How to Build Business Credit From Scratch

How to Build Business Credit From Scratch

When your business is new, lenders and suppliers have no track record to judge you by — so they fall back on your personal credit, your personal guarantee, and a lot of caution. Building a credit profile in your business’s own name changes that. It unlocks better financing terms, higher supplier limits, and a layer of separation between your company and your personal finances. Here’s how to build it deliberately, starting from zero.

An open-for-business sign with a credit card
Business credit is built on purpose — it rarely happens by accident.

Lay the legal foundation first

Before you can build business credit, your business has to look like a real, separate entity. That means forming an LLC or corporation, getting an Employer Identification Number (EIN) from the IRS, and opening a dedicated business bank account. Many lenders and credit bureaus also want to see a business phone number and address on file.

One often-overlooked step: register for a D-U-N-S Number from Dun & Bradstreet, the identifier most commercial credit reports are built around. Without it, much of your activity may not be tracked at all.

Open accounts that actually report

Here’s the catch that trips up many owners: not every vendor or card reports your payment history to the business credit bureaus. To build a profile, you need accounts that do.

  • Net-30 vendor accounts — suppliers that let you buy now and pay in 30 days, and report your on-time payments.
  • A business credit card — ideally one that reports to commercial bureaus, not just consumer ones.
  • Small trade lines — even office-supply or shipping accounts can contribute once they’re reporting.
A smartphone resting on financial documents
Apply for accounts that report to business bureaus — otherwise the history doesn’t count.

Pay early and keep balances low

Business credit scores reward the same behavior as personal ones, only more so. Dun & Bradstreet’s PAYDEX score, for example, gives its highest marks to businesses that pay before the due date, not just on it. Keeping your credit utilization low and your payments consistently early is the fastest path to a strong score.

Monitor your profile: Check your business credit reports with Dun & Bradstreet, Experian Business, and Equifax Business at least a few times a year. Errors are common, and a single wrong entry can cost you a loan approval.
Two business partners shaking hands
Strong business credit earns you better terms from lenders and suppliers alike.

The bottom line

Business credit is a long game, but it compounds. Set up the legal foundation, open accounts that report, and pay early and consistently. Within a year or two, you can qualify for financing on your business’s own strength — without putting your personal credit on the line every time.

Want help setting up your business entity and credit foundation the right way? KSR Financial Solutions guides small business owners through every step. Reach out today.

This article is for general educational purposes and is not financial advice. Consult a qualified professional about your specific situation.

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