Last updated: May 2026

Business Finance Education

How UCC Filings Work: A Business Owner's Guide to UCC-1 Financing Statements, Searches, and Terminations

Most business owners encounter UCC filings for the first time when they take a business loan — often without fully understanding what was filed. The UCC-1 financing statement is a foundational document in commercial lending that affects your legal obligations, your future financing access, and your creditor priority in a distress scenario. This guide explains everything a business owner needs to know about UCC filings: what they are, how to find them, what they mean for future borrowing, and how the termination process works after payoff.

  • What a UCC-1 financing statement is and what it means legally
  • Step-by-step instructions for searching UCC filings on your business
  • How long UCC filings last and how lenders keep them active
  • Exactly how to get a UCC lien removed after payoff

What is the UCC and why does it govern commercial lending?

The Uniform Commercial Code (UCC) is a comprehensive body of commercial law that has been adopted in substantially similar form by every U.S. state (and the District of Columbia). It standardizes the rules for commercial transactions across state lines — making it possible for businesses to engage in interstate commerce, extend credit, and take security interests with a consistent set of legal expectations regardless of which state a transaction occurs in.

Article 9 of the UCC specifically governs secured transactions — the rules for how a creditor creates and enforces a security interest in personal property (as opposed to real estate, which is governed by separate state mortgage and deed of trust laws). Article 9 defines what counts as collateral, how security interests are "attached" (made legally binding between debtor and creditor) and "perfected" (made effective against third parties), and how competing claims are prioritized.

The UCC-1 financing statement is the primary mechanism for "perfecting" a security interest in personal property under Article 9. A security interest that has been created (the loan agreement has been signed) but not perfected (no UCC-1 has been filed) is enforceable against the debtor but not necessarily against other creditors or a bankruptcy trustee. Perfection through filing is what gives the lender's security interest its priority over competing claims. This is why lenders file UCC-1s at or immediately before funding — they need to establish their priority position as early as possible.

The UCC-1 financing statement explained

A UCC-1 financing statement is a relatively simple form that accomplishes a specific legal purpose: publicly noticing the world that a particular secured party claims a security interest in particular collateral belonging to a particular debtor. The form has three essential components:

1. Debtor information

The legal name and address of the business (or individual) whose assets are covered by the security interest. For businesses, the exact legal name as it appears in formation documents is critical — UCC searches are name-based, and a filing under a slightly different name may not show up in a standard search. A filing under "Smith's Auto Repair LLC" and a search for "Smith Auto Repair LLC" (without the apostrophe-s) may not match under some state search systems. Accuracy in the debtor name is essential for the filing to provide proper legal notice.

2. Secured party information

The name and address of the lender or creditor claiming the security interest. This is who you owe the money to — the company that has the legal claim against your collateral. When a loan is sold or assigned to another lender, a UCC-3 amendment is filed to update the secured party information to the new owner of the debt. When you pay off a loan, the secured party on the UCC-1 is the entity you should contact for the termination.

3. Collateral description

The description of what is covered by the security interest. This can range from very specific ("2023 Caterpillar 320 excavator, serial number XXXXX") to extremely broad ("all personal property of the debtor, now owned or hereafter acquired"). The broad description is what creates a blanket lien. The narrower the description, the more limited the lender's claim. Most alternative lenders use broad "all assets" language because specific descriptions require effort to draft and may miss assets. For more on how blanket descriptions affect your business, see our guide to blanket liens in business financing.

Where UCC-1 filings are made: For most business entities (corporations, LLCs), the UCC-1 is filed in the Secretary of State's office of the state where the business entity was organized (incorporated or formed), not where it operates. An LLC organized in Delaware files its UCC-1 records in Delaware even if the business operates primarily in Texas. This distinction matters when searching — you need to search in the state of organization, not necessarily the state of principal operations. Individual debtors (sole proprietors) are searched in their state of residency.

Filing fees for UCC-1s are minimal — typically $10 to $30 per filing depending on the state. The low cost is why lenders routinely file UCC-1s even on small transactions; the filing cost is trivial relative to the legal protection it provides.

