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Merchant Cash Advance Fees in Canada (2026 Guide)

Learn the fees MCA companies charge in Canada: factor rates, holdbacks, NSF/default costs, and how to compare offers safely.

Written by
Alec Whitten
Published on
December 22, 2025

What an MCA “fee” really means in Canada

Most Canadian MCAs are priced as a purchase of future receivables with a factor rate. The provider advances cash today and collects a portion of your future sales until a pre-agreed total is collected.

That’s why MCAs often avoid quoting an “interest rate.” Instead, your cost is described as:

  • Factor rate (e.g., 1.20, 1.30)
  • Total payback amount (advance × factor rate)
  • Holdback/retrieval rate (the % of daily card sales or revenue that’s swept)

As of December 2025, Canadian MCA explainers commonly describe factor rates in a range like ~1.07 to 1.35 (the actual number depends on risk, business stability, and provider). (Swoop UK)

The core cost: factor rate (and what it hides)

Key point: The factor rate is the main “fee,” but it doesn’t tell you the tempo of repayment—which is what makes the effective cost feel expensive.

Factor rate

A factor rate is a multiplier applied to the amount advanced.

Example

  • Advance: $50,000
  • Factor rate: 1.25
  • Total payback: $62,500
  • Total cost: $12,500

Unlike interest, the total payback is typically fixed from day one.

Holdback / retrieval rate

This is the percentage of your daily sales (often card sales) that gets swept to repay the MCA.

Many MCA explanations describe holdbacks in the 10%–20% ballpark for card-based repayment examples, though it varies by provider and business profile. (Stripe)

Why this matters: A higher holdback can shorten the payoff timeline, which can make the annualized cost feel much higher (even if the total payback is “fixed”).

The fee stack: what MCA companies charge beyond the factor rate

Key point: The factor rate is just the headline. The contract often includes additional fees that fall into four buckets: up-front deductions, ongoing admin costs, event-driven penalties, and default/enforcement costs.

1) Up-front fees (taken off your funding day-one)

These reduce what you actually receive.

Common up-front fees include:

  • Origination/setup fee
  • Underwriting/processing fee
  • Wire/EFT disbursement fee

Watch for this language: “Net funding,” “administration fee,” “program fee,” “delivery fee.”
If you’re approved for $50,000 but receive $46,500, your true cost is already higher because you’re paying back based on the larger figure.

2) Ongoing fees (small, but persistent)

  • Payment processing / ACH-style withdrawal fee (monthly or per withdrawal)
  • Servicing/admin fee
  • Monitoring/reporting fee (less common, but it exists)

On paper these look minor. In real life, they matter when cash gets tight—because they stack on top of daily sweeps.

3) Event-driven fees (the “cash flow stress” fees)

These hit when something goes wrong—or when you ask for relief.

  • NSF / returned payment fee (often per incident)
  • Late fee or “failed remittance” fee
  • Reconciliation fee (sometimes) or “manual review” cost
  • Amendment fee (changing bank accounts, changing processors, term changes)

This is where business owners get blindsided: the MCA doesn’t just cost more—it becomes harder to manage operationally.

4) Default and enforcement costs (the expensive part)

If you trigger default (even a “technical” one), agreements may add:

  • Default fees
  • Increased remittance/step-up collections
  • Legal/enforcement costs

Even if you never default, you should read these clauses as a risk scenario: What’s the worst day that can happen, and what does the contract let them do?

A clear view of MCA fees (table)

The “real cost” isn’t the factor rate—it’s the speed of payback

Key point: Two MCAs with the same factor rate can feel completely different depending on how fast you repay.

Payment examples often show how holdback works in practice: on high sales days you pay more, on low sales days you pay less. (Stripe)

That variability is the promise of an MCA. But in many contracts, the operational reality is closer to a fixed daily sweep from your bank account. When the sweep is effectively fixed, it can behave like a rigid debt service obligation.

Mini “back-of-napkin” calculator (use this to compare offers)

This isn’t a legal APR calculation—just a sanity check.

