Business Credit

Your Business Credit Score: How It's Calculated and How to Improve It Fast

DK
David Kim

Small Business Credit Specialist

9 min read

February 17, 2025

Your business credit score is one of the most powerful — and most misunderstood — factors in getting funded. Here's exactly how it works and what you can do to improve it, starting today.

Why Business Credit Is Separate from Personal Credit

Many business owners don't realize that their business has its own credit file — entirely separate from their personal FICO score. Your business credit profile determines the rates and amounts you can access as your business matures, and it's built on completely different bureaus with different scoring methodologies. Understanding this distinction is the first step toward strategically building the credit profile that unlocks the best business term loans, lines of credit, and SBA financing.

The Three Business Credit Bureaus

Unlike personal credit, which is dominated by three bureaus (Equifax, Experian, TransUnion) using similar FICO models, business credit has three distinct bureau systems with different scoring methodologies and data sources. Understanding all three is essential because different lenders pull from different bureaus.

1. Dun & Bradstreet PAYDEX Score (0–100)

The PAYDEX score measures how promptly your business pays its bills. It's based entirely on payment history reported to D&B by your vendors and suppliers. A score of 80 means you pay on the due date; 100 means you pay early. Scores above 75 are generally considered good; below 50 raises red flags with lenders. To generate a PAYDEX score, you need a DUNS Number (free from D&B) and at least 3 trade experiences reported.

The PAYDEX is the most widely referenced business credit score in commercial lending — if a lender mentions your "business credit score," they usually mean your PAYDEX.

2. Experian Intelliscore Plus (0–100)

Experian's business score considers payment history, credit utilization, company age, industry risk, and public records (such as liens and judgments). Like PAYDEX, 76–100 is considered low risk. This score is widely used by alternative lenders and many SBA lenders. Experian also provides a separate "Financial Stability Risk" score that predicts the likelihood of severe delinquency within the next 12 months — some lenders use this in addition to the Intelliscore.

3. FICO Small Business Scoring Service (SBSS) (0–300)

The FICO SBSS is unique because it blends both your personal credit and your business credit data into a single score. It's used by the SBA to pre-screen 7(a) loan applications — you generally need a score of 155+ to pass the SBA's automated screening. The SBSS is increasingly used by banks and credit unions for loans up to $1 million. Because it incorporates personal credit, improving your personal FICO score directly improves your SBSS.

What Damages Your Business Credit Score

Just as important as knowing how to build your score is understanding what harms it. The most damaging factors include late payments to vendors (even a single 30-day late payment can drop your PAYDEX significantly), high credit utilization on business credit cards, public records such as tax liens and judgments, collections, and derogatory items from lenders reporting to business bureaus. Unlike personal credit, which has a 7-year window for most negative items, business credit negative items can stay on your report indefinitely.

How to Build Business Credit: Step-by-Step

  1. Incorporate your business: LLC or Corporation status separates your personal and business identity, which is required to build a separate business credit file. A sole proprietorship cannot have a separate business credit file.
  2. Get a DUNS Number: Register for a free DUNS Number at dnb.com. This is your business credit identity — every trade line, loan, and lender report will be tied to it.
  3. Open a business bank account: Keep all business transactions separate from personal finances. This is both a practical necessity and a signal of legitimacy to lenders reviewing your application.
  4. Get a business credit card: Use it for regular business expenses and pay the full balance monthly. This builds both payment history and utilization ratios across Experian and Equifax business files.
  5. Establish trade lines: Open accounts with vendors who report to D&B and Experian (many office supply, shipping, and wholesale companies do — Uline, Quill, and Grainger are popular choices). Pay early — not just on time. A score of 100 PAYDEX requires paying before the due date.
  6. Apply for a business credit card from a major issuer: Cards from American Express, Chase Ink, and Capital One Spark report to business bureaus and carry significant weight in your business credit file.
  7. Monitor your reports: Check your business credit reports regularly for errors at dnb.com, experian.com/business, and equifax.com/business. Dispute inaccuracies promptly — errors are common and can significantly harm your score.