Step-by-step: how to search for UCC filings on your business

Searching for UCC filings on your business is free, takes about 5 minutes, and is something every business owner should do before seeking new financing. Here is the process:

  • Step 1 — Identify your state of organization. Determine which state your LLC or corporation was formed in. This is the state where you filed your Articles of Organization (LLC) or Articles of Incorporation. It is on your formation documents and is the state where you pay annual report fees to maintain your business registration.
  • Step 2 — Go to that state's Secretary of State website. Search "[your state] Secretary of State UCC search" in your browser. Every state has a UCC search tool, though the interface varies. Most are under the Secretary of State's website, sometimes under a "Business Services" or "Commercial Code" section.
  • Step 3 — Search by debtor name. Enter your business's exact legal name — as it appears on your formation documents, including any punctuation, LLC or Inc. designation. Run the search. Some states also offer search by debtor address or filing number, but name search is the standard method.
  • Step 4 — Review results. Results show all active UCC filings with your business name as debtor. Each result shows the secured party name, the filing date, the filing number, the lapse date (5 years from filing), and in many states a link to view the actual filing including collateral description.
  • Step 5 — Review each collateral description. For each filing, view the collateral description. "All assets" or "all personal property" means a blanket lien. Specific descriptions (equipment serial numbers, specific accounts) mean a targeted lien on those specific items. Note the secured party for each active filing — these are the lenders whose liens are currently active on your business.
  • Step 6 — Note lapse dates. Each filing has a lapse date (5 years from the original filing date). Filings that lapsed without renewal are no longer active and do not encumber your assets. Only active filings (before their lapse date) affect future financing.
  • Step 7 — Identify paid-off liens not yet terminated. If you see filings from lenders you have already fully repaid, those filings should have been terminated. Contact those lenders to request UCC-3 termination filings if they have not already done so.

State-specific UCC search portals: Below are a few commonly used state UCC search portals — search "[state] Secretary of State UCC search" to find your specific state's current URL, as these sometimes change:

  • Delaware: UCC filing search at Delaware Division of Corporations
  • California: UCC search at California Secretary of State
  • New York: UCC search at NY Department of State Division of Corporations
  • Texas: UCC search at Texas Secretary of State (SOS Direct)
  • Florida: UCC search at Florida Division of Corporations (Sunbiz)

How long UCC filings last and how they are renewed

Under the UCC, a properly filed UCC-1 financing statement is effective for 5 years from the date of filing. On the 5-year anniversary of the filing date (the "lapse date"), the filing automatically becomes ineffective — the security interest is no longer perfected against third parties. This does not mean the underlying debt disappears; it means the lender loses their priority position if the filing lapses.

For ongoing obligations (lines of credit that remain open for years, long-term equipment leases, SBA loans with 10-year terms), lenders must file a UCC-3 continuation statement before the 5-year lapse date to extend the filing's effectiveness. The continuation must be filed within the 6-month window before the lapse date — not too early and not after lapse. A continuation filed after lapse does not revive the old filing; a new UCC-1 would be required, which would reset the priority date to the new filing date (potentially losing priority to other lenders who filed in the interim).

Each continuation extends the filing for another 5 years from the lapse date of the previous period — not from the date of the continuation filing. There is no limit on the number of times a filing can be continued, so a long-term secured obligation can theoretically have a UCC filing active for decades through successive continuations.

Practical implication for borrowers: If you took a business loan 4 years ago, know that the lender's UCC filing is approaching its 5-year lapse date. If the loan is still outstanding, expect the lender to file a continuation. If the loan was paid off but the lender has not yet filed a termination, the filing will automatically lapse at 5 years — which effectively clears the encumbrance even without a formal termination. However, for paid-off obligations, it is still better to get a formal termination rather than wait for lapse — a lapsing UCC filing may still cause confusion in lender due diligence searches before the lapse date.

Lien priority rules: how competing UCC filings are ranked

The general rule under Article 9 of the UCC is first-to-file priority: among secured parties claiming the same collateral, the one who filed first has the higher priority claim. The priority date runs from the date the UCC-1 was filed with the Secretary of State, not from the date the security agreement was signed or the loan was funded.

