What Happens If You Miss an MCA Payment Because of a Slow Week
Short answer: One missed payment can trigger a default, even if your business is fine, and even if you catch up two days later. Most MCA agreements don’t care why you missed. They care that you missed. The lender can accelerate the full balance, hit you with NSF and reversal fees, and start enforcement, all before you’ve had a chance to call them. If you had a slow week, and the ACH bounced, you need to act in the next 24 hours, not the next 24 days.
Many business owners think a single NSF is no big deal. This is false. Under the language of a typical MCA agreement, one bounced ACH is a technical default, and that’s all the lender needs.
Why one missed payment is treated like the end of the world
Traditional lenders build in grace periods. They expect cash flow to wobble. MCAs don’t work that way.
When you signed, the funder didn’t lend you money, they purchased a percentage of your future receivables. The daily ACH isn’t a “payment” in the legal sense, it’s the funder collecting the receivables they already own. So when the ACH bounces, in the lender’s eyes you didn’t just miss a payment, you interfered with their property.
That’s the framing. And it’s why their response is so much faster, and so much harsher, than anything you’d see from a bank.
- No federal consumer protection laws apply. MCAs are commercial transactions.
- No 30 day grace period. This is the single biggest myth in the industry.
- No requirement to notify you before accelerating. Most agreements waive that right in the fine print you signed.
- No requirement to work with you in good faith. Some lenders will. Many won’t.
What the lender actually does in the first 48 hours
The enforcement clock starts the second the ACH gets returned. Here’s what usually happens, in the order it happens.
- The ACH gets re-presented. Most funders will re-attempt the debit one or two more times. Each attempt that fails triggers an NSF fee from your bank (usually $35), and a returned payment fee from the lender (often $35 to $100). A single bounced day, in a worst case, can cost $200+ in fees alone.
- The collections team starts calling. Some funders have in-house collections, some outsource to firms that are very, very aggressive. You’ll get calls on your business line, your cell, and the personal guarantor’s cell. Within 24 to 48 hours.
- They pull your bank statements. Remember, you gave them read-only access to your bank account when you funded. They’re watching your deposits in real time. They know if you have the money and they know if you don’t.
- They make a decision. Either they call you and try to work something out, or they accelerate the balance and start enforcement. Which path they take depends on the funder, the size of the balance, and how you’ve handled prior payments.
What “slow week” means to you vs. what it means to them
To you, a slow week is a normal part of running a business. To the funder, a slow week is the start of a pattern, and they’ve seen this pattern before. They know what comes next, statistically, when an MCA merchant misses one ACH:
- The merchant misses another within 30 days, in most cases.
- The merchant takes a stacked MCA to cover the gap, in many cases.
- The merchant defaults entirely, in a meaningful percentage of cases.
The funder isn’t being paranoid. They’re pattern-matching. And the pattern says, protect the position now, don’t wait.
That’s why one bounced ACH on a Tuesday can result in a UCC notice going out on a Friday. Not because they’re vindictive (some are, but most aren’t), but because their playbook is built around moving first.
What you should do in the first 24 hours
This is the part most business owners get wrong. They panic, or they go silent, or they do the worst possible thing, which is open a new bank account and move deposits there. Don’t do that. That’s not a missed payment anymore, that’s a deliberate default, and it changes the lender’s posture entirely.
Here’s what to do instead.
- Call the funder before they call you. This sounds obvious. Almost no one does it. The merchants who call within 24 hours of a bounce get dramatically better outcomes than the ones who wait for the call to come in. You’re not begging, you’re communicating.
- Have a number ready. Don’t call to say “I had a slow week.” Call to say “I had a slow week, the ACH for Wednesday will clear, and I can resume the normal schedule on Monday.” Specifics. Dates. Amounts.
- Don’t lie about why. They have your bank statements. They can see the deposits. If you tell them a customer didn’t pay, and the deposits are normal, you’ve just made it worse.
- Don’t promise what you can’t deliver. A second broken promise, after a missed payment, is what flips a recoverable situation into an accelerated balance.
- Do not, under any circumstances, take a second MCA to cover the first. This is called stacking, it’s a default in its own right under almost every MCA agreement, and it’s the single fastest way to go from “rough week” to “lawsuit.” More on this below.
The stacking trap
When you miss a payment, the brokers know. The MCA broker world is small, and lead lists get sold fast. Within a few days of a bounce, you’ll start getting calls and emails offering you “emergency funding” to get caught up.
This is a trap. Not because the second MCA is necessarily predatory (some are, some aren’t), but because:
- Taking the second MCA, by itself, is a default on the first one.
- The first lender finds out within days, because they monitor your bank account.
- You now have two daily debits instead of one, on the same revenue.
- The math doesn’t work, and it was never going to work.
Almost every merchant who ends up needing settlement got there through stacking. Almost none of them thought, at the time, that stacking was the move that would do it. They thought it was a bridge. It wasn’t.
When the missed payment turns into something worse
If 48 to 72 hours pass without contact, or with a contact that goes badly, the lender’s options expand fast.
- Acceleration. The full purchased amount becomes due, immediately. Not the daily payment. The whole balance, plus default fees, plus attorney fees in most agreements.
- UCC enforcement. When you funded, the lender filed a UCC-1 against your receivables. They can now send notices to your credit card processor, your customers, and anyone else paying you, instructing them to redirect payments to the funder.
- Confession of judgment, in some states. This is rarer than it used to be (New York banned new ones in 2019), but old MCAs still have them, and some out-of-state filings still go through. A COJ lets the lender get a judgment without a trial, and use it to freeze accounts within hours.
- Lawsuit. Filed against the business and the personal guarantor. Once it’s filed, the cost of resolving it goes up substantially.
The honest read on your situation
If you missed an MCA payment because of a slow week, you’re not in an unusual position. It happens to a meaningful percentage of MCA merchants, every month. What separates the merchants who recover from the ones who spiral is what they do in the next 24 to 72 hours.
The merchants who recover, almost always, do three things. They communicate early. They don’t stack. They don’t move banks.
The merchants who spiral, almost always, do the opposite. They go silent, they take a second MCA to plug the hole, and they open a new account when the calls get bad.
If you’re reading this after one missed payment, you have time. If you’re reading this after two missed payments and a stacked MCA, you don’t, and you should talk to someone today about settlement, restructuring, or legal options before the lender makes the decision for you.