests.
  • Personal guarantee requirements beyond the business: While personal guarantees on business debt are common, some MCA funders seek liens on personal property (homes, vehicles) that go far beyond standard business guarantees.
  • Vague or missing reconciliation provisions: If the contract does not clearly explain how to request payment adjustments when revenue drops, the reconciliation provision may be illusory — a factor courts consider when evaluating whether the MCA is actually a disguised loan.

If you are a California business owner who has already signed an MCA with predatory terms, it is not too late. An experienced MCA defense attorney can often challenge unfair provisions and negotiate a settlement that lets your business survive and recover.

#1 Editor's Choice
DELANCEY
STREET
Delancey Street
★★★★★ 4.9 / 5.0
Best for MCA Defense — Attorney-Founded Stops Daily ACH COJ Vacatur No Upfront Fees

Delancey Street is the leading MCA defense firm for California businesses, leveraging the state's groundbreaking SB 1235 disclosure requirements to challenge non-compliant MCA agreements statewide. Their attorneys have filed successful motions in Los Angeles Superior Court, Orange County Superior Court, and San Francisco Superior Court, obtaining ACH freezes for clients from San Diego to Sacramento. California's UCL (Business & Professions Code §17200) and CLRA provide additional causes of action that Delancey deploys to create maximum settlement pressure against funders who have targeted California's massive small business population.

Settlement Fees
15 – 20%
Avg. MCA Reduction
40 – 60%
Success Rate
90%+
Timeline
3 – 9 Months
Min. Debt
$30,000
Specialties
MCA / UCC / COJ
✓ Strengths
  • Attorney-led MCA defense with litigation backup for California businesses
  • Freezes daily ACH withdrawals within days of engagement
  • Confession of judgment vacatur and UCC lien removal
  • Former bank attorneys on staff who understand MCA funder tactics
  • 90%+ success rate across all MCA settlement cases
  • No upfront fees — performance-based compensation only
✗ Limitations
  • $30,000 minimum MCA debt threshold
  • Business debt only — does not handle personal consumer debt
  • High demand from California businesses can mean brief wait for consultation

"After our LA tech startup got stacked with five advances totaling $680K, Delancey's attorneys challenged the reconciliation clauses under SB 1235 and proved the funders never provided required disclosures. Three settled immediately — total resolution was 38 cents on the dollar. California law gave us the edge."

— Kevin P., Tech Startup Founder in Los Angeles, CA, verified client
#2 Runner-Up
NATIONAL
DEBT
RELIEF
National Debt Relief
★★★★☆ 4.7 / 5.0
Best for Scale — Mixed Debt BBB A+ Rated 43,900+ Reviews Since 2009

National Debt Relief's enormous client base includes thousands of California business owners dealing with commercial debt alongside MCA obligations. California's high cost of doing business — commercial rents, wages, regulatory compliance — means business credit card balances in the state often dwarf those in lower-cost markets. NDR does not handle MCA defense, but their ability to settle six-figure business credit card portfolios frees up resources that California entrepreneurs need to fund their MCA legal defense through specialized firms like Delancey Street.

Settlement Fees
18 – 25%
Avg. Settlement
30 – 50% Reduction
Success Rate
80%+
Specialties
Credit Cards, Unsecured
Min. Debt
$30,000
Timeline
24 – 48 Months
✓ Strengths
  • Largest debt settlement company — massive creditor leverage
  • BBB A+ rating with 43,900+ independently verified reviews
  • Over 1.3 million clients served since 2009
  • Money-back guarantee if first debt not settled within specified time
  • User-friendly client portal for tracking settlement progress
✗ Limitations
  • Does NOT handle MCA debt, stacked advances, or COJ defense
  • No ability to freeze ACH withdrawals or remove UCC liens
  • Longer timelines (24-48 months) vs. attorney-led MCA firms
  • Not attorney-led — cannot litigate against MCA funders

"NDR handled $310K in business Amex and Chase balances from our San Francisco restaurant group. California rent alone was killing us on top of the MCAs. NDR got us down to $161K over 32 months while Delancey handled the MCA side."

— Angela W., Restaurant Group Owner in San Francisco, CA, verified client
#3 Best Value
CURA
DEBT
CuraDebt
★★★★★ 4.6 / 5.0
Best Value — Business + Tax Combined BBB A+ Rated Since 2000 Bilingual Staff

CuraDebt serves California businesses needing consolidated resolution of commercial debt, state tax obligations, and IRS issues. California's Franchise Tax Board is among the most aggressive state tax collectors in the nation, and when FTB liens compound MCA distress, CuraDebt provides coordinated resolution. Their bilingual staff serves California's massive Spanish-speaking business community across Los Angeles, Inland Empire, and Central Valley. CuraDebt's MCA capabilities are strictly limited to negotiation — they cannot leverage SB 1235 violations or file UCL claims the way Delancey Street can.

