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5 Dangers of Merchant Cash Advances Nobody Warns You About

5 min read

Most business owners who sign a merchant cash advance agreement do not realize what they have agreed to until the first withdrawal hits their account. The document they signed was not a loan application. It was a purchase agreement for future revenue, and that distinction, which sounds like a technicality, determines everything that follows.

The MCA industry has operated for years in a regulatory gap between commercial lending and consumer protection. In January 2025, the New York Attorney General secured a judgment exceeding one billion dollars against Yellowstone Capital and its affiliates for what the state called predatory loans disguised as merchant cash advances. Some of those agreements carried effective annual rates above 800 percent. New York civil usury laws cap interest on small loans at 16 percent. The distance between those two numbers tells you what the gap looks like in practice.

The Daily Debit That Starves Your Operating Account

A traditional loan sends you a monthly statement. You plan around it. An MCA pulls from your bank account every business day, sometimes before your morning deposit clears. The amount withdrawn is calculated as a fixed percentage of projected daily revenue, but the projection belongs to the funder, not to you, and it rarely accounts for the Tuesday afternoon when foot traffic disappears or the week your largest client delays payment.

What makes this arrangement dangerous is not merely the frequency. It is the priority. That daily debit executes before payroll, before rent, before the vendor who keeps your shelves stocked. Over three to six months, this steady extraction can reduce your operating cash to a margin so thin that one slow week triggers a cascade. We have seen businesses with healthy gross revenue close their doors because the MCA left them with nothing to operate on between deposits.

The funders know this. They structure the withdrawal schedule around it.

The Confession of Judgment Buried on Page Nine

Before New York banned confessions of judgment in consumer transactions, MCA companies used them as a standard collection tool. A confession of judgment is a pre-signed legal document that allows the funder to obtain a court judgment against you without filing a lawsuit, without notice, and without giving you the opportunity to respond. You agree to it when you sign the MCA contract. Most borrowers do not know the clause exists until their bank account is frozen.

The FTC permanently banned at least one MCA operator from the industry for weaponizing confessions of judgment to seize assets. But the clause persists in contracts issued by funders operating in states where enforcement remains lax. Even in jurisdictions that have restricted the practice, some companies file in friendly courts and hope the borrower lacks the resources to challenge the venue.

In MCA Servicing Co. v. Nic’s Painting, LLC, a 2024 ruling from the New York Supreme Court, the judge denied summary judgment and wrote that the court would not be used as a cudgel to enforce potentially illegal and unconscionable agreements. That language was unusual. Most borrowers never reach a courtroom.

The Factor Rate Disguised as Simplicity

An MCA does not quote an interest rate. It quotes a factor rate, typically between 1.2 and 1.5, which means you repay $1.20 to $1.50 for every dollar advanced. The number sounds manageable. It is designed to sound manageable.

But a factor rate of 1.4 on a six month advance translates to an annualized cost that can exceed 80 percent. On a three month advance, the same factor rate approaches 160 percent. The math is not hidden. It is simply never presented in a form that invites comparison with conventional financing. California’s SB 1235 and New York’s Commercial Financing Disclosure Law now require funders to provide APR equivalents in pre-funding disclosures, but compliance remains uneven, and the disclosures arrive after the business owner has already decided they need the money.

One does not comparison shop when the lights are about to go off.

Personal Guarantees That Follow You Home

The MCA is structured as a commercial transaction between two business entities. That framing dissolves the moment you read the personal guarantee clause. Nearly every MCA contract requires the business owner to guarantee repayment individually, which means the funder can pursue your personal assets, your savings, your home equity, your spouse’s joint accounts, if the business cannot cover the balance.

This is where the “it is not a loan” distinction works against you with particular force. Because the MCA is classified as a purchase of future receivables, the consumer protections that limit personal liability in traditional lending do not apply. The guarantee is unlimited in most contracts. It survives the closure of the business. And it frequently includes a clause granting the funder access to your personal bank accounts through an ACH authorization that you signed alongside the business authorization, probably on the same page, probably without distinguishing one from the other.

I have sat across from business owners who did not know their personal checking account could be debited until the morning it was.

The Stacking Trap

When one MCA bleeds your cash flow, the temptation to take a second advance from a different funder becomes difficult to resist. The second funder knows about the first. They approve you anyway, at a higher factor rate, because the desperation that drove you to a second MCA is the same desperation that makes you unlikely to read the terms. This is called stacking, and it is the most common path from MCA debt to business insolvency.

Three advances running simultaneously can extract 40 to 60 percent of daily revenue before the business owner touches a dollar. The funders compete for priority, sometimes filing UCC liens against each other, sometimes racing to freeze accounts. The business becomes a carcass being picked over by parties who each believe they are entitled to the largest share. By the time a borrower contacts an attorney, the operating account has been drained, the credit line is exhausted, and the only remaining question is whether the business can be saved or merely wound down in an orderly fashion.

That question deserves an honest answer, and it deserves one before the third funder calls.

What Comes After the Realization

The MCA industry will not reform itself. The margins are too attractive, the regulatory framework too fragmented, and the borrowers too desperate at the point of sale to exert market pressure. What changes outcomes is early legal involvement, ideally before the second advance, certainly before the confession of judgment is filed.

A consultation costs nothing and assumes nothing. It is where the conversation about what your contract actually says, and what your options actually are, begins.


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Todd Spodek

Todd Spodek

Managing Partner, Spodek Law Group

With decades of experience in criminal defense, Todd has been featured on Netflix, CNN, Fox News, and major legal publications.

