Your business credit score is one of the most powerful financial assets your company owns, yet many business owners never actively work to improve it. Learning how to increase your business credit score can mean the difference between securing affordable financing and being locked out of the capital you need to grow. In this guide, we break down every step you can take to build a stronger credit profile and access better funding terms.
In This Article
A business credit score is a numerical rating that reflects how reliably your company repays its debts and manages financial obligations. Unlike your personal FICO score, business credit scores are generated by specialized bureaus such as Dun & Bradstreet, Experian Business, and Equifax Business, each using its own scoring model and scale. The most widely used is the Dun & Bradstreet PAYDEX score, which runs from 0 to 100, with higher numbers indicating better payment behavior.
Business credit scores are publicly available, meaning lenders, suppliers, landlords, and potential partners can check your company's score without your permission. This is a key difference from personal credit, where inquiries require your consent. A strong score signals that your company is a reliable financial partner, while a weak score can raise red flags for anyone evaluating your creditworthiness.
For a deeper dive into what constitutes a strong score, read our guide on What Is a Good Business Credit Score.
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Apply Now ->Your business credit score affects nearly every major financial decision your company makes. Lenders use it to determine whether to approve your loan application, what interest rate to offer, and how much capital to extend. A higher score can translate directly into lower borrowing costs, which compounds significantly over the life of a loan.
Beyond lending, a strong business credit profile improves your negotiating position with suppliers. Many vendors use credit scores to set payment terms, so a better score can earn you net-30 or net-60 terms instead of requiring payment upfront. According to the U.S. Small Business Administration, access to capital is one of the top challenges for small business owners, and your credit score is the gateway to that capital.
Business credit also helps protect your personal finances. When your company has a strong credit profile of its own, you're less likely to need to personally guarantee every loan or lease. That separation is critical for protecting your personal assets and credit history as your business scales.
Each credit bureau weighs factors differently, but several core elements influence all major business credit scores. Understanding these factors gives you a clear roadmap for improvement.
Payment History: This is the single most important factor across all bureaus. Paying invoices and loans on time (or early) directly boosts your PAYDEX and other scores. Even one or two late payments can drag your score down significantly and take months to recover from.
Credit Utilization: How much of your available revolving credit you're using matters. Keeping utilization below 30% is generally recommended, though lower is better. High utilization signals financial stress to lenders and credit bureaus alike.
Credit Age and History Length: Older credit accounts with clean histories help your score. Closing old accounts or opening too many new ones in a short period can reduce the average age of your credit and temporarily lower your score.
Number and Type of Accounts: A diverse mix of credit types (trade lines, revolving credit, installment loans) demonstrates that your business can manage different forms of debt responsibly. Lenders and bureaus reward this diversity.
Public Records: Bankruptcies, liens, and judgments appear on your business credit report and can severely damage your score. Keeping your financial obligations clean and resolving any disputes promptly is essential.
Company Information Accuracy: Unlike personal credit, business credit scores can be affected by incomplete or inaccurate company data. Ensuring your business is properly registered, your DUNS number is active, and your information is consistent across bureaus is foundational.
Business Credit Score: Key Factors at a Glance
45%
Payment History
20%
Credit Utilization
15%
Credit Age
10%
Account Mix
10%
Public Records & Filings
Approximate weighting across major business credit bureaus
Improving your business credit score is not a one-time fix but a series of deliberate, consistent actions. The following steps are arranged from foundational to advanced, so you can tackle them in order and build momentum.
If you haven't already, register your business as an LLC, S-Corp, or C-Corp. Operating as a sole proprietor means your business activity is tied to your personal Social Security Number, which makes it nearly impossible to build a distinct business credit profile. Registration gives your company its own identity in the eyes of lenders and credit bureaus.
You should also open a dedicated business bank account and obtain a business phone number listed in directory services. These foundational steps signal legitimacy and allow credit bureaus to correctly identify and track your business's financial activity. For business owners managing an LLC, our Business Loans for LLC guide offers additional context on how entity structure affects financing.
Dun & Bradstreet assigns a unique nine-digit DUNS (Data Universal Numbering System) number to businesses, which serves as the foundation of your D&B credit profile. Registering for a DUNS number is free and can be done at dnb.com. Without one, your business essentially doesn't exist in the D&B system, which powers many lender and supplier credit checks.
Once you have your DUNS number, make sure your business information is accurate: legal name, address, phone, revenue, and employee count. Errors in your D&B profile can affect your score even if your payment history is perfect.