  1. Total payback = Advance × Factor rate
  2. Total cost = Total payback − (Net funds received)
  3. Time = Expected months to pay off
  4. Cost intuition (annualized) ≈ (Total cost ÷ Net funds received) ÷ (months ÷ 12)

Why net funds matter: If fees are deducted up front, your true cost is higher than the factor suggests.

Canada’s criminal interest regime affects how you should think about MCA fees

Key point: Even when an MCA is marketed as “not a loan,” Canadian business owners should understand how high-cost financing interacts with Canada’s criminal interest rules—especially if the deal functions like credit.

As of December 2025, Criminal Code section 347 defines the “criminal rate” as an APR exceeding 35% on the credit advanced, calculated using generally accepted actuarial practices. (Department of Justice Canada)

Related regulations were published in the Canada Gazette and connect to the January 1, 2025 changes. (www.gazette.gc.ca)

There are also exemptions/carve-outs that can apply in some commercial contexts (details vary by structure and borrower), which Canadian law firms have discussed in practical terms. (Dentons)

Practical takeaway (not legal advice):

  • If an MCA’s fees and enforcement mechanics make it behave like credit that must be repaid no matter what, the “it’s not a loan” label won’t necessarily protect you from the risks that come with high-cost credit structures.
  • This is why fee transparency matters: “fees” can function like “interest” in effect, even if the contract uses different words.

The underwriter lens: how MCA fees affect future approvals

Key point: From a credit analyst perspective, an MCA doesn’t just cost money—it changes your risk profile.

Lenders (including equipment lessors) evaluate you through the 5Cs of credit:

Character

  • Do you disclose existing MCAs?
  • Do bank statements show surprise withdrawals or stacked advances?

Hidden obligations are a common “deal killer” because they change the risk picture overnight.

Capacity (cash flow)

Daily sweeps can be brutal because cash flow is lumpy, especially in:

  • Restaurants/hospitality
  • Seasonal retail
  • Trades with uneven billing cycles
  • Transportation businesses with delayed settlement

Capacity isn’t your profit margin—it’s whether cash arrives fast enough to survive daily pulls.

Capital

If you have no working capital buffer, even a “small” MCA can cause repeated NSF events, which then triggers more fees.

Collateral

Most MCAs lean on access to receivables and contract remedies rather than hard collateral. If you do have equipment, a leasing-first structure can often raise capital with predictable monthly payments instead of daily sweeps.

Conditions

Underwriters care about what could go wrong next quarter:

  • Revenue concentration (one platform, one processor, one big customer)
  • Chargebacks/refunds
  • CRA arrears pressure
  • Seasonality

Mehmi POV (leasing-first): If you’re taking an MCA to buy equipment or vehicles, pause. A properly structured lease (or sale-leaseback if you already own assets) can often be a healthier match for business cash flow than a daily sweep product.

How to compare MCA offers safely (a decision checklist)

Key point: You’re not just shopping “rates.” You’re shopping how the contract behaves when real life happens.

Use this checklist before you sign:

Pricing clarity

  • What is the total payback?
  • What is the net funding (after all fees)?
  • Are there recurring admin/withdrawal fees?

Repayment mechanics

  • Is the holdback truly a percentage of sales (auto-adjust), or a fixed daily amount?
  • If reconciliation exists, is it automatic or do you need approval and paperwork?

Fee triggers

  • NSF fees: amount and frequency
  • Default definition: what counts as default besides “missed payment”?
    • changing bank accounts
    • changing processors
    • missing reporting
    • tax issues
    • unusual deposit patterns

Exit terms

  • If you pay off early, do you get a discount—or is the cost effectively fixed?

A simple rule: If you can’t explain the worst-case week in plain English (sales drop + 2 NSFs + supplier payments due), you’re not ready to sign.