This first-to-file principle has significant practical consequences:

  • Lenders file UCC-1s as quickly as possible. Because priority runs from filing date, lenders who want first priority file their UCC-1 before or simultaneously with funding — never after. Some lenders file a UCC-1 even before final loan approval to reserve their priority position, though they must file again if the loan doesn't close and the initial filing needs to be terminated.
  • A prior blanket lien defeats a later specific lien on the same collateral. If Lender A has a blanket lien filed in 2023 and Lender B files a specific lien on a piece of equipment in 2025, Lender A has first priority on that equipment — even though Lender B specifically financed that equipment. This is why equipment lenders and other secured lenders require payoff or subordination of existing blanket liens before funding.
  • Purchase money security interests (PMSIs) are an important exception. A PMSI is a security interest taken by a seller or lender who provided the funds to purchase a specific item. For inventory PMSIs, the new lender gets priority over earlier blanket lien holders if they comply with specific notification and timing requirements. Equipment PMSIs automatically have priority over earlier blanket liens on the specific equipment, provided they file within 20 days of the debtor taking possession. This exception enables equipment financing to function even when a prior blanket lien exists.
  • Priority between blanket liens is determined by filing date. If you have three MCA funders who all filed blanket liens, Funder 1 (first to file) has first claim on all collateral, Funder 2 has second claim, and Funder 3 has third claim. In a default and liquidation, proceeds flow to Funder 1 first, then Funder 2 from any remainder, then Funder 3. Funder 3 in this scenario may recover nothing or next to nothing, which is why stacking carries significant risk for lenders and why multiple stacked advance positions lead to funding denials.

UCC-3 amendments, assignments, and partial releases

After a UCC-1 financing statement is filed, subsequent changes are made through UCC-3 filing amendments. Understanding the different types of UCC-3 amendments helps you interpret what you see in a UCC search and what actions you can take.

UCC-3 Continuation

Filed by the secured party before the 5-year lapse date to extend the filing for another 5 years. The continuation must reference the original UCC-1 filing number. Only the secured party (not the debtor) can file a continuation. If the debtor's information has changed (new address, name change), the continuation updates those details while extending the filing.

UCC-3 Amendment — Collateral Change

Modifies the collateral description in the original filing. A lender might file an amendment to add collateral (expanding the security interest to cover additional assets), delete specific collateral (releasing specific assets from the lien), or clarify an ambiguous collateral description. Collateral amendments that add new collateral only have priority from the date of the amendment, not the date of the original UCC-1.

UCC-3 Assignment

Transfers the secured party's interest to a new entity. When a loan is sold — for example, an MCA funder sells a portfolio of advances to an investor — the new owner of the debt files a UCC-3 assignment to update the secured party information to their name. The priority date remains the original filing date even after assignment.

UCC-3 Partial Release

Removes specific assets from the coverage of an existing blanket lien without fully terminating the filing. For example, if a lender releases a specific piece of equipment so you can sell it free and clear, they file a UCC-3 amendment to delete that specific equipment from the collateral description. The blanket lien continues to cover all remaining assets. Partial releases require lender cooperation and are typically conditioned on the proceeds from the sale being applied to the outstanding balance.

UCC-3 Termination

Fully releases the security interest and deactivates the UCC-1 filing. The secured party certifies that they no longer claim a security interest in the collateral. Once a termination is filed, the UCC-1 is no longer effective. This is what you need after paying off any secured loan. The terminated filing remains visible in UCC search history (it does not disappear) but shows a "terminated" status indicating the lien is no longer active.

Debtor-filed termination

In some states and circumstances, if the secured party fails to file a termination within 20 days of a written demand after the debt is satisfied, the debtor may file a UCC-3 termination themselves using a specific form and process. This debtor-initiated termination typically requires an authorization statement and varies somewhat by state. Consulting a commercial attorney before filing a debtor-initiated termination is advisable to ensure the form and process comply with your state's specific requirements.

Step-by-step: how to get a UCC filing removed after payoff

After you pay off a loan secured by a UCC-1 filing, taking specific steps to get the lien removed protects your future financing access. Here is the recommended process:

  • Step 1 — Get written payoff confirmation immediately. When making your final payment, request written confirmation from the lender that the obligation is paid in full and satisfied. This confirmation should include the UCC-1 filing number and reference the lender's obligation to file a UCC-3 termination. Keep this document permanently — it is your evidence that the debt was satisfied if the lender ever disputes it.
  • Step 2 — Send a formal written termination demand. Send the lender a written demand (email is sufficient in most cases, certified mail for extra protection) stating that the secured obligation has been satisfied and requesting that they file a UCC-3 termination for filing number [XXX] within 20 days as required by UCC Section 9-513. Reference the specific filing number from your UCC search. This 20-day clock only starts running when you make a written demand — the obligation to terminate within 20 days is triggered by the demand, not automatically upon payoff.
  • Step 3 — Wait 20 days and verify. After 20 days from your demand, run a fresh UCC search on your business. If the filing now shows "terminated" status, you are done. If it still shows active, the lender is in violation of UCC 9-513 and can be held liable for damages caused by their failure to terminate.
  • Step 4 — If lender fails to act, pursue remedies. If the lender does not file the termination after your written demand and the 20-day deadline passes, you have several options: escalate with the lender's compliance department, consult a commercial attorney about filing a debtor-initiated termination or pursuing damages, or (for larger issues) file a complaint with your state's financial regulator or the CFPB if the lender is a supervised entity.
  • Step 5 — Document the clean search. After confirming termination, save a copy of the search results showing no active filings from the paid-off lender. This documentation is useful if the lender ever attempts to refile or if the termination is questioned in future financing due diligence.

