Business Updated: November 21, 2025
Business Updated: November 21, 2025

Beyond the Balance Sheet: What Really Controls Your Business Credit Score

If your business has ever been rejected for a loan or charged sky-high interest rates,

Overview

If your business has ever been rejected for a loan or charged sky-high interest rates, the fault likely lies with its Business Credit Score. This number, between 300 and 900, is the financial world’s report card on your company’s reliability. A score of 660 or higher is considered excellent, opening doors to great loan terms and establishing trust with vendors and partners.

But how exactly is this crucial number calculated?

Understanding the factors that determine your creditworthiness is the first step toward securing your company’s financial future.

The Big Four That Drive Your Score

Four factors dominate how your business credit score is determined, influencing your financial opportunities more than anything else:

  1. Payment History: This is the biggest piece of the puzzle, often accounting for over 35% of the score. Simply put, lenders want to know if you pay your bills on time. Delaying or defaulting on loan installments and other financial commitments severely damages your creditworthiness. To succeed, a business must rigidly track and adhere to every single repayment due date.
  2. Credit Utilisation: This factor makes up at least 30% of the score. It measures how much of your total available credit your business is actually using. A high ratio signals irresponsible, high-risk spending, suggesting your company is dependent on credit. The golden rule for how to increase your score is to keep your credit utilisation ratio under 30%.
  3. Length of Credit History: Lenders favor businesses with a long, positive track record. A lengthy history of timely payments over many years demonstrates a proven ability to handle credit responsibly. Staying credit active and repaying consistently is the most reliable way to steadily improve your score over time.
  4. Types of Credit Used: A diverse credit portfolio with a healthy mix of different types of credit like secured and unsecured loans, builds the lender’s trust. Successfully managing various debt products proves your financial maturity and helps boost your overall score.

The Warning Signs and Financial Red Flags

Two other elements can swiftly and severely damage your score, even if your payment habits are good:

  • Recent Credit Inquiries: When you formally apply for a loan or a new credit card, the lender initiates a hard inquiry on your report. Too many of these hard inquiries in a short period suggest you are desperately seeking credit, which lowers your score. Remember, checking your own score is only a soft inquiry and is harmless.
  • Unfavorable Public Records: Legal and financial red flags like bankruptcy filings, tax liens, and legal judgments are public records that destroy credibility. These issues remain on your credit report for many years and will stand firmly in the way of future financing.
Conclusion

Payment delays and high credit utilisation carry the most weight in determining your financial trustworthiness. Focus on these variables, and the rest will follow. Mastering these factors isn’t just about getting a loan; it’s about gaining the financial leverage needed to thrive. Take charge of your business credit today, and you’ll open the doors to opportunities tomorrow.

How to build your Credit Score?

Navigating Business Loans in India: A Comprehensive Guide
How to Maintain a Stellar Company Credit Score
Your Financial Blueprint: How to Check Your Company Credit Report
×
×

Disclaimer

You are being redirected to a third-party website/application (the “Site”) on which YES BANK LIMITED Limited (the “Bank”) exercises no control or ownership. The Bank expressly disclaim any liability for any kind of deficiency in any of the services being provided/facilitated through the Site. The Bank will not be liable or responsible for any kind of loss that you may suffer/incur (i) by availing/relying the Information and/or services being facilitated through the Site, (ii) because of accessing the Site, including but not limited to, any system failure, virus and/or malware attack, data loss, data theft etc., and (iii) due to sharing/disclosing on the Site, any data/information pertaining to you or any third party

Proceed