Business Credit

How Your Personal Credit Score Affects Your Business Loan — and What to Do About It

DK
David Kim

Small Business Credit Specialist

7 min read

April 14, 2025

Many business owners are surprised to learn how heavily their personal credit score affects their business financing — especially in the first few years. Here's everything you need to know.

Why Lenders Look at Your Personal Credit

For businesses under 3–5 years old, personal credit is often the primary indicator lenders use to assess risk. A business with 18 months of history doesn't have enough financial data to stand on its own — so lenders look at the owner's personal financial behavior as a proxy. The logic: someone who manages their personal finances responsibly is more likely to manage their business responsibly.

As your business matures and builds its own credit profile, personal credit becomes less dominant — but it rarely disappears entirely from the equation. Even SBA loans require personal guarantees and credit checks on all owners with 20%+ ownership. Understanding your personal credit score and how to optimize it is one of the highest-ROI activities for any business owner seeking financing.

How Personal Credit Scoring Works

Your personal FICO score is calculated from five factors, each weighted differently:

FactorWeightWhat It Measures
Payment history35%On-time vs. late payments, collections, bankruptcies
Credit utilization30%Balances as % of credit limits across all revolving accounts
Length of credit history15%Age of oldest account, newest account, average age
Credit mix10%Variety of account types (cards, installment loans, mortgage)
New credit inquiries10%Hard inquiries from new credit applications

Understanding this weighting tells you exactly where to focus improvement efforts: payment history and utilization together account for 65% of your score. These are the levers that move fastest.

How Each FICO Tier Affects Your Business Loan Options

FICO RangeRatingBusiness Financing Access
Below 500Very PoorVery limited. Specialty high-risk lenders only. Expect factor rates of 1.45+.
500–579PoorRevenue-based financing and MCAs accessible. Limited term loan options.
580–629FairBroader RBF options plus some online term loans. Rates elevated.
630–679GoodOnline lenders accessible. Business lines of credit open up. Moderate rates.
680–719Very GoodCompetitive access across most products. Bank term loans realistic. Rates improve significantly.
720–759ExcellentFull access including SBA loans. Lowest rates on alternative products.
760+ExceptionalBest rates available, highest loan amounts, full SBA program access.

Notice the step-changes at 580, 630, 680, and 720 — these are the key thresholds where your financing options meaningfully expand. If your score is 625, getting to 630 unlocks lines of credit. If you're at 672, getting to 680 significantly reduces your rates across all products.

The Fastest Ways to Improve Your Personal Credit Score

1. Reduce Credit Card Utilization (Fastest Impact)

Credit utilization — your balances as a percentage of your credit limits — is the second most important factor and the fastest to change. Getting balances below 30% of limits can add 20–50 points within a single billing cycle once the new balances are reported. Getting to below 10% can add another 15–30 points on top of that. If you have a $10,000 credit card limit and a $7,000 balance (70% utilization), paying it down to $2,500 can meaningfully improve your score within 30–60 days.

2. Dispute Inaccurate Negative Items

Request your free credit reports from all three bureaus at AnnualCreditReport.com. Studies show 25–35% of credit reports contain material errors. Dispute any inaccurate derogatory items — incorrect collections, wrong account statuses, accounts that aren't yours, late payments incorrectly reported, or discharged debts still showing as open. Successful disputes can remove negative items entirely, sometimes adding 50–100+ points.

3. Become an Authorized User on a Strong Account

If a family member or trusted person has an old, high-limit credit card with low utilization and no late payments, being added as an authorized user can instantly improve your average account age, lower your overall utilization ratio, and add a positive payment history — even if you never use the card. This is one of the fastest legitimate score-building strategies available.

4. Avoid New Hard Inquiries Before Applying for Business Financing

Each hard credit inquiry drops your score 5–10 points temporarily. Avoid applying for new personal credit cards, auto loans, or personal loans in the 3–6 months before seeking business financing. Approvd uses a soft credit pull for initial matching — this doesn't affect your score — but be disciplined about hard inquiries in the window leading up to your application.

