Our objective in this blog post is to walk you through what actually happens when you default on multiple MCAs at the same time. This is one of the worst positions a business owner can be in, and most people don’t understand how fast it spirals. But you should.
Short answer: When you default on multiple MCAs at once, you don’t get one enforcement action — you get a race. Every funder you owe will try to hit your bank account, your merchant processor, and your personal guarantee, all at the same time. The first one in, wins. The rest sue. Within 24-48 hours, your operating account can be frozen, your card processing can be redirected, and you can have multiple lawsuits filed against you and the personal guarantor. There is no grace period, no triage, no order of priority. It’s every funder for themselves, and you’re the one underneath.
If you’re stacked on 3, 4, 5+ MCAs and you’re behind, or considering pulling the plug, read this carefully before you do anything at all.
Why does defaulting on one MCA usually mean defaulting on all of them?
This is the part most business owners don’t know. Almost every MCA agreement has a stacking clause — meaning if you take additional financing without the funder’s written consent, you’re automatically in default. So when you took MCA #2, you actually defaulted on MCA #1. When you took MCA #3, you defaulted on #1 and #2. It just hadn’t been triggered yet.
The moment one funder declares default, and starts enforcing, the others find out. Fast. Here’s how:
- Bank statements — the funder pulls fresh statements and sees the other daily ACHs going out
- Merchant processor records — visible to anyone with a UCC notice
- UCC filings, which are public, and which other funders actively monitor
- The grapevine — MCA funders talk to each other constantly, the underwriting community is small, and they share blacklists of merchants in default
Once one funder calls default, the rest follow within days. Sometimes hours.
What happens in the first 24-48 hours after a multi-MCA default?
The enforcement is faster, and uglier, than a single-MCA default. Here’s what you should expect, in roughly the order it happens:
- Every ACH hits at once. If you have 4 MCAs, you have 4 daily debits. They all attempt to pull. They all bounce. You’re now looking at $200-$1,000+ in NSF fees in a single morning, plus returned-payment fees from each lender. By end of week, the fees alone can exceed $2,000.
- The bank account gets locked, or drained. Some funders (especially ones with a confession of judgment, where still enforceable) will move within 24 hours to freeze the account. Others will simply re-pull aggressively until your bank closes the account on you. Either way, you lose access to your operating cash.
- Your merchant processor gets bombarded. Each funder sends a UCC notice and notice of assignment to your card processor. The processor doesn’t know who has priority. They often freeze deposits entirely while they sort it out, which means even the money customers are paying you today, doesn’t reach you.
- The collections calls start — from everyone. You’re not getting calls from one in-house collections team. You’re getting calls from four. On your business line, your cell, the personal guarantor’s cell, sometimes your spouse’s phone. Some funders will start contacting your customers and vendors within days, and they have full rights to do that.
- The lawsuits get filed. This is the part where it stops being recoverable on your own. Multiple funders will file in multiple jurisdictions — some in New York (the historical MCA capital), some in your home state. Each lawsuit names you, the business, and the personal guarantor. You’re now defending 3-4 cases simultaneously.
Who gets paid first when you default on multiple MCAs?
Short answer: whoever moves first.
There is no legal hierarchy that says MCA #1 has to be paid before MCA #2, even though MCA #1 funded first. Yes, UCC-1 filings technically establish priority on receivables. But MCA funders don’t wait for a court to sort priority out. They race.
- The funder who hits your bank account first, gets the most money first
- The funder who gets the merchant processor to redirect first, intercepts the most cash flow
- The funder who files suit first, often gets a settlement first — because you only have so much capacity to negotiate at once
This is why the order in which funders find out about your default, matters more than the order in which they funded you. It’s a brutal dynamic, and it’s by design.
Does defaulting on multiple MCAs at once trigger personal liability faster?
Yes. And worse than most business owners realize.
Almost every MCA agreement has a personal guarantee, even if the language is buried, even if it’s framed as a “performance guarantee.” When you default on a single MCA, the funder usually sues the business first, then the PG. When you default on multiple at once, multiple funders go after the personal guarantor at the same time, in different jurisdictions.
What that looks like in practice:
- Judgments piling up against you personally, in 2-4 different courts
- Bank account levies on your personal accounts
- Liens against personal property
- Restraining orders that freeze personal funds within hours
- Credit destruction (judgments report)
The personal guarantor doesn’t get to sit back and watch the business take the hit. They’re a defendant in every case, from day one.
Should you file bankruptcy if you’ve defaulted on multiple MCAs?
Maybe. But understand what you’re walking into.
Bankruptcy will stop the collection activity (the automatic stay), and it will pause lawsuits. But:
- MCA funders will fight the bankruptcy aggressively, and many of them will try to argue the MCA isn’t a loan, and therefore shouldn’t be discharged
- The personal guarantor is still on the hook, unless they file personally too
- Chapter 7 may not be available if your business has any assets worth liquidating
- Chapter 11 is expensive, and most small businesses can’t carry the cost
For most business owners with stacked MCAs, bankruptcy is the last option, not the first. Settlement, restructuring, and consolidation are usually cheaper, faster, and let you keep operating. But every situation is different, and you should never make this decision alone.
What should you actually do if you’ve already defaulted on multiple MCAs?
Don’t try to handle this yourself. The reason is simple — when you have one MCA in default, you’re in a one-on-one negotiation. When you have four, you’re trying to negotiate four deals simultaneously, against funders who know the others exist, and who each want to be paid first. The leverage dynamics are completely different. The mistakes are also more expensive.
A few things to do immediately:
- Stop the bleeding. Move operating cash to an account the funders don’t know about. This is legally complicated, and you should consult counsel before doing it, but you cannot operate with zero access to cash.
- Document everything. Every call, every threat, every email. Some of what these funders do crosses the line, and the documentation matters later.
- Get the personal guarantee analyzed. Sometimes the PG is unenforceable. Sometimes it isn’t. You need to know which one applies to you.
- Talk to a debt restructuring firm that handles MCAs specifically. Not a general business attorney. MCAs are their own ecosystem, with their own funders, their own settlement patterns, and their own enforcement playbooks.
The bottom line
Defaulting on multiple MCAs at once isn’t 4x worse than defaulting on one. It’s exponentially worse. The funders move faster, the lawsuits stack faster, and the personal exposure compounds. The window to get in front of it, before the racing starts, is small.
If you’ve already defaulted, or you know it’s coming in the next 30-60 days, the worst thing you can do is wait. Every day you wait, another funder finds out, another ACH bounces, another lawsuit gets prepared.