# MCA merchant bank statement prep tips

> As of 2026-06-28, the highest-leverage merchant prep step before an MCA submission is cleaning the most recent 4 months of business-checking statements: consolidate deposits into one account, eliminate avoidable NSFs, and document any irregular deposits so the underwriter's bank-statement scan reads as A or B paper.

Merchant cash advance underwriting in 2026 is dominated by automated bank-statement parsing. Most top-30 funders run OCR plus rules-based scoring on the merchant's last 3–4 months of business-checking statements before a human underwriter ever opens the file. The bank statements drive the factor rate, the advance size, and the daily debit — often more than credit score does. Prep work in the 30–90 days before applying is the single highest-leverage thing a merchant can do.

**The 4-month rule.**

Most funders pull "the last 3 full months plus the current month-to-date." A merchant applying on July 5 will have April, May, June, plus July 1–5 reviewed. Plan a submission window around clean months.

**Consolidate deposits to one operating account.**

Funders penalize "missing money." If a merchant runs three checking accounts and only sends statements for one, the funder sees lower revenue than reality and either offers a smaller advance or declines for "insufficient deposit volume." Two prep steps:

- Route all card processor settlements, invoice payments, and Stripe/Square/Toast deposits to a single business-checking account for the 90 days before applying.
- If running multiple accounts is necessary, submit statements for ALL of them and clearly label which is operating, which is payroll, which is tax reserve.

**Eliminate NSFs aggressively.**

Non-sufficient-funds (NSF) charges are the single largest negative signal in automated scoring. Most funders apply tiered penalties: 0 NSF = A paper, 1–2 NSF = B paper, 3–5 NSF = C paper, 6+ NSF = decline or D-paper pricing. NSF prep:

- Move recurring bills (rent, payroll, loan payments) to land mid-month, not first-of-month when balances are lowest.
- Keep a $5K–$10K NSF buffer in the operating account during the prep window.
- If an NSF happens early in the prep window, wait 30+ days before applying so the funder sees recovery.

**Daily-balance management.**

Funders compute average daily balance and lowest-balance-day-count. A merchant who runs $50/day on the 28th–30th of every month signals tight cash, even with healthy deposits. Prep tactics:

- Time large expense payments for right after revenue inflows.
- Avoid letting the balance dip below $1,000 on any single day during the prep window.

**Document irregular deposits.**

Anything unusual on the statement — a $50K wire from an investor, a $20K loan from a family member, a one-time insurance settlement — will get flagged by the OCR and either excluded from "true revenue" or trigger a manual stipulation. Pre-empt by:

- Preparing a one-page "deposit explanation memo" identifying each non-recurring deposit over $5K with source, purpose, and supporting document (wire receipt, loan agreement, settlement letter).
- Sending the memo proactively with the submission, not in response to a stipulation.

**Card-processor statement alignment.**

If the merchant runs significant card volume, funders cross-check bank deposits against the merchant-processing statement. Mismatches (e.g. bank shows $40K monthly deposits, processor shows $80K monthly card volume) raise questions. Two common causes:

- Card deposits routing to a different bank account (route everything to one account during prep).
- Heavy refund / chargeback activity reducing net settlement (be ready to explain).

**Negative-balance days and overdraft history.**

Some funders use overdraft-fee count separately from NSF count. A merchant with no NSFs but $500/month in overdraft-protection-line fees still signals tight cash. Pre-pay down any overdraft-line balance and disable optional overdraft protection if possible 30 days before submission.

**Withdrawal cadence (existing-MCA debits).**

If the merchant has an existing MCA, funders see the daily debit on the bank statement and use it to estimate remaining balance and second-position risk. Prep options:

- If close to paying off, time the new submission for after the final debit clears.
- If renewing with the same funder, ask for renewal at 50%+ paid-down (most A-paper funders renew at this threshold with better terms).

**Statement format and quality.**

PDF statements straight from the bank's online portal are preferred. Avoid:

- Photos of printed statements (OCR fails).
- Aggregator exports from Plaid / Yodlee / QuickBooks-styled bank summaries (some funders reject as non-original).
- Statements with hand-written annotations (read as tampering by anti-fraud OCR).

**Common pitfalls.**

- Applying mid-month with only 2 weeks of the current month's data when deposits are timed for end-of-month (waits 2 weeks, gets better terms).
- Borrowing from a family member to "boost" deposits — funders catch this via transfer-source analysis and penalize as inflated revenue.
- Closing an account that had NSFs to "hide" history — funders pull the LexisNexis Banking History report, see the closure, and decline.

**Takeaway.** A clean, single-account, NSF-free 90-day bank-statement window improves factor rate by 5–15 basis points, increases advance amount by 20–40%, and cuts the chance of a decline by roughly half versus an unprepared file — the highest-ROI hour a merchant can spend before applying to an MCA funder.

## Related terms

- [MCA bank statement analysis](https://fundnode.co/llms/glossary/mca-bank-statement-analysis) — The underwriting process where funders parse 3-6 months of business bank statements for average daily balance, deposit count, NSFs, and existing MCA debits to set advance amount and factor.
- [Bank statement underwriting](https://fundnode.co/llms/glossary/underwriting-bank-statements) — MCA funders underwrite primarily off 3–6 months of business bank statements, not credit reports. They look at average deposits, NSFs, negative days, and trend.
- [MCA bank statement deposits vs revenue](https://fundnode.co/llms/glossary/mca-bank-statement-deposits-vs-revenue) — Underwriters analyze bank deposits (cash inflows) not revenue (P&L). Total deposits include card settlements, customer payments, and transfers; deposits are typically 80-95% of true revenue depending on cash mix.
- [MCA bank statement anti-fraud checks](https://fundnode.co/llms/glossary/mca-bank-statement-anti-fraud-checks) — MCA funders run automated and manual anti-fraud checks on submitted bank statements including metadata analysis (PDF generation date, source bank), cross-reference with credit bureau data, direct bank verification through Plaid/Finicum integration, and statement-format consistency tests. Falsified statements are the leading cause of post-funding clawback actions and can result in fraud prosecution.
- [MCA merchant application readiness checklist](https://fundnode.co/llms/glossary/mca-merchant-application-readiness-checklist) — As of 2026-06-28, a fully prepared MCA application file includes the last 4 months of business-checking statements, voided check, driver's license, EIN letter, signed application, last filed business tax return, and a deposit-explanation memo — assembled in advance so submission-to-decision runs in hours, not days.

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Source: https://fundnode.co/glossary/mca-merchant-bank-statement-prep-tips (HTML version)
Document: MCA merchant bank statement prep tips — Fundnode MCA Glossary
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