The Net-30 Vendor Strategy

One of the fastest ways to establish business credit is through Net-30 vendor accounts — suppliers who extend 30-day payment terms and report your payment history to the business credit bureaus. The key is choosing vendors who actually report to D&B and/or Experian. Some popular starter vendors include Crown Office Supplies, Grainger, Uline, and Quill. Open 3–5 such accounts, make small purchases, and pay early every month. Within 3 months, you can establish your first PAYDEX score.

Credit Scores by Business Age: What to Expect

Business AgeTypical ProfileFinancing Accessible
0–6 monthsNo business credit file yetPersonal credit-based options only
6–12 monthsEarly trade lines, thin fileRevenue-based financing, equipment loans
1–2 yearsGrowing PAYDEX, Experian score developingOnline term loans, lines of credit
2+ yearsEstablished PAYDEX 70+Bank loans, SBA programs
3+ years, PAYDEX 80+Strong business credit profileBest rates on all products

How Personal Credit Interacts with Business Credit

For businesses under 2–3 years old, your personal FICO score is still the primary lending criterion for most products. As your business credit matures, lenders gradually shift weight toward your business profile. The FICO SBSS always blends both. This means your credit-building strategy should be two-pronged: build business credit aggressively while also protecting and improving your personal score. Read our guide on how personal credit affects business loans for a full breakdown of the FICO score tiers and what each unlocks.

How Long Does It Take?

Building a meaningful business credit profile takes 12–24 months of consistent, on-time payments across multiple accounts. However, you can establish your first PAYDEX score in as little as 3 months with 3 active trade lines reporting. The key is to start immediately — every month you delay is a month of credit history you can't get back. Businesses that start building credit on day one of operations are in a dramatically better position when they seek larger financing 12–24 months later compared to those who start the process only when they need a loan.

Monitoring and Maintaining Your Business Credit

Unlike personal credit (which you can check for free at AnnualCreditReport.com), business credit reports typically require paid subscriptions to access. D&B CreditSignal provides a free basic monitoring tier. Experian BusinessCreditAdvantage starts at around $189/year. Nav offers a free tier showing your business credit grades across multiple bureaus. The investment is worth it — catching and disputing errors early prevents them from impacting your financing options when you need capital most.

At Approvd, we connect business owners with lenders who report to business credit bureaus, helping you build credit while accessing the capital you need. Check your financing options with no impact to your credit score.

Frequently Asked Questions

How is a business credit score different from a personal credit score?

Business credit scores use different scales and models. D&B PAYDEX runs 0–100; Experian Business runs 0–100; Equifax Business runs 0–300; FICO SBSS runs 0–300. Unlike personal credit, business credit scores are publicly accessible — anyone can purchase your business credit report. They also weigh payment timing differently: paying early improves your score (especially PAYDEX), whereas personal credit only cares that you pay on time.

What's the fastest way to improve my business credit score?

The fastest levers are: (1) Pay all existing business obligations early — even 1 day early improves PAYDEX significantly. (2) Open 3–5 net-30 vendor accounts that report to business bureaus and pay them immediately. (3) Check your business credit reports for errors and dispute them. (4) Reduce utilization on any business credit cards below 30%. Most businesses see meaningful score improvement within 60–90 days of taking these steps.

Do business credit cards help build business credit?

Yes — most major business credit cards (Amex, Chase, Capital One) report to business credit bureaus. Using a business credit card for regular expenses and paying it in full each month is one of the easiest ways to build business credit. Keep utilization below 30% of your limit to maximize the positive impact on your score.

How do I check my business credit score for free?

Free options are limited. Nav.com offers a free business credit summary. CreditSignal from D&B shows PAYDEX trends for free. For full reports, you'll pay: D&B CreditMonitor (~$39/month), Experian Business (~$40/report), Equifax Business (~$100/report). Many business owners check annually rather than monthly to keep costs reasonable, unless actively applying for financing.

Can a bad business credit score disqualify me from all financing?

No — a poor business credit score limits your options but doesn't eliminate them entirely. Revenue-based lenders, invoice factoring companies, and some online lenders focus primarily on revenue and cash flow rather than credit scores. Additionally, a strong personal credit score (700+) can partially offset a weak business credit profile for many lenders.

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