UCC Lien Explained
A UCC lien is a legal claim filed under Article 9 of the Uniform Commercial Code (UCC) that gives a creditor a security interest in a debtor's personal property or business assets. It is created by filing a UCC-1 financing statement with the appropriate state agency, typically the Secretary of State.
The UCC is a set of standardized business laws adopted (with variations) by all 50 U.S. states. A UCC lien does not grant ownership of the assets — it establishes the creditor's right to seize or sell the collateral if the debtor defaults on their obligation.
In B2B contexts, UCC liens are commonly used in equipment financing, factoring arrangements, and asset-based lending. They can also serve as a powerful collection tool: a UCC filing on a debtor's assets makes it difficult for that business to obtain new financing, often motivating faster payment of outstanding debts.
What You Need to Know About UCC Liens
- First to file wins. UCC lien priority is determined by filing date. The first creditor to file a UCC-1 statement has first claim on the collateral — making early filing critical in multi-creditor situations.
- UCC-1 filings are public records. Anyone can search UCC filings through the Secretary of State's office. Lenders routinely check for existing liens before extending credit, which is why a UCC filing can pressure debtors to pay.
- Filings expire after 5 years. A UCC-1 must be renewed by filing a continuation statement within 6 months before the 5-year expiration date. If not renewed, the secured creditor loses their priority position.
- Blanket liens cover all assets. A UCC filing can be specific (covering one piece of equipment) or blanket (covering all business assets). Blanket liens are common in asset-based lending and factoring.
- UCC liens survive bankruptcy — partially. Secured creditors with perfected UCC liens have priority over unsecured creditors in bankruptcy proceedings, though the automatic stay temporarily prevents enforcement.
UCC Lien in Practice: B2B Example
Scenario: Equipment Supplier
Situation: A construction equipment supplier sells $180,000 in excavators to a contractor on Net 90 terms. To protect the receivable, the supplier files a UCC-1 financing statement with the state, naming the excavators as collateral.
The contractor fails to pay after 90 days. Meanwhile, the contractor also owes $300,000 to two other unsecured creditors.
Outcome: Because the supplier filed a UCC lien, they have a secured interest in the excavators. If the contractor defaults or enters bankruptcy, the supplier can repossess the equipment — ahead of the unsecured creditors who have no claim on specific assets.
The leverage effect: Often, the mere existence of a UCC filing motivates payment. The contractor needs to borrow from a bank to fund a new project, but the bank's lien search reveals the existing UCC filing — the contractor must resolve the outstanding debt before the bank will lend.
How AgentCollect Helps Before Liens Become Necessary
Collect Before You Need Legal Tools
UCC liens are a last resort — they're effective but create friction in business relationships. AgentCollect AI agents resolve overdue invoices through persistent, professional outreach long before legal remedies become necessary.
By contacting debtors early with phone calls, emails, and payment plan options, AgentCollect resolves most B2B receivables within 30-60 days of delinquency. For the small percentage that require escalation, AgentCollect identifies non-responsive accounts quickly so you can make informed decisions about UCC filings or legal action.
Related AR Glossary Terms
UCC Lien FAQ
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