5 Myths About Merchant Cash Advances (and the Truth Behind Them)

By: Chad Otar0 comments

TL;DR

Merchant cash advances (MCAs) can be useful for short-term cash flow. But a lot of what you hear about them is wrong. Below are the five biggest Merchant Cash Advance myths, the facts, fresh 2025 context, and quick checklists to help you choose wisely.


Myth #1: “An MCA is a loan.”

Truth: It’s not a loan. It’s a purchase of a slice of your future revenue (a “receivables purchase”) repaid via a daily/weekly holdback from card or bank sales. Because it isn’t a loan, providers quote a factor rate (e.g., 1.35×) instead of an interest rate. The effective APR can be much higher than it looks.

2025 context: Courts and regulators keep stressing “substance over form.” Suppose a contract looks and behaves like a loan (fixed payments, unconditional repayment). In that case, courts may recharacterize it as a loan, bringing usury and bankruptcy risks for funders and extra defenses for merchants.

Fast checklist

  • Variable payments tied to sales? ✅ more like a true MCA
  • Fixed payments regardless of revenue? ⚠️ loan-like risk

Myth #2: “MCAs are always predatory.”

Truth: Costly? Often. Always predatory? No. Reputable providers disclose total payback, holdback %, estimated term, and prepay rules. But bad actors exist, so disclosures matter. Texas, for example, adopted a 2025 law requiring standardized sales-based financing disclosures and provider/broker registration.

2025 context: Enforcement and litigation continue. Regulators and courts have challenged extreme structures and mislabeling, while states expand disclosure regimes. Net effect: more transparency, but diligence is still on you.

Fast checklist

  • Get total payback (advance × factor).
  • Confirm true tie to revenue (no fixed debit if sales drop).
  • Ask for a sample disclosure before you sign.

Myth #3: “MCAs don’t affect APRs, so cost is simple.”

Truth: Factor rates hide the effective APR. A 1.35× factor on a $100k advance means $135k payback—whether you finish in 4 months or 12. Paying early rarely reduces the fee. Effective APRs can be very high if you repay quickly.

2025 context & stats

  • The merchant cash advance market is sizeable, valued at ~$19.65B in 2025 with a projected 6.6% CAGR through 2029, so you’ll see many offers; comparison shopping is critical.
  • The Federal Reserve’s 2025 small-business report notes application and approval rates for loans/LOCs/MCAs stayed roughly stable year over year, but satisfaction fell, largely tied to pricing and terms.

Quick math tip

  • Estimated APR (rough sense): Convert the fee to interest over expected months (there are online calculators). If the APR shocks you, negotiate or walk.

Myth #4: “MCAs are the fastest way to get funding—period.”

Truth: They can fund in 24–48 hours. But so can other working-capital products, depending on your file. Compare speed and total cost.

2025 context (legal risk for “fast but fixed” deals): A 2025 New Jersey bankruptcy decision held parties can’t sell rights to future receipts that don’t exist yet, weakening some “future receivables” claims. Translation: structure matters as much as speed.

Fast checklist

  • Ask: “What exact documents will speed approval?”
  • Compare at least 3 quotes (MCA, short-term loan, LOC).
  • Don’t trade a day of speed for a year of pain.

Myth #5: “If sales dip, the MCA automatically adjusts—no stress.”

Truth: Only true MCAs flex with revenue. Some contracts draft fixed daily debits that won’t adjust when sales fall, courts often view those as loans. That raises the chance of usury and preference issues in bankruptcy.

2025 context—real cases to learn from

  1. Williams Land Clearing (E.D.N.C., May 2025): Court found the MCA functioned like a loan and was criminally usurious under NY law.
  2. Chapter 7 preference rulings (Aug 2025): Courts allowed clawbacks where structures looked like debt, not purchases.
  3. Turnaround case study (TMA, Apr 2025): Advisor negotiated a multi-MCA situation down to $1.8M payoff as part of a rescue, illustrating how stacked MCAs strain cash and vendor relations.

Learn about MCA for construction companies

Fast checklist

  • Verify automatic reconciliation when sales drop.
  • Confirm no fixed ACH if revenue dips below projections.
  • Add a hardship or remittance-reduction clause in writing.

When Does an MCA Make Sense?

  • You need fast working capital to capture short, revenue-backed opportunities.
  • Card sales are steady and predictable.
  • You’ve priced the factor rate into margins and modeled stress scenarios.

When to avoid: stacking multiple MCAs, thin margins, seasonal slumps without a reserve, or when a line of credit could be approved in a similar time.


2025 Quick Facts (to support your decision)

  • Market size: ~$19.65B in 2025; projected 6.6% CAGR to 2029.
  • Application/approval trend: Applications and approvals remained stable YoY; satisfaction fell due to costs/terms.
  • Cost transparency: Major providers and fintechs emphasize that factor-rate pricing can translate into high effective APRs, especially with early payoff.

Comparison Table (snapshot)

FeatureTrue MCAShort-Term Loan
PricingFactor rate (fixed fee)Interest rate (APR)
Payment% of sales (holdback)Fixed periodic payment
TermEstimate (sales-dependent)Fixed
Early payoffUsually no discountOften reduces interest
Best forFast cash tied to steady salesLower cost, predictable cash flow

How to Shop MCAs the Smart Way (2025 Edition)

  1. Request a one-page disclosure: advance amount, factor rate, total payback, estimated term, holdback %, fees, and prepayment policy. (States like Texas now require standardized disclosures.)
  2. Ask for reconciliation language: payments must flex with actual revenue.
  3. Model the APR: compare to a bank LOC or term loan.
  4. Stress test: “What if sales drop 30% for 3 months?”
  5. Avoid stacking unless a professional advisor structures a controlled refinance.

FAQs (quick answers for searchers)

Is an MCA bad for credit?
It usually doesn’t report like a loan, but missed debits and UCC filings can affect future financing. Policies vary by provider.

How fast can I get funds?
Often 24–48 hours with complete docs, but compare costs across options.

Can I prepay and save?
Usually, no—factor fees are fixed. Confirm in the contract.


Final Word

MCAs aren’t inherently good or bad. They’re tools. If the structure truly maps to your sales and you understand the real cost, they can bridge gaps or fuel a timely opportunity. If not, look at a LOC or short-term loan instead.

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