| # | Company | Settled | Score | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Delancey StreetAttorney-Founded · MCA Specialist | $100M+ | Call Now | |
| 2 | National Debt ReliefLargest U.S. Debt Settlement Co. | $1B+ | Compare | |
| 3 | CuraDebtDebt + Tax Resolution | $500M+ | Compare |
Short answer: Pay the MCA that can hurt you fastest, not the one with the biggest balance. That usually means the funder most likely to file a Confession of Judgment, hit you with a restraining notice, or start calling your customers. The biggest balance is rarely the biggest threat.
If you’re stacked — 2, 3, 4, sometimes 5 MCAs running daily debits at the same time — and you’ve missed a payment, or you’re about to, this post is for you.
You already know stacking is a default under virtually every MCA agreement you signed. The moment you took the second advance, you were technically in default on the first. The moment you took the third, you were in default on the first two. Most funders don’t enforce this at signing, because they’re still getting paid. They enforce it the second the ACH bounces.
This matters because, when you miss a payment, you’re not triggering one default. You’re triggering every dormant default clause at the same time.
Not all MCA funders are the same. Some will work with you. Some will accelerate and sue inside of a week. Your job, before you decide who to pay, is to rank them by enforcement speed, not by dollar amount.
Here’s how to rank:
Tier 1 — Pay these first. The fastest and most aggressive.
Tier 2 — Pay these second. Aggressive, but slower.
Tier 3 — Pay these last, or not at all until you have a plan.
Most business owners pay whoever called them last, or yelled loudest. This is exactly backwards.
The funder screaming at you on the phone is, a lot of the time, the one with the least actual leverage. The funder doing nothing is often the one quietly preparing the lawsuit. Silence, in MCA collections, is the scarier signal.
Read that again. Silence is the scarier signal. The call is the pressure tactic. The absence of the call is the preparation.
If you woke up today with 3+ MCAs and the money to pay 1, here’s what you do before you send a dollar:
Don’t. This is the instinct — spread $10k across 4 funders, give everyone $2,500, hope they all calm down. It doesn’t work. Here’s why:
Partial payments, below the contractual daily, are often treated as defaults by the funder’s own terms. You’ve now confirmed, in writing, through your bank records, that you can’t pay the full amount. You’ve given every one of them the evidence they need to accelerate. You’ve also burned through the only cash you had to negotiate with the one funder who actually matters.
Triage is not fairness. Triage is survival. Pay the one who can kill you this week. Deal with the rest next week.
After you’ve stabilized the Tier 1 threat, the other MCAs don’t go away. They still need a plan. The plan is usually one of three things:
What doesn’t work: hoping. Waiting. Paying whoever’s loudest. Ignoring the mail.
If you’re stacked and you missed a payment, your next 72 hours decide the next 12 months. Rank your funders by enforcement speed. Pay the fastest threat, not the biggest one. Don’t spread cash thin across all of them. Don’t answer the loudest caller first. And don’t mistake silence for safety — it’s almost always the opposite.
Most funders accept 30–60% as a full settlement — with proper leverage.
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