5. Don't Close Old Accounts

Closing old credit cards reduces your total available credit (increasing utilization) and can shorten your average account age — both of which hurt your score. Even a card you rarely use should typically be kept open. A small recurring charge (a streaming subscription, for example) and auto-pay keeps the account active without requiring attention.

6. Address Collections and Derogatory Items Strategically

Not all collections need to be paid to be removed. Some collection agencies will execute a "pay for delete" arrangement — you pay the balance and they remove the collection from your report. For collections more than 2–3 years old, the impact on your score is already diminishing. Consult with a credit professional before paying old collections, as paying some types can actually reset the clock on derogatory reporting.

How Long Does Score Improvement Take?

StrategyTypical TimelinePotential Score Impact
Reduce utilization below 30%30–60 days+20–50 points
Reduce utilization below 10%30–60 days+15–30 additional points
Dispute and remove error30–45 days+10–100+ points (varies)
Add authorized user30–60 days+10–40 points
Pay off collection (with delete)45–90 days+20–80 points
Late payment aging (1 year)12 monthsGradual improvement

Personal Credit vs. Business Credit: Building Both Simultaneously

While improving your personal FICO, also invest in building your business credit profile. As your business ages and your business credit score develops, lenders place progressively less weight on personal credit. Building both simultaneously puts you in the strongest possible position: good personal credit for now, strong business credit for the long-term financing relationships that follow.

The Bottom Line

Personal credit improvement is one of the highest-ROI activities a business owner can pursue. Moving from a 620 to a 680 score can mean the difference between paying 25% APR and 12% APR on the same loan amount — a difference that compounds significantly across a growing business's financing history. Approvd advisors can review your credit profile and identify the highest-impact improvement steps before you apply, ensuring you're positioned for the best possible offers when you're ready.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does applying for a business loan affect my personal credit score?

It depends on the lender. Most business loan applications involve a hard inquiry on your personal credit report, which can lower your score by 2–10 points temporarily. Rate shopping with multiple lenders within a 14–45 day window typically counts as a single inquiry (varies by credit bureau). After approval, the business loan itself usually doesn't appear on your personal credit report — though you're personally liable via the personal guarantee.

What personal credit score do I need for each type of business loan?

General thresholds: SBA loans require 650–680 minimum (700+ preferred). Bank term loans want 680–700+. Online lenders typically accept 600–640+. Revenue-based financing: 550–600+. Equipment financing: 600+. Business credit cards: 670+ for the best cards. These are minimums — a higher score always improves your rate and terms, sometimes significantly.

How quickly can I improve my personal credit score before applying?

The fastest improvements come from: paying down credit card balances below 30% utilization (can improve score in 30–60 days), disputing errors on your credit report (30–45 days for resolution), asking for a credit limit increase on existing cards without spending more (reduces utilization immediately). Avoid opening new accounts or closing old ones in the 6 months before applying. A focused effort can add 30–50 points in 3–6 months.

If I have excellent personal credit, do I still need business credit?

For most small business loans today, strong personal credit is sufficient — especially for loans under $500,000 with online lenders. Business credit becomes more important as loan amounts grow, when seeking SBA loans from traditional banks, when applying for vendor/supplier credit terms, and when you want to eventually obtain business financing without a personal guarantee. Building both is ideal, but personal credit carries more weight in the near term.

Can my personal credit score be too high to affect my business loan terms?

There's no such thing as too high a credit score — an 800+ score will always get you better rates than a 720. However, above roughly 750–760, the incremental benefit narrows because most lenders put you in their top tier regardless of the exact score. The biggest jumps in loan terms happen between 600–640 (bad to fair), 640–680 (fair to good), and 680–720 (good to excellent). Above 760, other factors like revenue and DSCR matter more.

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