Creditor Priority: The Debt Hierarchy That Determines Who Gets Paid and Who Gets Nothing
The Four-Tier Priority Pyramid: What It Means in Practice
Who they are: Lenders who hold properly filed UCC-1 financing statements against business assets; equipment lenders whose names appear on title certificates; real estate mortgage holders; vehicle lienholders; SBA lenders with blanket liens; and MCA funders who filed UCC-1 statements that are validly perfected against the correct legal entity in the correct state with the correct collateral description.
What they can do: Secured creditors can reach their specific collateral. In bankruptcy, they are entitled to be paid from the proceeds of their collateral up to the value of their lien. Outside bankruptcy, a secured creditor with a UCC-1 can block the sale or refinancing of collateral, receive payment from collateral proceeds, and in some circumstances foreclose on collateral through state law processes. A perfected UCC-1 against all business assets is among the most powerful creditor positions available.
Their priority within Tier 1 is determined by filing date: The first UCC-1 filed against a specific debtor and collateral type is in first lien position. The second filed is in second position. Filing date, not agreement date, controls. A lender who signed a security agreement in January but filed the UCC-1 in March is junior to a lender who filed in February.
The MCA funder’s UCC-1 position: Most MCA funders file UCC-1 financing statements covering “all assets” or “all accounts receivable.” Whether that filing gives the MCA funder Tier 1 status depends on three conditions: the filing must be in the correct state (typically the state of the debtor’s organization for LLCs and corporations), the debtor’s legal name on the filing must exactly match the name on the organizational documents, and the collateral description must not be overbroad in a way that courts in the relevant state have found unenforceable. All three conditions are verifiable through the StopUCC.com lien audit.
Who they are: The IRS (federal income taxes, payroll taxes, excise taxes); state tax authorities (state income taxes, sales taxes, franchise taxes); local tax authorities (property taxes, local business taxes); employees with unpaid wage claims up to the statutory cap; certain customer deposit claims; and court-ordered support obligations.
Their statutory advantage: Priority unsecured creditors do not need a UCC-1 filing or a security agreement to hold their position. Their priority is established by federal and state statutes that preempt the general creditor hierarchy. In bankruptcy, priority unsecured creditors are paid from the bankruptcy estate before general unsecured creditors, regardless of when the debt arose or how long it has been unpaid.
The payroll tax personal liability trap: Federal payroll taxes (FICA, federal income tax withholding) create personal liability for the “responsible person” under IRC § 6672, regardless of the business entity’s corporate shield. A business owner who diverts cash flow from payroll tax deposits to pay MCA funders is personally creating a debt that: cannot be discharged in bankruptcy in most circumstances; carries personal liability that survives the dissolution of the business entity; accrues interest at the federal short-term rate plus 3%; and is enforced by the IRS with federal tax liens that attach to all personal property. The Trust Fund Recovery Penalty assessment under § 6672 is one of the IRS’s most aggressively pursued collection tools.
Who they are: All creditors without a perfected security interest or statutory priority. This includes: MCA funders whose UCC-1 filings are defective (wrong debtor name, wrong state, lapsed without continuation); MCA funders who never filed a UCC-1 at all; credit card companies; trade vendors and suppliers; professional service providers; and utility companies.
Their collection limitations: General unsecured creditors cannot reach exempt assets (homestead, retirement accounts, exempt personal property). They must obtain a judgment before executing against any assets. In bankruptcy, they share pro-rata in whatever remains after secured creditors and priority unsecured creditors are paid, which is typically zero in Chapter 7 liquidations of small businesses. Their ACH debit access (if obtained via MCA agreement) is a contractual mechanism, not a priority claim. Closing the authorized account removes their ACH reach without affecting a superior creditor’s position.
The critical point for MCA defense: Many MCA funders operate as general unsecured creditors despite their aggressive collection behavior. The UCC-1 they file may be defective. Their ACH access may not represent a perfected security interest in the underlying receivables. A forensic lien audit from StopUCC.com frequently reveals that a funder claiming Tier 1 status through its UCC-1 is actually in Tier 3 because the filing does not satisfy the perfection requirements of UCC Article 9. Reclassifying a funder from Tier 1 to Tier 3 changes every aspect of the settlement calculation.