How UCC filings affect future financing access

Understanding how lenders use UCC searches in their underwriting helps you anticipate the questions and complications that arise when you apply for additional financing with existing liens on file.

Every serious commercial lender searches UCC records before approving financing. This is standard due diligence. When you apply for an equipment loan, an invoice factoring facility, an SBA loan, or even many working capital products, the lender will search UCC records in your state of organization. What they find directly affects their decision.

What lenders look for in a UCC search: The number of active filings and the identity of the secured parties. Are the secured parties well-known lenders with predictable behavior (banks, established equipment lenders) or aggressive alternative lenders with unclear subordination policies? The collateral descriptions — are they specific (limited assets covered) or blanket (all assets)? The outstanding balances implied by active positions — even if not specified in the UCC filing itself, the lender will likely ask about outstanding balances. The age of filings — very recent filings suggest the business is actively taking on new debt, which raises questions about financial health.

For businesses looking to grow into bank or SBA financing: Having clean UCC records — meaning only filings for current, non-stacked obligations, with immediate terminations after payoff — is an important part of presenting a creditworthy profile. Lenders who see a history of multiple stacked alternative lending positions, even if paid off, form an impression of a business that relies on high-cost financing rather than one building toward bank-quality credit access. For context on how credit profiles affect financing options, see our guides to business credit scores and unsecured business loans.

FAQ

Questions about UCC filings for business owners

What is a UCC-1 filing and what does it mean for my business?

A UCC-1 financing statement is filed by a lender with your state's Secretary of State to publicly establish a security interest in your business assets. It creates a public record that the named lender has a legal claim against the described collateral. Most business loans result in a UCC-1 filing. The filing protects the lender's priority position against other creditors and gives them legal recourse to business assets in a default scenario.

How long does a UCC filing last?

UCC-1 filings are effective for exactly 5 years from the filing date. They automatically lapse after 5 years unless the secured party files a UCC-3 continuation before the lapse date. Continuations extend effectiveness for another 5 years from the original lapse date. There is no limit on renewals, so long-term obligations can maintain UCC filing effectiveness through successive continuations.

How do I search for UCC filings on my business?

Go to the Secretary of State website for the state where your business was organized (incorporated or formed as an LLC). Use the UCC search tool with your exact legal business name. Results show all active filings. Review the collateral description for each — "all assets" indicates a blanket lien. Note the secured party and lapse date for each active filing. This search is free and takes about 5 minutes.

How do I get a UCC filing removed after I pay off the loan?

After payoff, send the lender a written demand for UCC-3 termination of the specific filing number. Under the UCC, the lender has 20 days from your written demand to file the termination. Verify the termination by running a follow-up UCC search 30 days after making the demand. If the lender fails to file, they can be held liable for damages. Do not wait for automatic lapse if the loan is paid off — get a formal termination filed promptly.

Can two lenders both have UCC filings on the same business?

Yes — multiple UCC filings are common and legally permitted. Priority between competing secured parties is determined by filing order: first to file has first-priority claim. This is why stacking multiple advance positions with blanket liens is damaging — each additional lender gets a lower priority position, reducing their recovery and increasing their risk perception, which leads to higher rates and lower approval amounts for later positions.

Does a UCC filing appear on my personal credit report?

No. UCC filings are business records, not personal credit records. A UCC-1 against your business appears in business credit databases and public Secretary of State records, not on your personal Equifax, Experian, or TransUnion credit report. However, if you defaulted and the lender pursued collections through the personal guarantee, that collection activity can appear on personal credit reports separately from the UCC filing.

Have UCC filings complicating your financing options?

Get matched to a lender who understands your situation

Axiant Partners works with businesses navigating complex lien situations — including those with existing UCC filings that need to be managed, subordinated, or paid off as part of a new financing arrangement. Tell us about your situation and we will identify the right path forward.