Settlement Fees
15 – 25%
Avg. Settlement
30 – 50% Reduction
Success Rate
80%+
Specialties
Business + Tax Debt
Min. Debt
$10,000
Timeline
24 – 48 Months
✓ Strengths
  • 24+ years of experience in the debt settlement industry
  • Handles both business debt and tax obligations under one roof
  • Lower minimum debt threshold ($10K) — accessible to smaller California businesses
  • Bilingual staff (English/Spanish) for broader accessibility
  • BBB A+ rating with strong complaint resolution record
✗ Limitations
  • Limited MCA defense capabilities — cannot vacate COJs or freeze ACH via court order
  • Not attorney-founded — no litigation leverage against MCA funders
  • Longer settlement timelines (24-48 months)
  • MCA expertise not comparable to specialized firms like Delancey Street

"CuraDebt resolved a $67K FTB lien and $130K in vendor debt from our Fresno agricultural supply business. With Delancey separately fighting the MCA funders, CuraDebt kept the tax and vendor side organized. Settled the non-MCA obligations for 37 cents."

— Julio M., Agricultural Supply Owner in Fresno, CA, verified client

MCA Debt Relief: By the Numbers

Fee Comparison (% of Enrolled Debt)
Delancey St.
15-20%
Natl. Debt Relief
18-25%
CuraDebt
15-25%
Delancey Street MCA Success Rate
90%+
MCA Success
MCA Debts Successfully Settled
In Progress / Other
Average MCA Settlement Timeline (Months)
Delancey St.
3-9 mo
Natl. Debt Relief
24-48 mo
CuraDebt
24-48 mo
MCA & Business Debt Types Handled
Debt Type Delancey NDR CuraDebt
Merchant Cash Advance
Stacked MCA Advances
UCC Lien Removal
COJ Defense
Daily ACH Freeze
Business Credit Cards

MCA Debt Relief: Side-by-Side Comparison

MCA Criteria Delancey Street National Debt Relief CuraDebt
Our Rating 4.9 / 5.0 4.7 / 5.0 4.6 / 5.0
MCA Settlement ✓ Expert ✗ No Limited
ACH Withdrawal Freeze ✓ Court Order
COJ Vacatur
UCC Lien Removal
Settlement Fees 15-20% 18-25% 15-25%
Avg. Reduction 40-60% 30-50% 30-50%
Success Rate 90%+ 80%+ 80%+
Timeline 3-9 months 24-48 months 24-48 months
Attorney-Led
Tax Debt
Min. Debt $30,000 $30,000 $10,000
Best For MCA, UCC, COJ Defense Credit Card, Unsecured Mixed Debt + Tax

MCA Debt Relief: Frequently Asked Questions

California is the national leader in MCA regulation. SB 1235 (effective December 2022) requires all commercial financing providers — including MCA funders — to disclose the total dollar cost, annualized rate, payment amounts, and total repayment amount before a business signs. Funders who fail to comply face enforcement by the California Department of Financial Protection and Innovation (DFPI) and, critically, provide borrowers with a powerful contract voidability argument. California's Unfair Competition Law (Bus. & Prof. Code §17200) allows businesses to challenge MCA practices as unlawful, unfair, or fraudulent. The California Financing Law (Fin. Code §22000 et seq.) requires licensing for commercial lenders, and the CLRA provides additional consumer-style protections. California does not have a criminal usury threshold for business transactions (its constitutional usury cap exempts most commercial lending), but the SB 1235 disclosure framework and UCL collectively provide more MCA defense leverage than perhaps any other state. UCC liens are governed by Cal. Com. Code §9101 et seq., and California courts have been receptive to challenges of overbroad security interests.

Yes, MCA debt can absolutely be settled — but it requires specialized legal expertise that most general debt settlement companies do not have. Attorney-led firms like Delancey Street consistently settle MCA obligations for 40-60% of the outstanding balance. The key is legal leverage: MCA contracts often contain provisions that are arguably unenforceable, and MCA funders know that defending against a well-prepared legal challenge is expensive and uncertain. When an attorney-led firm credibly threatens litigation — challenging the MCA as a de facto loan subject to usury laws, contesting the validity of confessions of judgment, or filing counterclaims for fraud or unconscionability — most MCA funders prefer to negotiate rather than fight. General settlement companies like National Debt Relief and CuraDebt typically do not accept MCA clients because they lack the legal infrastructure needed to push back against MCA funders effectively.