Facing Criminal Charges?

Contact Spodek Law Group now for a free, confidential consultation. Available 24/7.

5 Dangers of Merchant Cash Advances Nobody Warns You About

5 min read

The Warnings You Receive Are About the Wrong Things

When merchants ask about the risks of merchant cash advances, they receive warnings about high factor rates, short repayment periods, and daily debits. Those are real concerns. They are also the concerns that appear on every competitor’s comparison article, every financial advice site, and every disclosure that is actually made. The five dangers described below are the ones that surface after the agreement is signed, sometimes months later, when the merchant has no remaining leverage and limited options.

The Reconciliation Clause Is a Promise That Rarely Performs

Almost every MCA agreement contains a reconciliation provision. In theory, this clause allows the merchant to request an adjustment to daily payment amounts when revenue declines below the level assumed at origination. The MCA is structured as a purchase of future receivables at a specified percentage, and if the payment amount no longer reflects that percentage, the merchant can request reconciliation.

In practice, funders retain significant discretion over whether to grant the request, when to process it, and what documentation to require. Contracts that specify reconciliation is “at the sole discretion of the funder” provide essentially no protection; the funder can deny every request while remaining technically within the agreement. Merchants whose revenue drops by 40% continue paying at the original daily rate because the reconciliation process is designed to be cumbersome enough to discourage use.

Courts examining MCA agreements for loan-versus-purchase classification have noted that the practical inaccessibility of reconciliation rights makes the advance look more like a fixed-payment loan than a contingent revenue purchase. That observation has not yet uniformly produced outcomes favorable to merchants, but it has influenced judicial analysis in several recent cases in the Southern District of New York.

A June 2025 SBA Rule Eliminates a Common Exit Path

For years, merchants trapped in expensive MCA positions used SBA loans as a refinancing vehicle. The SBA 7(a) program offered substantially lower effective costs, and refinancing an MCA with SBA proceeds was a recognized path out of a high-cost position. As of June 2025, that exit is closed. A new SBA rule prohibits the use of 7(a) loan proceeds to refinance merchant cash advances. The SBA’s stated rationale was that MCA costs are so high that using subsidized government lending to retire them created an inappropriate use of the program.

The practical effect on merchants currently servicing MCA positions is that one of the most accessible refinancing paths is no longer available. Conventional bank loans, credit unions, and CDFIs remain options, but each requires creditworthiness standards that merchants in financial difficulty may not meet. The closure of the SBA refinancing path arrived without the attention it deserved from the business press, and many merchants and their advisors do not yet know it happened.

Acceleration on Technical Default Arrives Before You Know It Is Coming

The acceleration clause converts a future payment stream into an immediate, total obligation upon default. And default, as discussed elsewhere, can be triggered by events that have nothing to do with payment failure. The danger that nobody warns about is the combination of acceleration and confessed judgment: a technical default triggers acceleration, which the funder executes by filing the pre-signed confession of judgment, which produces a court judgment against the business without notice or hearing. The merchant’s bank account may be restrained before they receive any communication from the funder.

The Bloomberg Businessweek investigation that exposed these practices documented cases where the default was entirely manufactured. The amount on the confessed judgment did not match the balance owed. The default event had not occurred. These were not isolated aberrations; they were practices associated with specific funders who operated at volume. The New York Attorney General’s ongoing enforcement activity has addressed some of these operators. The practice has not disappeared.

The Personal Guarantee Survives the Business

A merchant who closes their business and walks away from the MCA balance does not walk away from the obligation. The personal guarantee in the agreement reaches through the entity and attaches to the individual owner’s personal assets. Years after a business has ceased operations, the funder or a debt buyer who purchased the obligation may pursue collection against the former owner’s personal bank accounts, real property, or other assets.

One practitioner in this space described the pattern as a slow-motion liability: the merchant forgets about the guarantee once the business closes, the obligation sits dormant until the statute of limitations runs or a buyer acquires the debt and resumes collection, and the former owner encounters judgment enforcement against personal assets they had believed were safe. The guarantee is not buried. It is in every MCA agreement, and it is enforceable in most jurisdictions for as long as the applicable limitations period permits.

Early Payoff Does Not Reduce the Total Amount Owed

This is perhaps the most counterintuitive feature of the MCA structure, and the one that merchants most frequently misunderstand at the point of sale. With a conventional loan, prepayment reduces interest costs. With an MCA, early payoff does not affect the total repayment amount. The factor rate produces a fixed dollar obligation on the first day of the agreement. Paying it in sixty days instead of one hundred eighty days saves no money. The funder captures the same return either way.

A merchant who believes they can exit a costly MCA position by paying aggressively and retiring the balance early discovers that the full factor rate obligation remains regardless of pace. The only benefit of faster repayment is that the daily debits end sooner. There is no interest savings, no prepayment discount, and no negotiated reduction available simply because the merchant can afford to pay quickly. This feature has been central to the legal argument that MCAs are disguised loans, because it eliminates the contingent-return characteristic that defines a true purchase of future receivables.


If any of these dangers describe your current situation, the information most useful to you is in the specific language of your agreement. Counsel who has reviewed MCA contracts in litigation can tell you, on a first call, whether the terms you accepted create risks beyond what you anticipated.

Related Articles

Todd Spodek

Todd Spodek

Managing Partner, Spodek Law Group

With decades of experience in criminal defense, Todd has been featured on Netflix, CNN, Fox News, and major legal publications.

Facing Criminal Charges?

Contact Spodek Law Group now for a free, confidential consultation. Available 24/7.