New York State Bill Seeks to Criminalize Invoice Factoring, Merchant Cash Advances, and More
A Senate Bill in New York hopes to rewrite the state’s criminal usury laws to include invoice financing, revenue-based financing, merchant cash advances, retail installment contracts, “or any transaction that in substance functions as the advance of funds in exchange for a future payment or obligation, regardless of the label assigned to such transaction.” S10127, introduced by Senator Rachel May (D), says that the purpose is to ensure “that businesses cannot evade New York’s longstanding usury laws by re-labeling high-cost financing products as services or other non-loan transactions, and to apply existing civil and criminal interest rate protections to covered financing arrangements.”
Any product that falls under these definitions would be deemed criminal if its all-in cost exceeds 25% per annum or the equivalent rate for a longer or shorter period. Depending on the circumstances it would either be considered a Class E felony punishable up to 4 years in prison or a Class C felony punishable up to 15 years in prison.
The bill has merely been introduced and has not yet made its rounds through the legislature. It can be viewed here.
Last modified: May 6, 2026





























