Quick answer: Defaulting on a merchant cash advance means missing the agreed payments or breaching the contract, which lets the funder pursue the entire remaining balance at once. Depending on what you signed, that can include enforcing a confession of judgment, acting on a UCC lien to intercept receivables, freezing bank accounts, and pursuing you personally under a personal guarantee. The balance does not disappear, but you usually have more leverage to negotiate before a judgment is entered, which is why acting early matters.

Key takeaways

  • Default lets a funder demand the full remaining balance, not just the missed payment.
  • What can follow depends on your contract, COJs, UCC liens, and personal guarantees change everything.
  • Shutting off the daily debit in a panic usually triggers the default you are trying to avoid.
  • Your leverage is highest before a judgment is entered, so the timeline rewards acting early.
  • Even a defaulted MCA can often be settled or restructured, default is a status, not the end.

What "default" actually means on an MCA

A merchant cash advance is not a loan in the traditional sense, it is the sale of a slice of your future receivables, repaid through daily or weekly ACH debits. "Default" is whatever your specific contract says it is, and it is usually broader than just missing a payment. Blocking the debit, switching bank accounts without telling the funder, closing the account, or letting a payment bounce can all count. The moment you cross that line, a clause called "acceleration" typically lets the funder demand the entire unpaid balance immediately, rather than the small daily amount you were paying.

That shift, from a manageable daily number to the full balance due now, is what makes default feel like it happens overnight. It is also why the worst move is an unplanned one.

What happens in the first days and weeks

The sequence varies by funder and by what you signed, but it generally unfolds like this:

  • Immediate contact. Calls and emails demanding you cure the missed payment, often escalating quickly in tone.
  • Acceleration. A formal demand for the full remaining balance under the contract's default terms.
  • Confession of judgment. If you signed one, the funder may use it to obtain a court judgment fast, sometimes without a hearing you attend. See how a COJ works.
  • UCC enforcement. A funder holding a UCC lien may notify your customers or processor to redirect receivables, a "lockbox" effect that chokes cash flow.
  • Bank levies and freezes. With a judgment, the funder can move to freeze or levy business, and sometimes personal, accounts.
  • Personal exposure. A personal guarantee can put your own assets in reach once a judgment exists.

For the full chain of what can follow a judgment, the deeper walkthrough is on our MCA default consequences page. This page is about the decision before you get there.

Does defaulting hurt your credit?

This surprises people: because MCAs are commercial transactions, many funders do not report to the consumer bureaus the way a personal loan would, so a default may not hit your personal credit score the same way. That is cold comfort, though. If you signed a personal guarantee, a resulting judgment can reach your personal assets directly, and lawsuits and judgments are public record. The real consequences of an MCA default are usually legal and financial, not a number on a credit report.

What to do instead of a panic default

If money is tight, the instinct is to stop the debit and buy time. Understandable, but it hands the funder the default trigger. Here is the more controlled sequence:

  1. Read your contract first. Find the default, acceleration, reconciliation, and guarantee clauses. What you signed dictates your options.
  2. Check reconciliation. Many MCAs include a reconciliation clause that is supposed to lower your payment when revenue drops, an underused, contractual off-ramp.
  3. Weigh the real paths. Renegotiation, consolidation, or settlement each fit different situations, and often a blend fits best.
  4. Move before a judgment. Your leverage to negotiate a reduced payoff is almost always greater before a COJ or judgment is entered.
  5. Get help early. A free review maps this against your actual numbers, and if you have already been served, we will tell you to bring in an attorney.

Can a defaulted MCA still be settled?

Frequently, yes. A funder facing a business that genuinely cannot pay in full often prefers recovering a reduced amount to chasing an empty account, so settlement is commonly possible even after a default. What changes is the leverage and the window: once a judgment is entered, the funder has stronger collection tools and less reason to discount. That is the whole argument for acting at the first sign of trouble rather than after the courthouse gets involved. If you are staring at a payment you cannot make, a free debt review is the lowest-risk next step, it costs nothing and it buys you a clear picture before the timeline gets decided for you.