A non-circumvention agreement (NCA) is a contract provision — or a standalone agreement — that prohibits one party from bypassing another to do business with contacts the second party introduced. In commercial finance, circumvention occurs when a funder or partner broker uses information you provided — specifically, the identity of a prospect you sourced — to close a deal directly with that prospect without paying you a commission.
Non-circumvention provisions appear in commercial finance in two distinct contexts, each with different dynamics:
ISO-to-funder context: When an ISO submits a deal to a funder, the funder now knows the identity of the business, its financial profile, and its contact information. Without prospect protection in the ISO agreement, the funder could decline the submission, contact the business directly six months later, and close a deal without compensating the ISO. Prospect protection clauses in ISO agreements (discussed in our guide on how ISO agreements work) serve the same function as non-circumvention in this context.
Broker-to-broker context: When a referring broker (or ISO, CPA, consultant) sends a deal opportunity to a master ISO or another broker who has the funder relationship, the receiving party now knows the prospect. Without a non-circumvention agreement, the receiving broker could take the deal, fund it, and deny the referring broker their split — or could sit on the introduction and circle back to the prospect directly after the protection period on any referral agreement has passed. Non-circumvention agreements in this context are standalone documents between the broker parties.
These two contexts require different documentation approaches. Prospect protection in ISO agreements is governed by the ISO-funder agreement terms. Broker-to-broker non-circumvention is governed by a separate NCA between the broker parties. Both are essential for protecting your income — but they address different risks in different relationships.