One of the fastest ways to build a business credit profile is to open vendor accounts with suppliers that report payment activity to the major bureaus. Companies like Quill, Grainger, Uline, and Office Depot Business frequently report to D&B and Experian Business. Even small, regular purchases paid on time can generate positive tradeline history quickly.
Start with two or three vendor relationships, pay every invoice on or before the due date, and let those positive accounts accumulate over several months. This strategy is particularly effective for newer businesses that lack a lengthy credit history.
The PAYDEX score from D&B rewards businesses that pay ahead of schedule, not just on time. A business that consistently pays 10 to 30 days early can score a perfect 100 PAYDEX. Paying on the due date earns an 80. Waiting even a day past the due date begins to lower your score, and chronic late payments can drop your PAYDEX to the 50s or lower.
Set up automatic payments wherever possible and build payment calendars to ensure no invoice slips through the cracks. Even a single late payment to a reporting vendor can set back months of progress.
A study by the Federal Trade Commission found that a significant percentage of consumers found errors on their credit reports, and business credit reports are no different. Errors can include incorrect payment dates, duplicate accounts, or outdated negative information that should have aged off. These inaccuracies can suppress your score for no good reason.
Pull your business credit reports from D&B, Experian Business, and Equifax Business at least once per quarter. Review each one carefully and file disputes for any inaccurate data. Most bureaus are required to investigate and resolve disputes within 30 days.
A business credit card that reports to the major bureaus is an excellent tool for building revolving credit history. Use the card for regular operational expenses, keep utilization below 30%, and pay the balance in full each month. This builds credit history without adding net debt to your business.
Avoid applying for multiple cards at once. Each application triggers a hard inquiry that can temporarily lower your score. Start with one card, establish a track record, and then consider expanding your revolving credit profile after 6 to 12 months.
An installment loan reported to the credit bureaus adds a different type of credit to your profile and demonstrates that your business can manage structured repayment. Even a small small business loan paid back consistently will contribute positive history across multiple bureaus.
Consider a business line of credit as well. A revolving line that you draw from and repay regularly is an efficient way to build both credit history and financial flexibility at the same time. Crestmont Capital offers competitive options that report to the major bureaus.
Inconsistent business information across different platforms can confuse credit bureaus and create duplicate or inaccurate records. Make sure your legal business name, address, and phone number are identical on your website, Google Business Profile, bank accounts, vendor applications, and loan documents. Even small variations (like "St." vs. "Street") can cause problems.
High total debt relative to your business's revenue signals financial stress to lenders and bureaus. Work to pay down existing balances, avoid maxing out credit lines, and keep your debt-service coverage ratio healthy. If your business is carrying multiple high-interest debts, consider a long-term business loan to consolidate and lower your monthly payments.
If you have existing business credit accounts in good standing, requesting a credit limit increase without increasing your balance will automatically lower your utilization ratio. This is one of the quickest ways to improve your credit score without taking on new debt. Most card issuers will approve limit increases for customers with 12 or more months of clean payment history.
Even business owners who are actively trying to build credit can unknowingly damage their score. Here are the most common pitfalls to avoid.
Mixing personal and business finances: Using personal accounts for business expenses or vice versa muddies your business credit profile. It also makes bookkeeping harder and undermines the legal separation that protects your personal assets in case of a business lawsuit.
Missing payments due to cash flow gaps: Many late payments happen not because a business owner forgets, but because cash flow timing doesn't line up with due dates. Tools like invoice factoring or a fast business loan can bridge gaps and prevent late payments during slow periods.
Ignoring your credit report: Business credit reports aren't checked automatically, and errors can sit uncorrected for years. Schedule quarterly reviews as a recurring calendar task so inaccuracies don't silently drag down your score.
Closing old accounts: Closing a long-standing vendor or credit account reduces the average age of your credit history. Unless an account carries fees that outweigh its benefits, it's usually better to keep it open, even if you use it infrequently.
Over-applying for credit: Multiple loan or credit applications in a short window generate multiple hard inquiries and signal desperation to lenders. Space out credit applications and only apply when you have a clear need and reasonable confidence of approval.
The timeline for improving a business credit score depends on your starting point and the actions you take. For a business with no credit history, building a meaningful profile typically takes 6 to 12 months of consistent activity. For a business with negative marks, improvement can take 12 to 24 months, depending on the severity of the issues.
Some improvements are faster than others. Disputing and correcting errors can yield results within 30 days. Reducing your utilization ratio by paying down balances can also show up in the next billing cycle. Payment history improvements accumulate more slowly, since most bureaus want to see a consistent pattern over multiple months before adjusting scores upward.
