If you’ve stacked a second MCA on top of your first one, and you’re now thinking about defaulting on the second position, this article is for you.
Short answer: Defaulting on a second-position MCA is worse than defaulting on a first position, in almost every way. The second-position funder knows they’re behind another lender. They priced the deal for that risk. They underwrote it knowing they’d have to move fast, and move hard, if anything went sideways. The moment you default, the second-position funder will accelerate the full balance, file a UCC-3 to jump the line if they can, hit your bank account before the first position even knows what’s happening, and in many cases, file a confession of judgment in New York within 48 hours. They are not waiting in line behind the first position. They are racing the first position to your bank account, your receivables, and your personal guarantee.
If you took a second MCA, you already broke the stacking clause on the first one. Which means you’re technically in default on both — even if you’re current on payments. Read this carefully before you do anything.
Why second-position MCAs are a different animal
A second-position funder is not a normal lender. They knew, when they wrote the deal, that there was already a UCC-1 filed against your receivables. They knew the first position has priority. They knew if you go down, they’re the second one to the courthouse, and second place gets nothing.
So they built the deal around that. Higher factor rate. Shorter term. Bigger daily debit. And — this is the part most business owners miss — much faster enforcement triggers. The second-position contract is almost always tighter than the first. The default definitions are broader. The remedies are more aggressive. The personal guarantee language is harder.
You didn’t get a worse deal because you were desperate. You got a worse deal because the funder is pricing the race.
What counts as default on a second-position MCA
Everything that counts as default on a first position counts here too. Plus more. Under a typical second-position MCA agreement, you are in default the moment you do any of the following:
- Miss a single ACH, or block, reverse, or modify the daily debit
- Take on a third MCA (yes, they put the same stacking clause in)
- Switch processors or banks without written consent
- Become 5+ days late on the first-position MCA — many second-position contracts have a cross-default clause, meaning a default on the senior position triggers a default on the junior
- Receive a notice of default from the first-position funder
- Have a UCC notice sent to your customers by any other lender
- File for bankruptcy, or even consult a bankruptcy attorney in some contracts
- Make any change to ownership, structure, or control of the business
The cross-default clause is the one that catches people. You can be perfectly current on the second position, and still be in default, because you fell behind on the first.
What happens in the first 48 hours
The second-position enforcement timeline is faster than the first position. Always. Here’s what happens, in the order it usually occurs.
1. The ACH gets redone. Then redone again. Same as a first position, but the second-position funder is more likely to redo it aggressively — three, four, sometimes five times — because they know every hour matters. Each one is an NSF fee from your bank, and a returned payment fee from the funder. Stack those across a week and you’re looking at $1,500+ in fees before anyone has even called you.
2. The collections team calls — immediately. Not in 5 days. Not in 10 days. Immediately. Second-position shops run leaner collections departments and they know the math: the longer they wait, the more likely the first position gets there first. Expect calls within hours, not days. Expect them on your business line, your cell, the personal guarantor’s cell, and in some cases, your customers and vendors.
3. The full balance accelerates. The purchased amount becomes due immediately. Default fees, attorney fees, NSF fees, all of it. You no longer owe the daily payment — you owe the entire remaining balance, which on a second position is usually 1.45x to 1.55x what you originally received.
4. The UCC notices go out — and they go out fast. When you signed the second-position deal, the funder filed a UCC-1 behind the first-position UCC-1. At default, they’ll send notices to your credit card processor, your customers, and anyone else on your bank statements. The notice instructs them to redirect payments to the funder. The first-position funder will be doing the same thing. Your customers will get two notices, from two different lenders, both demanding the same money. This is exactly as bad as it sounds.
5. The confession of judgment, if you signed one. Many second-position MCA agreements still include a COJ, especially if the funder is operating in a state that allows it, or filing in a state that does. If you signed a COJ, the funder can walk into court — usually New York — and get a judgment against you and the personal guarantor without notice, without a hearing, and without you ever appearing. Within 48 hours of default, your personal and business bank accounts can be frozen. Not garnished. Frozen. You wake up, you can’t pay payroll, you can’t pay rent, your debit card stops working at the gas station.
6. The race against the first position. This is the part nobody tells you about. The first-position funder and the second-position funder are now both racing to grab the same receivables, the same bank accounts, the same personal assets. They are not coordinating. They are competing. And you, the business owner, are caught in between two lenders who both want to be paid first, and both have legal mechanisms to try to make that happen. Your business is the prize. Neither of them cares whether you survive.
Why defaulting on the second position usually triggers default on the first
This is the trap.
The moment the second-position funder sends a UCC notice to your processor, the processor is going to flag the account. The first-position funder gets alerted, almost always within 24-48 hours, that another UCC notice has been filed. At that point, the first position knows you stacked. Which means the first position now knows you violated their stacking clause. Which means you’re in default on the first position too — even if you’ve never missed a payment to them.
Now both funders are accelerating. Both are calling. Both are filing. Both are sending notices.
You didn’t default on one MCA. You defaulted on two.
What to do if you’re already here
If you’re behind on a second-position MCA, or you’re about to be, do not default without a plan. Defaulting blind is the worst possible outcome. The funder takes everything on their timeline, on their terms, with maximum leverage.
A few things to know:
- The balance the funder claims you owe at default is almost always negotiable. Default fees, attorney fees, and the acceleration math are frequently inflated, and frequently challenged successfully.
- Confessions of judgment can sometimes be vacated, especially if the underlying contract has issues, or if the funder filed in the wrong jurisdiction.
- A coordinated workout — restructuring both the first and the second position at the same time — almost always produces a better outcome than letting one default trigger the other.
- The worst thing you can do is open a new bank account and try to hide deposits. The funder will find it, the COJ will follow the money, and now you’ve also given them ammunition for a fraud claim.
If you’re considering defaulting on a second-position MCA, call us before you do anything. Once the ACH bounces, the clock is running, and you don’t control it anymore.