Debt Restructuring
Debt restructuring is the right path when the MCA isn't the whole problem. If you have stacked MCAs, tax debt to the IRS, a personal guarantee you're exposed on, and vendor obligations you're behind on, refinancing one MCA into a term loan doesn't fix anything. Restructuring means approaching the full debt picture at once: inventorying every obligation, assessing which creditors hold the most power, prioritizing which relationships matter most to the business's survival, and negotiating modified terms across the board. It takes longer than a single-product exit and usually requires professional help. It's also the only approach that actually addresses a multi-creditor situation.
| Approach |
Time Frame |
Court Involvement |
What It Addresses |
Right For |
| Debt Restructuring |
Weeks to months |
None |
MCAs, vendor debt, business loans |
Businesses with multiple creditors that are still operating and want to preserve the company. |
| Chapter 7 Bankruptcy |
3-6 months |
Yes |
All business debt |
Businesses that are no longer viable and owners seeking a clean exit. |
| Chapter 11 |
1-3 years |
Yes |
Comprehensive debt restructuring |
Viable businesses carrying substantial debt that need court-supervised reorganization. |
| Subchapter V (SBRA) |
3-12 months |
Yes, streamlined |
Comprehensive debt restructuring |
Small businesses seeking a faster and less expensive alternative to traditional Chapter 11. |
| Settlement-Only |
Weeks |
None |
Individual MCA balances |
Businesses with one or two MCAs, documented hardship, and access to lump-sum settlement funds. |
Acting before default matters significantly. Pre-default restructuring gives you a cooperative negotiating position. Post-default restructuring happens in the context of default notices, COJ filings, and bank account threats, all of which reduce your leverage and increase legal costs. If you can see the wall coming before you hit it, that's the moment to act.
The most common mistake in a multi-creditor situation is handling each creditor in isolation. An IRS tax lien takes priority over UCC liens, which means if you settle the MCAs first and leave the IRS balance unresolved, you've improved the MCA companies' positions relative to the IRS, not yours. The sequencing of who gets paid in what order, and who gets approached first in a restructuring conversation, matters. A restructuring advisor who has handled MCA-plus-tax situations before understands this sequencing. A general bookkeeper or an MCA debt relief company with one product does not.