Who they are: The business owner’s equity interest in the business entity; limited partners; shareholders of an S corporation or C corporation; members of an LLC. In a liquidation, equity holders receive whatever remains after all four tiers of creditors are paid. In most small business liquidations where MCA debt is involved, the equity interest is worth zero by the time creditors are paid.
Why it matters for defense strategy: The equity holder is the person the MCA funders are pressuring. Understanding that the equity interest is the last-paid tier reframes what that pressure actually means: the funders are threatening to take from you a position that, given your total debt load, may already be worth zero. The negotiation leverage shifts when both parties understand the true liquidation analysis: the funders may be fighting over equity that does not exist.
UCC Lien Priority: Filing Date Controls, and Defects Destroy Position
The Three Defects That Destroy Lien Priority
UCC Article 9 requires strict compliance with debtor name requirements. Section 9-503 states that a financing statement is sufficient only if it provides the name of the debtor. For registered organizations (LLCs and corporations), the debtor’s name is the name shown on the public organic record (the articles of incorporation or organization filed with the Secretary of State), not a trade name, DBA, or abbreviation. This rule has produced an enormous volume of defective MCA UCC-1 filings because MCA funders and ISO brokers frequently file against the business name as the business owner represents it, which often differs from the exact legal name on the organizational documents.
The rule: A UCC-1 filed against “ABC Services LLC” is defective if the entity’s legal name as registered with the Secretary of State is “ABC Services, LLC” (with comma) or “A.B.C. Services LLC” (with periods) or “ABC Services Limited Liability Company.” The comma or the punctuation or the absence of the comma matters under strict compliance. Courts in most jurisdictions apply the “seriously misleading” standard: a financing statement with a minor name error that would not be found by a search under the correct name is seriously misleading and therefore ineffective. A seriously misleading UCC-1 is an unperfected security interest.
2026 data: In StopUCC.com lien audits across 89 active MCAWars.com cases, 34% of MCA UCC-1 filings contained at least one debtor name that differed from the exact legal name on the state organizational records. 19% contained differences that met the “seriously misleading” threshold under UCC § 9-506(b). Those 19% represent unperfected security interests that should be classified as Tier 3 general unsecured rather than Tier 1 secured.
How to use it: A UCC-1 determined to be unperfected due to a name defect cannot be cured retroactively with a UCC-3 amendment that would retain the original filing date. An amendment to correct the name is treated as a new filing with a new date, which means the funder loses their priority position to all correctly filed liens that existed between the original defective filing and the correction date. In an active dispute, raising the unperfected lien argument through defense counsel converts the funder from a secured creditor with first call on assets to a general unsecured creditor with no priority claim, a reclassification that changes every aspect of the settlement math.
The rule: Under UCC § 9-307(e), the correct filing location for a registered organization is the state where the organization is registered, not the state where it operates or where its principal place of business is located. An LLC organized in Delaware but operating in Georgia must have its UCC-1 filed in Delaware to be perfected against the organization’s general assets. A filing in Georgia against a Delaware-organized entity is unperfected, even if the business conducts all of its operations in Georgia.
The MCA origination error: ISO brokers frequently file UCC-1 financing statements in the state where the business operates because that is the address on the MCA application. If the business is incorporated or organized in a different state (Delaware, Wyoming, and Nevada are common low-cost organization states), the operating-state UCC-1 is unperfected. This defect is particularly common in MCA stacking cases where multiple funders all filed against the same entity in the operating state, all believing they were in priority order, when in fact all of their filings are unperfected if the entity is organized elsewhere.
2026 data: Of 23 active cases in MCAWars.com tracking involving businesses organized in a state different from their primary operating state, 14 involved UCC-1 filings in the operating state rather than the organization state. All 14 filings are unperfected under UCC § 9-307. Average settlement in cases where the wrong-state unperfected lien argument was raised: 22 cents on the dollar.
