If you’ve defaulted on an MCA, the first question that hits you is whether you’re done. You’re not. But the road back is longer, and uglier, than most people will tell you.
Short answer: After an MCA default, your business credit profile is wrecked, your personal credit is likely hit (if you signed a PG, which you did), and you’ll have UCC liens, judgments, or charge-offs sitting on your reports. Real rebuilding takes 12 to 24 months of clean behavior — and it can’t start until you’ve actually resolved the defaulted debt. Settle it, pay it, or discharge it. There’s no rebuild while the wound is still open.
Here’s what the path actually looks like.
Step one: stop the bleeding before you build anything
You can’t rebuild on top of an active default. The funder is still reporting, still suing, still filing UCC notices. As long as that’s happening, every new tradeline you open gets dragged down by the old one.
That means: settle the MCA, pay it off, or get it discharged in bankruptcy. Pick one. There’s no fourth option, and waiting it out is not a strategy — it’s just the slowest version of option one, with more interest and legal fees attached.
(This is where most business owners get stuck. They want to start rebuilding while still hiding from the funder. It doesn’t work. The funder will find your new bank account. They will UCC-lien your new receivables. They have done this thousands of times, you’ve done it once.)
Step two: get the UCC-1 terminated
When the MCA was funded, the lender filed a UCC-1 against your business assets. Settling the debt is not the same as removing the lien. You need a UCC-3 termination filed.
Many funders won’t file it automatically. You have to ask. Sometimes you have to ask three or four times. Get it in writing, as part of any settlement agreement, that they will file the UCC-3 within 30 days of receiving the settlement funds. Without that language, every future lender will pull a UCC search, see the open lien, and walk.
Step three: rebuild the business credit file from zero
Assume your D&B PAYDEX, Experian Business, and Equifax Business profiles are scorched. They probably are. The rebuild starts with small, boring tradelines that actually report.
- Net-30 vendor accounts. Uline, Quill, Grainger, Summa Office Supplies. Order something every month. Pay early, not on time. Early. These report to D&B and Experian Business.
- Secured business credit card. A card backed by a deposit, used for small recurring expenses (your phone bill, a software subscription), paid in full every month. Most issuers will give you one even with a default in your past.
- Tier-2 vendor lines after 6 months of clean reporting. This is where you start getting actual unsecured trade credit again — equipment, fuel cards, larger vendor accounts.
The trap here is impatience. Business owners want to jump to a real line of credit at month three. It doesn’t work that way. The bureaus need time-in-file, with positive payment behavior. You’re not gaming this in 90 days.
Step four: deal with the personal side
You almost certainly signed a personal guarantee on the MCA (every MCA has one — there’s no such thing as a non-recourse MCA, despite what the broker told you). When the funder sued, that judgment likely landed on your personal credit. Your FICO is hit. Your ability to open new personal accounts is hit. And in some states, that judgment is good for 10 to 20 years, accruing interest the whole time.
If the judgment is settled, get a satisfaction of judgment filed with the court. Then dispute the entry on your personal credit reports with that documentation. It will still show as a settled judgment for seven years, but “satisfied” reads very differently than “open” to the next underwriter who pulls you.
Step five: rebuild the banking relationships
If your bank account got hit with a restraining notice, or you had a string of NSFs, you may show up in ChexSystems. That makes opening a new business account harder. Not impossible. Second-chance business banking exists — Mercury, Relay, BlueVine, certain local credit unions — and most won’t pull ChexSystems at all. Use them to rebuild a clean deposit history for 6 to 12 months before you go back to a traditional bank.
How long does it really take to rebuild business credit after an MCA default?
Anyone telling you that you can rebuild business credit in 90 days after an MCA default is selling you something. The realistic numbers:
- Months 0–3: Resolving the default. Filing UCC-3 terminations. Opening secured cards, and net-30 vendor accounts.
- Months 3–9: Building a payment history. Adding tradelines slowly. PAYDEX starts moving.
- Months 9–18: First unsecured trade credit. Maybe a small unsecured business card.
- Months 18–24: Eligible for real working capital again — SBA, line of credit, equipment financing — if you’ve done the work.
This is not fast. But it’s real. And it’s a hell of a lot better than the alternative, which is taking another MCA to plug the hole, and starting the whole cycle over again, six months from now, in worse shape than you are right now.
If you’re at the start of this process, and you don’t know where to begin, that’s what we do. Call us before you take the next MCA, not after.
Pull your business credit reports first. A default sits on the personal side too if you signed a PG.
honestly the whole credit rebuild thing feels like another trap to keep you borrowing. they want you back in the cycle, thats the point of letting you “recover”
One thing that helped me, get a secured card or a net-30 vendor account and actually pay it early, not on time, early. Small thing but it moves the needle after a default way faster than people think.
Yeah credit takes a while to come back but honestly the bigger problem for me was my bookkeeper never reconciled the MCA payments right so my books looked like a warzone when I tried to apply for anything, and dont even get me started on my bank, they froze the account during all this over some “review” and I had two vendors bounce. I think the default was on my report like 6 or maybe 7 years? not totally sure. point is fix your books before you even try.
I defaulted on a MCA in 2023 and let me tell you it was a NIGHTMARE, the factor rate thing means by the time you default you already paid them basically 200% interest and they still come after you for the rest, they took like half my monthly revenue at one point through the ACH and i couldnt make payroll. then a collections outfit bought the paper and started calling my customers. rebuilding credit was honestly the easy part compared to getting these people to leave me alone, took 2 years before a real bank would even talk to me.
^ thats not really right, a default doesnt automatically stay 7 years on the business side, business tradelines arent regulated the same as consumer. and the 200% thing depends entirely on how early you defaulted, could be way less.