When an MCA can make sense (and when it usually doesn’t)

MCA can make sense when:

  • You have strong card volume and high margins
  • The use of funds has a short, certain ROI (e.g., a quick inventory flip with predictable demand)
  • The holdback truly flexes with sales (and reconciliation is real)

Swoop’s Canadian guide, for example, emphasizes that factor rates depend on business stability and transaction profile—this is consistent with how underwriters view risk. (Swoop UK)

MCA is often a bad fit when:

  • You’re plugging a structural cash-flow hole
  • Your margins are thin (the sweep starves operations)
  • You’re tempted to “stack” a second advance to cover the first

Contrarian take (but fair): The most dangerous MCA isn’t the expensive one—it’s the one that looks manageable until revenue dips, and then fees + sweeps turn a temporary gap into a spiral.

Alternatives to consider in Canada (especially if you’re buying assets)

If your goal is to fund growth without daily cash strain, alternatives often match better:

  • Equipment leasing (monthly payments, asset-based logic, often easier to budget)
  • Sale-leaseback (unlock cash from equipment you already own)
  • Receivables financing / factoring (for B2B invoices)
  • Asset-based lending (for businesses with A/R + inventory and reporting capacity)

This is where Mehmi can help: we look at your use of funds and cash cycle first, then structure something that doesn’t silently tax you every morning.

Anonymous case study: the “fees-on-fees” problem that nearly forced stacking

Business: Canadian retail operator (card-heavy, seasonal dip every winter).
Need: $80,000 to bring in inventory early and cover a short-term supplier prepay.

What they were offered:

  • Factor rate that looked “normal”
  • A daily sweep that was described as a percentage of sales
  • Small admin fees that “didn’t matter”

What happened in real life:

  • A slow two-week period reduced sales.
  • The sweep didn’t flex down fast (reconciliation was manual and slow).
  • Two NSF events triggered fees and further tightened liquidity.
  • The owner considered a second MCA to “stabilize” (stacking risk).

What changed the outcome:

  1. We rebuilt the cash plan around daily liquidity, not monthly P&L.
  2. We replaced the daily-sweep pressure with a structure tied to assets and a predictable payment schedule.
  3. We added guardrails (clear conditions before funding and a monitoring plan) so the business didn’t drift back into stacking.

Result: The business stabilized cash flow, avoided stacking, and had cleaner bank statements—which matters for future approvals.

FAQs (Canada-specific)

1) What is the most common fee on a merchant cash advance in Canada?

The main cost is usually the factor rate (fixed total payback). Many Canadian explainers cite ranges like ~1.07–1.35 depending on the business and provider. (Swoop UK)

2) What’s the difference between a factor rate and a holdback?

A factor rate sets your total payback. A holdback is the % of sales used to collect it. Holdback examples are often shown around 10%–20% in MCA explainers, but it varies. (Stripe)

3) Do MCA companies charge origination or setup fees in Canada?

Some do. These may be deducted from your advance, reducing your net funding. Always ask for “net funds to my account” in writing.

4) What fees can hit me if cash flow gets tight?

The most common are NSF/returned payment fees, late/default fees, and sometimes fees connected to reconciliation or amendments. These are the fees that create the “fees-on-fees” spiral.

5) Do MCA fees fall under Canada’s criminal interest rate rules?

It depends on whether the arrangement is treated as credit advanced and how fees are characterized. As of December 2025, section 347 defines the criminal rate as APR exceeding 35% on credit advanced, and changes came into force on January 1, 2025. (Department of Justice Canada)

6) What’s a safer option if I’m buying equipment or vehicles?

Often, leasing or sale-leaseback can be safer because payments are predictable and aligned with the asset’s useful life—rather than sweeping cash daily. If you have B2B invoices, factoring/receivables financing may also fit better.

Calm next step

If you have an MCA offer in hand, the smartest move is to ask for a one-page breakdown showing: net funding, total payback, holdback mechanics, all fees, and what triggers default. If you want a second set of eyes, Mehmi can help you compare structures (leasing-first where it fits) before you sign something that quietly taxes your cash flow every day.

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