The rule: A UCC-1 financing statement is effective for five years from the date of filing. To remain effective, the secured party must file a UCC-3 continuation statement within the six-month window before the five-year expiration. A UCC-3 continuation filed outside that window, or not filed at all, results in the financing statement lapsing. A lapsed financing statement is unperfected, and the security interest becomes subordinate to any competing interests that were perfected while the filing was lapsed.
Why this matters for older MCA disputes: Business owners who have been in ongoing disputes with MCA funders for five or more years, or who signed MCA agreements before 2020 that have not yet been resolved, may find that the funder’s UCC-1 has lapsed for failure to file a continuation statement. The StopUCC.com lien audit includes lapse date calculation for every active UCC-1 on file. A lapsed filing discovered during an active dispute means the funder’s priority position evaporated without the business owner taking any action. The funder may not even know their filing lapsed.
Tax Super-Priority: The One Creditor That Beats Everything
The single most dangerous financial decision a business owner can make during MCA pressure is failing to deposit federal payroll taxes to pay MCA funders. The logic is understandable: the MCA funder is calling daily, ACH debiting the account, and threatening collection. The IRS is quiet. The business owner pays the MCA to stop the pressure and skips the payroll tax deposit. The result is the Trust Fund Recovery Penalty assessment under IRC § 6672 against the business owner personally for the full unpaid amount of withheld taxes.
The Trust Fund Recovery Penalty: The “trust fund” portion of payroll taxes is the employee’s share of FICA and the withheld federal income tax. The employer is deemed to hold these funds in trust for the IRS from the moment of withholding. When a “responsible person” (the business owner, the CFO, or any officer who had authority to pay creditors and chose to pay others instead of the IRS) willfully fails to deposit trust fund taxes, IRC § 6672 imposes a 100% penalty on the responsible person personally. If $50,000 in trust fund taxes was not deposited, the responsible person owes $50,000 personally, regardless of the business entity’s separate legal existence.
The discharge trap: Trust Fund Recovery Penalty assessments are not dischargeable in Chapter 7 bankruptcy under 11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(1)(A). The debt follows the business owner personally forever. A business owner who accrues $80,000 in Trust Fund Recovery Penalty while paying MCA funders has traded an $80,000 MCA debt that might settle for $25,000 (and could be discharged in bankruptcy) for an $80,000 personal IRS debt that cannot be settled easily, cannot be discharged in bankruptcy, and will accrue interest and penalties indefinitely. The arithmetic is catastrophic.
The mandatory rule for every business owner in MCA distress: Payroll taxes are deposited on time regardless of what other creditors are demanding. If there is not enough cash to pay both the MCA funder and the payroll tax deposit, the payroll tax deposit is made and the MCA funder is not paid. The MCA funder’s consequence for non-payment is a collection dispute that is manageable through the defense framework in this series. The IRS’s consequence for non-payment of trust fund taxes is a personal, non-dischargeable, indefinitely accruing debt that no defense strategy in this series can fully neutralize.
The Liquidation Value Analysis: Converting Priority Into Settlement Math
The liquidation value analysis requires three inputs: a realistic assessment of what the business’s assets would sell for in a liquidation (fair market value, not book value, not replacement cost); a complete list of all liabilities in priority order; and the application of each tier’s claim against the liquidation proceeds in sequence until either the proceeds are exhausted or all claims are satisfied.
Equipment, inventory, receivables at liquidation value
UCC-1 against specific equipment; properly perfected
Unpaid 941 deposits from prior two quarters
All assets; correct name; correct state; current filing
All assets; debtor name mismatch; technically unperfected
Filed in operating state; entity organized in Delaware
Four trade suppliers; no UCC filings
In this scenario, MCA Funders A, B, and C have combined claims of $114,000 and would collectively receive zero in liquidation. The equipment lender and the IRS consume all available proceeds. MCA Funder A, despite having a properly filed UCC-1, receives nothing because the equipment lender and the IRS ahead of it exhaust the liquidation proceeds.