According to data from Forbes, businesses that actively manage their credit profiles see meaningfully higher approval rates and better loan terms than those that don't engage with their credit at all. The effort compounds over time and pays dividends every time you apply for financing.
Many business owners don't realize that business and personal credit are tracked separately and scored differently. Your personal FICO score is generated by Equifax, Experian, and TransUnion based on your individual financial behavior. Your business credit score is maintained by D&B, Experian Business, and Equifax Business based on your company's financial track record.
The two can influence each other. Lenders for small business loans often check both when evaluating an application, particularly for newer businesses. If your business credit is thin, a strong personal score can help you qualify. Conversely, if your personal credit is damaged, a strong business credit profile can help you access financing without a personal guarantee.
The long-term goal is to build your business credit strong enough that you no longer need to rely on your personal score for business financing. This protects your personal credit from business obligations and gives your company a financial identity that stands on its own. For businesses considering SBA loans, note that both scores are typically reviewed, and maintaining both is important for the best outcomes.
A U.S. Census Bureau report on small business demographics highlights that businesses with strong financial profiles are more likely to survive and grow beyond their first five years, underscoring the importance of credit management from day one.
At Crestmont Capital, we understand that building business credit is a process, and we've helped thousands of business owners across the country access the capital they need at every stage of that journey. Whether your credit is just getting started or you're ready to unlock premium financing terms, we have a solution designed for your situation.
Our lending products are designed to report to major credit bureaus, so every payment you make on a Crestmont loan or line of credit is working to build your credit profile. We also work with business owners whose scores aren't yet where they need to be, using a holistic review process that looks at your revenue, cash flow, and business performance alongside your credit score.
Our team of funding specialists can help you identify which products will best serve your credit-building goals while also meeting your immediate capital needs. From small business loans and equipment financing to revolving lines of credit, we offer flexible options that fit your timeline and budget. Explore our equipment financing options as one way to build installment credit while acquiring the assets your business needs to grow.
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Apply Now ->Scenario 1: The Startup with No Credit History
A new landscaping company registered as an LLC needs to purchase equipment but has no business credit history. The owner opens accounts with three suppliers that report to D&B, including a fuel card and a tool supplier. After paying every invoice 10 to 15 days early for six months, the company builds a PAYDEX score of 80. A year in, with a track record of consistent payments and a small equipment loan from Crestmont Capital, the business qualifies for a $75,000 equipment financing line at a significantly better rate than it would have received at launch.
Scenario 2: The Business Recovering from Late Payments
A restaurant group had a rough patch during a slow season and fell behind on three vendor invoices. Their PAYDEX dropped to 60. The owners disputed one inaccurate payment date, negotiated a goodwill adjustment with another vendor, and implemented automatic payments for all ongoing bills. Eighteen months of consistent on-time payments brought their score back above 80, and they were approved for a business line of credit to fund a second location.
Scenario 3: The Business Ready to Scale
A regional logistics company with a PAYDEX of 75 and an Experian Business score of 68 wants to expand its fleet. By requesting credit limit increases on existing accounts, consolidating two high-rate loans into a single long-term business loan, and reducing overall utilization, they raise their scores into the 80s within eight months. The improved profile qualifies them for a $500,000 equipment financing deal with terms that save them over $40,000 in interest over the loan term.
As reported by CNBC, businesses that proactively manage their credit profiles tend to access capital more quickly and at lower cost, giving them a competitive advantage in their markets. Additionally, Bloomberg analysis has shown that credit access remains one of the strongest predictors of small business survival and growth.
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Building and improving your business credit score is one of the most impactful investments you can make in your company's financial future. A stronger score unlocks better loan terms, higher credit limits, more favorable vendor relationships, and greater financial independence from personal guarantees. The process takes consistency and patience, but every step you take compounds over time into a credit profile that works for your business.
Whether you're starting from zero or recovering from past setbacks, the strategies in this guide give you a clear path forward. And when you're ready to put that improved credit to work, Crestmont Capital is here with financing solutions designed to support your growth at every stage. Apply today and let us help you turn a stronger credit profile into real capital.
Disclaimer: The information provided in this article is for general educational purposes only and is not financial, legal, or tax advice. Funding terms, qualifications, and product availability may vary and are subject to change without notice. Crestmont Capital does not guarantee approval, rates, or specific outcomes. For personalized information about your business funding options, contact our team directly.