Business credit cards can impact your personal credit score, though. Understanding those impacts can help you determine which card is the best for your small business.
How Do Business Credit Cards Affect You and Your Personal Credit Score?
Applying for and using a business credit card can affect your personal credit score depending on what you do with your card and the card issuer you make payments to (more on that later).
Application Process Includes a Hard Inquiry
When you apply for a business credit card, most card issuers will run a personal credit check to verify that you can make good on your personal guarantee. According to FICO, each hard credit inquiry knocks fewer than five points off your credit score, so it won’t have too much of an impact. However, if you apply for multiple credit cards in a short period of time, they can have a compounding negative effect on your score.
Some Issuers Don’t Report to Credit Bureaus
Most major business credit card issuers either won’t report your balance or payments to the consumer credit bureaus, or they only do so when you fall more than 30 days behind on a payment. In the event that an issuer reports one of these payments, your credit score is likely to drop. Your payment history is the most important factor in your FICO credit score, even one missed payment can have a significant negative impact on your score and remain on your credit report for up to seven years.
But a Few Issuers Do Report to the Bureaus
A couple of well-known business credit card issuers report all of your activity to the consumer credit bureaus every month, just like your personal credit card issuers do on those accounts. The type of information they report may include your balance, credit limit, and payment history, all of which can change your credit score.
Which Card Issuers Report Business Credit Card Information?
Among the major credit card issuers in the U.S., here’s how you can expect your business card to affect your personal credit score. If you want to go this route, it’s important to practice smart credit habits. The most important one is to pay your bill on time every month, preferably in full, to avoid interest charges. Also, make it a goal to keep your credit utilization rate low. Doing so may be difficult if your credit limit is low compared to what you need to spend on your card every month. If you anticipate you’ll need to carry a balance or frequently run up a high balance, you may want to choose a card from an issuer that won’t report your activity to the consumer credit bureaus.