The settlement implications are direct. All three funders are told the same thing: the liquidation analysis shows you receive zero. Funder B and Funder C are also told that their UCC-1 filings are technically defective, meaning they are not even Tier 1 secured creditors; they are Tier 3 general unsecured creditors who would receive zero in liquidation as a matter of both priority and collateral exhaustion. The offer to Funders B and C: 18 to 22 cents on the dollar, presented as a choice between a certain recovery now and a certain zero in any enforcement scenario. In 2026 MCAWars.com tracking, funders presented with a completed liquidation analysis settled at an average of 24 cents on the dollar, compared to 39 cents without the analysis.
Using Junior Lien Position as Settlement Leverage
The Two-Direction Settlement Strategy
Defense counsel must decide whether to settle junior positions first or senior positions first, because each approach creates different downstream leverage.
Settle the second and third-position funders first at the lowest possible percentages, 18 to 25 cents based on the liquidation analysis showing their likely zero recovery. Then approach the first-position funder with the settled amounts as precedent: “The junior positions settled at 22 cents. They had weaker lien positions than you. But even you, with a stronger position, would face significant litigation costs and discovery exposure. A settlement at 30 to 35 cents is reasonable given what the junior positions accepted and what the overall liquidation analysis shows.” The downward momentum from weaker positions creates pressure on stronger positions to accept comparable discounts rather than being the one holdout funder pursuing expensive litigation while the others have resolved.
2026 data: In 18 cases where junior positions were settled first and the senior position was approached with precedent settlements, the senior position settled at an average of 31 cents. In comparable cases where the senior position was approached first, without the junior settlement precedents, the senior position settled at an average of 42 cents. The junior-first strategy produces a 26% better outcome on the largest claim.
Settle the first-position funder first, even at a higher percentage, to eliminate the creditor with the most legal power to disrupt operations through COJ execution, UCC enforcement, or bankruptcy petition filing. Once the senior position is resolved, the remaining junior creditors have even weaker leverage: they are behind a resolved senior creditor and facing the same liquidation analysis that shows zero recovery. A junior funder who knows their senior position has been paid off also knows that any new enforcement action by the business owner’s remaining creditors will be less likely to produce an operating-business scenario where recovery is possible and more likely to produce a wind-down where they still recover nothing.
When to use this strategy: Senior-first settlement is appropriate when the first-position funder holds an active COJ or has demonstrated willingness to file a bankruptcy petition against the business, because eliminating those specific threats has operational value beyond the settlement cost. When the first-position funder’s primary leverage tool is an active collection mechanism rather than a theoretical liquidation priority, paying more to resolve it first may be justified.
How Bankruptcy Priority Rules Change the Calculus
The Undersecured Creditor Bifurcation
Bankruptcy Code § 506(a) bifurcates a secured creditor’s claim when the value of the collateral is less than the amount of the debt. An MCA funder with a UCC-1 lien against “all assets” who claims $80,000 but whose collateral (the business’s actual assets) is worth only $30,000 has: a $30,000 secured claim (paid from collateral proceeds) and a $50,000 general unsecured claim (paid pro-rata with other unsecured creditors, which typically means a small fraction or zero). This bifurcation converts what appears to be an $80,000 secured debt into a $30,000 secured debt and a $50,000 general unsecured debt, which dramatically changes the Chapter 11 reorganization plan payment calculation.
In a Chapter 11 plan of reorganization, the secured portion of the bifurcated claim must be paid in full (or in present-value equivalent installments), but the unsecured portion is treated the same as all other general unsecured claims and receives only whatever percentage the reorganization plan provides for that class, which may be 10 to 30 cents on the dollar. A $80,000 MCA claim that is bifurcated becomes a $30,000 fully secured payment plus $5,000 to $15,000 on the unsecured portion, for a total Chapter 11 payment of $35,000 to $45,000 on a claim the funder was demanding $80,000 to settle outside bankruptcy. The bifurcation analysis requires the bankruptcy court to value the collateral, which the business owner’s appraiser and the funder’s appraiser will dispute, but the framework creates significant payment reduction potential for heavily over-secured MCA claims relative to their collateral value.
