MCA Intercepting Credit Card Processing: How To Negotiate Processor Release
Delancey Editorial
+ UPDATED 2026 · Delancey Street
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MCA Intercepting Credit Card Processing: How To Negotiate Processor Release
One of the most disruptive collection moves a merchant cash advance funder can make is serving a UCC Article 9 notice on your credit card processor. The notice directs the processor to send your daily card settlements directly to the funder instead of to your operating account. Within 48 hours, the lifeblood of your business is being intercepted before it ever reaches you. Here’s how that works and how to get it released.
UCC § 9-406 notice diverts card receivables from the merchant to the funder.
What UCC § 9-406 Actually Does
When you signed the MCA, you granted the funder a security interest in your future receivables, including credit card receivables. UCC § 9-406 lets the funder enforce that security interest by giving the payor (your processor) written notice that future payments must go directly to the funder. The processor is legally required to comply once properly served.
The notice doesn’t require a lawsuit or a judgment. It’s a self-help remedy. The processor’s only protection is to follow the notice, because if they pay you in violation of the notice, they owe the funder again.
Release Path
Funder Cost
Speed
Outcome
Full payoff at balance
100%
Same day
Lockbox lifted
Structured workout
50-70%
5-10 days
Phased release
Lump-sum settlement
35-55%
3-7 days
Lockbox lifted
Defective-notice challenge
Counsel
2-6 weeks
Case-dependent
Four real paths to processor release, ranked by funder cost and speed.
How You’ll Discover It
Usually you find out when your normal daily settlement doesn’t show up in your bank account. You call the processor, and the rep tells you they received a notice from your funder. Some processors will share the notice; others won’t without legal pressure. Funds already in transit may be intercepted; future settlements will be redirected entirely.
The processor isn’t on your side and isn’t your enemy. They’re a neutral party following the law. The fight is between you and the funder, and the processor will release when the funder tells them to.
Negotiating Processor Release
Releasing the lockbox requires the funder to send a written rescission of the UCC § 9-406 notice to the processor. Funders will do this in three scenarios: full payoff, structured workout agreement that includes a release schedule, or settlement at a discounted lump sum.
A typical workout that gets the lockbox released includes: a lump-sum payment of 20 to 30 percent of the balance at signing, a stipulated payment plan for the remainder over 6 to 18 months, and a release of the processor lockbox effective on the lump-sum clearance. Funders agree to this because the workout cash beats the slow trickle of intercepted card sales after processor fees and reserves.
What If You Have Multiple Processors
Many MCA funders serve UCC notices on every processor they can identify. If you’ve changed processors during the MCA term, the funder may have outdated information and miss your current processor. Some merchants survive by switching to a new processor the funder hasn’t found, but the funder will eventually serve notices on the new one too.
A more durable solution: negotiate a workout that includes a written agreement not to serve future UCC notices in exchange for performance on the payment plan.
When the Notice Is Defective
UCC § 9-406 notices have technical requirements. The notice must be authenticated, identify the account, and reasonably identify the obligation. Defective notices can be challenged. Independent counsel from our referral network reviews notices regularly; technical defects don’t always exist, but when they do, they create immediate negotiating leverage.
Other defensive arguments include: the funder’s security interest was never properly perfected, the underlying MCA is challengeable (rare, but applies in some states with usury reclassification arguments), or the notice covers receivables beyond the funder’s collateral.
Practical steps when your processor gets hit:
Get a copy of the UCC § 9-406 notice from the processor. You need to see the funder’s exact language.
Stop processing on the affected MID if cash flow allows. Some merchants run a parallel processor while negotiating.
Open settlement conversations within 72 hours. The intercepted funds are accumulating on the funder’s side, and they’ll apply them to the balance, but you want a structured release before the holdback becomes a permanent feature.
Document the cash flow impact. This becomes part of the hardship case in negotiation.
Don’t try to move all sales to cash. Card customers are 60 to 80 percent of most retail revenue, and trying to dodge processing kills the business faster than the lockbox does.
Lockbox settlements typically land at 50 to 70 cents on the dollar, slightly higher than pre-lockbox numbers because the funder is already collecting. But funders also know the lockbox is killing the business, and they’d rather take a structured workout than watch the merchant fold. Senior advisors negotiate these every week.
Delancey Street is a business debt-relief company, not a law firm. When a matter requires legal work, we refer you to an independent attorney from our referral network; the attorney–client relationship is between you and that attorney.
When an MCA funder intercepts your credit card processing, either via pre-authorized split funding, or through a UCC notice, it means your receivables are under attack. Typically a UCC lien notice will be served on the processor after default. The core problem is this: processors like Stripe, Square, Shopify, Clover, Fiserv, etc, intercept all money before the money reaches your bank account, so a bank-side ACH block is useless.
In order to get around this, you need a processor release: a written instruction from the MCA funder that directs the processor to lift the split, the hold, and return deposits to the merchant. Our goal is to give you the simple takeaway up front: if the release is negotiated, you can get your funds returned to you. Typically, if you have defaulted on an MCA, the lender will not be fair - they know you have funds on hold, and in order to agree to the release, they will want a substantial component of those funds. You have to remember, all the major processors do not want to get in the middle of a dispute between you and the lenders. They would rather keep their hands clean, and avoid being sued by the lender.
Two Mechanisms MCA Funders Use to Intercept Processing
Split Funding: This is built into the contract. The merchant agrees at origination to have the processor split each daily batch, and send a % to the funder, and the remainder to the merchant. This is contractually authorized, it's not a default remedy. It's the default mode of repayment. Many companies like CAN Capital, Rapid Finance, Credibly, offer split funding as a solution when funding clients. This list can change, so it should not be relied upon. But the concept remains the same, split funding can be modified to a higher % by the funder, if the contract authorizes it on default. You, as the merchant, cannot stop split funding without either switching processors, or settling the debt in question.
UCC Notice After Default: Written demand gets sent from the lender to the processor to redirect payments. This is a hostile tactic. This is when you've defaulted, and now the lender is trying to get their money. The goal is to redirect your money, to the lender. In order to do this though, the funder has to have a senior security interest on the receivables.
Why You Can't Stop The Interception At Your Bank
Let's open with the direct answer: bank-side remedies do not apply, because the money will never reach your bank. NACHA R10 returns, ACH blocks, and stop-payment orders, all operate on the ACH network. When interception occurs, it's a VISA/Mastercard settlement event. Closing the account doesn't help, because the processor will simply hold the funds, or return them to the funder. The two main choke points are the processor itself, and the funder asserting the claim.
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