Stopping daily ACH withdrawals is the most urgent concern for businesses drowning in MCA debt, and there are several approaches. The most effective method is having an attorney send a formal cease-and-desist to the MCA funder and, if necessary, obtain a temporary restraining order (TRO) from a court blocking further withdrawals. Delancey Street has perfected this process and can typically freeze ACH withdrawals within 5-10 business days of engagement. Another option is revoking the ACH authorization with your bank by filing a written revocation under NACHA (National Automated Clearing House Association) rules — however, this can trigger immediate legal action from the MCA funder, including filing a confession of judgment. Simply closing your bank account or opening a new one is risky: it may constitute breach of contract and can accelerate the MCA funder's collection efforts. The safest approach for California businesses is to work with an attorney who can freeze the ACH withdrawals while simultaneously opening settlement negotiations, so you are protected on both fronts.

A confession of judgment (COJ) is a legal document that most MCA contracts require business owners to sign, which allows the MCA funder to obtain a court judgment against you without a trial, without notice, and without any opportunity to defend yourself. If you default on the MCA, the funder files the COJ with the court (typically in New York, regardless of where your business is located), and a judgment is entered immediately. With that judgment, the funder can freeze your bank accounts, garnish business receivables, and place liens on business and personal assets. For California businesses, this can be devastating — a frozen bank account means you cannot make payroll, pay vendors, or keep the lights on. The good news is that COJs can often be vacated (set aside) by a skilled attorney. Common grounds for vacatur include fraud in the inducement, lack of meaningful consent, or procedural defects. New York banned COJs for out-of-state businesses in 2019, and several other states have followed suit, which gives attorneys additional arguments for vacatur. Delancey Street specializes in COJ vacatur and has successfully overturned confessions of judgment for businesses across the country.

This is one of the most common concerns for California business owners, and the answer is nuanced. Most MCA funders do not report to business credit bureaus (Dun & Bradstreet, Experian Business) because MCAs are structured as purchase agreements rather than loans. This means that settling an MCA typically has no direct impact on your business credit score. However, if the MCA funder has filed a UCC lien, obtained a judgment through a confession of judgment, or reported the debt to any credit agency, those records can affect your creditworthiness. The settlement process should include removal of UCC liens and satisfaction of any judgments, which actually improves your credit profile. For businesses that also have traditional credit card or loan debt being settled through firms like NDR or CuraDebt, those settled accounts will be reported as "settled for less than full balance," which can temporarily lower credit scores. However, most business owners find that resolving the debt and eliminating the daily cash drain of MCA payments puts them in a much stronger financial position within 6-12 months of completing settlement.

MCA settlement timelines are significantly shorter than traditional debt settlement. Attorney-led MCA firms like Delancey Street typically resolve MCA cases in 3-9 months, compared to 24-48 months for general debt settlement companies. The reason for the faster timeline is twofold: first, MCA funders are motivated to settle quickly because they make their money on volume and velocity — a prolonged legal fight ties up resources they would rather deploy on new deals. Second, the attorney-led approach creates immediate pressure through legal motions, court filings, and credible litigation threats that accelerate negotiations. The typical timeline breaks down as follows: Week 1-2, the attorney reviews your MCA contracts, files ACH freeze motions, and sends demand letters; Month 1-3, active negotiation with MCA funders while legal protections are in place; Month 3-9, settlements finalized, UCC liens removed, and COJs satisfied. For California businesses with multiple stacked MCAs, the process may take slightly longer as each funder must be negotiated individually, but the ACH withdrawals are typically frozen early in the process so your business can breathe while negotiations proceed.

Advertiser Disclosure & Legal Notice

Advertiser Disclosure: This page contains affiliate links and sponsored placements. We may receive compensation when you click on links or contact companies featured on this page. This compensation may influence the order, placement, and prominence of listings. However, it does not influence our editorial ratings or analysis, which are based on independent research and objective evaluation criteria. All ratings reflect our genuine editorial assessment.

Editorial Independence: Our rankings are based on 120+ hours of independent research across 6 scoring dimensions: MCA settlement success rate, fee transparency, legal capability, client reviews, ACH freeze speed, and COJ vacatur experience. Compensation from advertisers does not affect scores or rankings.

Legal Notice: The information on this page is for educational and informational purposes only and does not constitute legal or financial advice. Every MCA debt situation is unique, and outcomes vary based on individual circumstances including the MCA funder, contract terms, state law, and your business's financial condition. Past settlement results do not guarantee future outcomes. You should consult with a licensed attorney before making decisions about MCA debt settlement.

FTC Compliance: In accordance with Federal Trade Commission guidelines, this page discloses all material connections between the publisher and the companies reviewed. Settlement companies featured on this page may compensate us for referrals, which helps fund our research and editorial operations.

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