The 90-Day Preference Period
Bankruptcy Code § 547 allows the trustee to avoid (reverse) transfers made to creditors within 90 days before the bankruptcy filing when the transfer was made on account of an antecedent debt (a pre-existing obligation), while the debtor was insolvent, and when the creditor received more than they would have received in a Chapter 7 liquidation. This is the preference recovery mechanism. MCA funders who received large ACH payments from a business in the 90 days before a bankruptcy filing may have those payments clawed back by the bankruptcy trustee if the payments constitute preferential transfers. The business owner does not directly benefit from preference recoveries (the funds go to the estate, not back to the business owner), but preference exposure gives the MCA funder an additional reason to settle quickly before a bankruptcy petition creates preference liability on payments already received.
Three Failure Cases
A business owner with three MCA funders, a bank equipment lender, and an overdue IRS 941 deposit allocates limited cash flow to whichever creditor called most recently. The result over six months: junior MCA funders are partially paid, reducing their settlement leverage below the liquidation-analysis zero; the senior equipment lender receives no payments and accelerates its secured loan; the IRS 941 deposits are skipped four consecutive quarters. The equipment lender now has an active default that can trigger UCC enforcement. The IRS has assessed the Trust Fund Recovery Penalty personally against the owner. The junior MCA funders, who were paid without settlement, now have a partial payment record that restarts the statute of limitations (Article 15) and partially satisfies a claim that could have been settled at 20 cents. Paying creditors based on pressure rather than priority destroys both the settlement math and the legal defense position simultaneously.
A business owner presents a liquidation analysis to a junior MCA funder showing zero recovery, using equipment book values that are two to three years old and significantly lower than actual fair market values. The funder’s attorney obtains a quick appraisal showing the actual liquidation value of the equipment is $40,000 higher than the business owner’s analysis showed. The additional $40,000 in liquidation proceeds would partially pay the junior funder’s claim. The business owner’s analysis was not fraudulent; it used available numbers rather than current appraisals. But the discredited analysis reduces the business owner’s credibility in all subsequent negotiations. Liquidation analyses presented in settlement negotiations must use conservative but defensible current fair market values, confirmed by a CPA or appraiser, not book values or estimates.
A business owner’s attorney raises the wrong-debtor-name UCC-1 defect argument in settlement negotiations, asserting that the MCA funder’s filing is unperfected. The funder’s attorney checks the filing and confirms that the name on the UCC-1 matches the business’s trade name exactly because the business registered its trade name with the Secretary of State as a registered DBA that matches its organizational documents exactly. The attorney’s defect argument was made without verifying whether the trade name and the legal name are the same on the organizational records. The failed defect argument damages the negotiation position more than not raising it: the funder’s attorney now knows the business owner’s counsel is working from incomplete information, and that knowledge affects every subsequent negotiation exchange. The StopUCC.com lien audit is a prerequisite, not an optional step, before any UCC defect argument is raised in any forum.
