Short answer: There is no real grace period on a merchant cash advance. There’s no federal one, there’s no industry standard one, and the informal “we’ll work with you” window most funders pretend to offer is not legally binding. If you’re operating under the assumption that you have 30 days, or even 7 days, to get current before bad things start happening – you’re operating on bad information.
Here are 8 facts every business owner needs to understand before missing a payment.
1. There is no federal grace period law for MCAs
MCAs are commercial transactions, not consumer loans. The protections you’d get on a credit card, mortgage, or auto loan (which include mandatory grace periods, notice requirements, and cure periods) do not apply here. The Truth in Lending Act doesn’t apply. Reg Z doesn’t apply. The CFPB has limited authority. What governs your MCA is the contract you signed, and almost nothing else.
2. Most MCA contracts trigger default the same day a payment fails
Read your agreement. The default clause in a typical MCA agreement says something like “any failure to remit the daily/weekly amount when due constitutes an event of default.” That means default is triggered the moment the ACH bounces, not 30 days later, not 10 days later, not even 24 hours later.
Some funders won’t act on it immediately. But the right to act is there from minute one.
3. The 1-3 day “buffer” is not a grace period, it’s just operations
Many funders will retry the ACH 1-3 times before doing anything aggressive. Business owners interpret this as a grace period. It isn’t. It’s just the funder’s collections workflow. They’re trying to grab the money quietly before they have to escalate. During those 1-3 days you’re already in technical default, the funder is just choosing not to enforce yet. That choice can be reversed at any moment, for any reason, including “we don’t like the look of your bank balance.”
4. Reconciliation is not a grace period either
A lot of MCA contracts have a reconciliation clause – language that says if your revenue drops, you can request an adjustment to the daily payment. Funders love to point at this and say “see, we’re flexible.” In practice, reconciliation requests are often denied, delayed, or ignored. And critically – until the reconciliation is approved in writing, you’re still obligated to the original payment. Missing payments while you “wait for reconciliation” puts you in default. The clause exists, the right exists, but operationally it doesn’t function as a safety net.
5. Verbal promises from the funder mean nothing
If the rep on the phone says “don’t worry, we’ll give you a few days,” get it in writing or assume it didn’t happen. MCA contracts almost universally contain a clause stating that any modification to the agreement must be in writing and signed by an authorized officer of the funder. The collections rep is not an authorized officer. The “we’ll work with you” call is not a modification. You can be told one thing on Monday and sued on Wednesday, and the Monday call has zero legal weight.
6. Stacking triggers default instantly, regardless of payment status
This is the one that catches people. You can be 100% current on your payments and still be in default the moment you take a second MCA. Almost every MCA agreement contains a stacking clause prohibiting additional financing without the existing funder’s consent. Take a second position without asking, and you’ve defaulted – even though every daily payment cleared. The funder can then accelerate the full balance, file a confession of judgment (in states that still allow them), and freeze your accounts. The fact that you never missed a debit is irrelevant.
7. Closing or changing your bank account is a default event
If you switch banks because you’re trying to manage cash flow better, and you don’t notify the funder and re-authorize the ACH at the new bank – you’ve defaulted. Same if you change processors. Same if you start routing deposits to a different account to keep money out of the funder’s reach. That last one is also potentially fraud, and a lot of MCA litigation includes a fraud claim built around exactly this fact pattern. There is no grace period on this. The default is triggered the moment the funder discovers the change, sometimes within hours via their bank monitoring software.
8. Once default is triggered, the timeline collapses to hours
When traditional lenders default a borrower, there’s a process. Notices, opportunities to cure, demand letters, eventually a lawsuit weeks or months later. MCA funders don’t operate that way. Once default is triggered the funder can:
- Accelerate the full balance the same day
- File a UCC notice to your customers and processor within 24-48 hours
- File suit in NY (or whatever venue your contract specifies) within days
- Seek a TRO freezing your accounts before you’ve even been served
- Begin contacting your customers and vendors from the bank statements you originally submitted
There’s no waiting period. There’s no notice requirement. There’s no “you have 10 days to cure.” The contract gave them all of these rights up front, and you signed it.