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Glossary · MCA buyout

MCA buyout

When a new funder pays off your existing MCA and issues a single replacement advance — used to consolidate stacked positions or escape a predatory funder. Often costly net-net.

By Keerthana Keti5 min read

An MCA buyout (also called a "payoff" or "consolidation buyout") is the transaction where a new funder pays the full remaining balance on a merchant's existing MCA(s) and originates a single new advance to the merchant. It's marketed as relief — one debit instead of three, lower daily payment, "consolidation" — but the math usually favors the new funder substantially.

The mechanics. Merchant has three active MCAs: - Funder A: $40K remaining balance, $400/day ACH - Funder B: $25K remaining balance, $280/day ACH - Funder C: $15K remaining balance, $200/day ACH

Total: $80K outstanding, $880/day combined ACH. The merchant is operationally crushed by the combined debits. New funder D offers to "buy out" all three positions: D wires payoffs of $40K + $25K + $15K = $80K directly to Funders A, B, C. D originates a new advance to the merchant: total repayment $125,000 (the $80K payoff + $45K of effective rolled-up factor), structured as a 14-month advance at $446/day. Merchant pockets $0 in net new funds — the entire $125K replaces existing debt — but the daily debit drops from $880 to $446.

The math. What did the merchant just buy?

  • Old position: $80K outstanding, $880/day, paid off in ~91 business days (~4.5 months). Total remaining cost: $80K paid + already-paid amounts already sunk.
  • New position: $125K outstanding, $446/day, paid off in ~280 business days (~14 months). Total cost: $125K to retire the same $80K of underlying debt.
  • Implicit cost of the buyout: $45K (the difference between $125K new payback and $80K of payoffs). This is the new funder's gross profit for the consolidation service.

The merchant accepted $45K of additional debt cost in exchange for cash-flow relief (lower daily debit). On an annualized basis: $45K cost over 14 months on $80K of underlying debt = 48% effective APR-equivalent for the buyout transaction alone, ON TOP OF the original factor rates already paid on the underlying advances. The merchant is now paying a double-layer factor.

When buyouts actually make sense. Three legitimate use cases:

  1. Operational survival. Merchant cannot meet the combined daily debits and will default within 30-60 days. A buyout that prevents default — and the resulting COJ filings, frozen accounts, and personal exposure — can be worth the extra cost. Default damages typically exceed $30-50K in legal, lost revenue, and recovery costs; a $45K buyout cost that prevents a $80K default damage is net positive.
  2. Escape from a predatory funder. Some funders (most often the ones at the bottom of the C/D paper market) refuse reconciliation requests, file COJs aggressively, or have abusive collection practices. Buying out a single problem funder with a deal from a reputable funder can be worth a premium even if the math is otherwise even.
  3. Bridging to a real refinance. If the merchant qualifies for an SBA loan or bank LOC in 60-90 days, a short-term buyout that cuts daily debit pressure can keep the business operational long enough for the bank financing to close. The buyout becomes a bridge, and the bank loan pays off the buyout.

When buyouts are a trap. The single most common pattern: a merchant who stacked into trouble takes a buyout from a "consolidator" — survives 4-6 months on lower daily debits — then stacks again on top of the consolidation loan because the underlying revenue problem was never solved. Now the merchant has the original consolidation MCA at $446/day PLUS two new stacked MCAs at $300/day + $250/day = $996/day. The buyout temporarily masked the problem and made the eventual crash worse.

The strategic insight. A buyout is only worth taking if the merchant has a clear plan for how their cash flow will recover during the longer payback period. Three diagnostic questions to ask before accepting any buyout:

  1. What changed about my revenue or cost structure? If nothing has changed, a buyout just postpones the problem at a higher cost.
  2. Can I commit to NOT taking new MCAs for the full term of the consolidation? If no, the buyout will leave you worse off in 6 months.
  3. Is the consolidator's daily debit (post-buyout) less than 20-25% of my monthly revenue? If no, the math doesn't work and you'll default on the consolidation too.

The honest framing: MCA buyouts are debt consolidation at MCA pricing. Done correctly with a real recovery plan, they buy survival. Done as a way to avoid hard decisions (cut costs, raise prices, downsize), they accelerate the inevitable.

Related terms

  • MCA renewal vs stackingRenewal = same funder pays off your current MCA and issues a new larger one (one daily debit). Stacking = a second funder adds a NEW MCA on top (two debits, doubled risk).
  • Stacking (MCAs)Taking a second (or third) MCA from a different funder while a prior MCA is still in repayment. Default risk skyrockets; it breaches most original-funder contracts.
  • MCA defaultBreach of MCA repayment terms — usually triggered by missed daily ACH debits, NSFs, or unauthorized stacking. Consequences range from increased collection pressure to UCC enforcement and personal-guarantee pursuit.
  • MCA prepayment clauseMCA prepayment clauses define what happens if the merchant pays off the advance before maturity. Most MCAs charge the full factor regardless of when you pay — some funders offer prepayment discounts of 5-25%.

AI agents: this term is available as raw markdown at /llms/glossary/mca-buyout.