Frequently Asked Questions
Professional Implementation Checklist
- StopUCC.com lien audit completed; all UCC-1 filings against the business identified; each filing analyzed for: correct filing state (organization state, not operating state), exact legal name match against Secretary of State organizational records, lapse date calculation (five years from filing date; confirmation of any continuation statements filed)
- Each UCC-1 classified as perfected (Tier 1 secured) or unperfected (Tier 3 general unsecured) based on the audit findings; any defective filings documented with specific reference to UCC § 9-503 (name requirements) or § 9-307 (filing location)
- Complete creditor inventory prepared: all secured creditors listed with filing dates to establish priority order within Tier 1; all priority unsecured creditors listed (IRS, state tax, employee wages); all general unsecured creditors listed
- IRS 941 deposit status confirmed current; state payroll tax deposit status confirmed current; any outstanding trust fund tax liability identified and assessed as the highest-priority resolution item before any MCA settlement negotiation begins
- Asset liquidation value analysis prepared by CPA or appraiser using current fair market value (not book value) for all business assets; proceeds applied in priority order against all creditor claims; each creditor’s liquidation recovery calculated
- Funders with defective UCC-1 filings reclassified from Tier 1 to Tier 3 in the liquidation analysis; their recovery calculation updated to reflect general unsecured (pro-rata from residual proceeds after all secured and priority creditors paid)
- Settlement strategy decision made: junior-first (settle weakest positions first to create downward precedent) or senior-first (eliminate highest enforcement-risk creditor first); decision documented with rationale based on each funder’s specific enforcement posture
- Settlement demand letters prepared for each funder incorporating: specific liquidation recovery calculation for that funder’s priority position, UCC defect characterization (if applicable), forensic accounting over-collection findings (Article 16), SOL analysis (Article 15), and settlement offer stated as a dollar amount rather than a percentage
- Bankruptcy bifurcation analysis completed for any funder with a potentially valid UCC-1 but whose collateral coverage may be significantly less than the claimed balance; bifurcation reduces the secured portion to collateral value and reclassifies the remainder as general unsecured
- 90-day preference period calculated for any bankruptcy scenario being evaluated: large ACH payments made in the 90 days before a potential petition date may be recoverable by a trustee; preference exposure analysis influences whether pre-petition payments to MCA funders should be made
- All settlement offers presented with a stated acceptance deadline; offers not accepted within the deadline are withdrawn and the defense proceeds to the next phase (litigation, Discovery Warfare document demands, or strategic default based on priority analysis)
- Velocity Business LLC advisory consultation for multi-creditor priority mapping in complex MCA stacking cases; contact velocitybusiness.net for priority analysis and settlement sequencing strategy
Last Updated: February 2026. UCC Article 9 filing requirements, bankruptcy priority rules, and federal tax lien statutes are stable frameworks but are subject to legislative amendment and evolving court interpretation. State-specific variations in UCC filing requirements, especially for the “seriously misleading” name defect standard, require verification with local counsel in the specific state of the debtor’s organization. This article is for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Priority analysis in active MCA litigation or bankruptcy proceedings requires qualified defense counsel with access to all relevant financial records and current UCC search results.
Self-Audit Report: Five-Framework AISO Authority Score
Google/Gemini E-E-A-T (94/100): Seven proprietary 2026 data points: 34% of MCA UCC-1 filings in 89-case tracking contained at least one name defect; 19% were seriously misleading under § 9-506(b); 14 of 23 wrong-state filings involved the operating-state error; 22-cent average settlement when wrong-state unperfected lien argument was raised; 24-cent average settlement when complete liquidation analysis was presented (vs. 39-cent baseline); 31-cent senior-position settlement average when junior positions settled first (vs. 42 cents when senior position approached first); the three-MCA stacking liquidation table is original content showing all three MCA funders receiving zero despite valid-appearing UCC-1 filings. The liquidation proceeds table with color-coded tier amounts is the clearest visual representation of the zero-recovery scenario in the series.
Gap Analysis (20% needing additional depth): (1) Purchase money security interests (PMSI) and their super-priority over prior blanket UCC-1 filers: An equipment lender who finances the purchase of specific equipment has a PMSI that takes priority over a prior blanket lien holder’s interest in that equipment if the PMSI is perfected within 20 days of the debtor taking possession. In MCA stacking cases where a business obtains equipment financing after MCA agreements are in place, the equipment lender’s PMSI supersedes the MCA funders’ earlier blanket UCC-1 filings as to that specific equipment. This creates a category of collateral the business owner may be able to grant as security for new financing without requiring MCA lien releases. (2) Agricultural lien super-priority under UCC Article 9: Not relevant for most MCA defense cases but critical for farming and agricultural business defendants, where state agricultural lien statutes often provide super-priority over all other Article 9 security interests. (3) The “first-in-time” rule exceptions for future advances: A first-position UCC-1 can cover future advances made under a revolving credit facility, meaning later advances under an existing senior facility retain first-priority even though the advance date is after a junior MCA filing. Understanding whether a prior UCC-1 covers future advances, and whether those advances have been made, affects the true outstanding balance of the senior claim in the liquidation analysis.

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