Stall & Save: The Trap that Leads to Collapse

The "Program" Designed to Fail

The truth is, most business debt "relief" companies do little to genuinely assist business owners. In fact, their contracts are designed to obscure a predatory business model that prioritizes extracting excessive fees while offering little to no actual debt relief.

Here's what happens after a business enrolls:

X
Step 1: Pay Upfront Fees

Before any negotiations happen, the business pays 15%-20% of enrolled debt—just for signing up.

X
Step 2: Stop Payments

The firm orders the business to stop paying lenders.

X
Step 3: Build Up Escrow (Slowly)

Payments are redirected into a settlement fund, but the firm controls the account.

X
Step 4: Wait… and Wait… and Wait

MCAs don't wait. Receivables are frozen. Accounts are swept. Lawsuits are filed.

X
Step 5: The "Settlement" Comes Too Late

By the time an offer is made, the business has lost months of revenue, been sued and paid thousands in fees.

Burying You In Fees

In addition to upfront enrollment, monthly and success fees, many settlement firms charge hidden fees that make recovery even harder.

Example

If a business enrolls $100,000 of MCA debt into a settlement program, here's what typically happens:

  • $15,000 is immediately paid as a nonrefundable upfront fee.
  • Up to $1,000 per month in monthly program fees drain remaining cash flow while creditors grow more aggressive.
  • If partial settlements eventually happen, the firm charges a 35% success fee, or $8,750—cutting into any supposed "savings."
  • If settlements drag on (which they often do), extension fees add thousands more. For a three-year timeframe, this looks like $36,000.
  • If a creditor doesn't respond quickly enough, the business can be hit with an inactive debt fee 35% of the enrolled amount. That's an additional $35,000 owed for circumstances entirely outside the business's control.
  • If the owner tries to exit the program early, termination penalties can add 2% per month on the outstanding balance.

In total, a business could easily pay $60,000 or more in fees—often before any creditors are actually paid. Meanwhile, lawsuits, bank account freezes and receivables seizures escalate in the background.