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How to Check My Company Credit Score

Running a company credit check is straightforward: you can use a credit reference agency such as Experian, Equifax, or Creditsafe, to look up any registered UK company by name or Companies House number. The report will show your business credit score, payment history, any County Court Judgments (CCJs), and other public financial data. Experian, for example, sources data from Companies House, the Gazette, and Registry Trust, processing over 100,000 data updates every day. Most agencies offer a basic company credit check free of charge, with more detailed reports available on paid tiers. 

What Is a Company Credit Score?

Every limited company registered at Companies House has a credit file. It works similarly to a personal credit score but tracks the financial behaviour of the business itself. The UK has three main credit reference agencies, Experian, Equifax, and TransUnion, each regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority, alongside specialist business credit agencies like Creditsafe. Credit reference agencies pull together data from public records, filed accounts, payment behaviour, and legal filings to generate a score that represents how creditworthy your company appears to lenders. Creditsafe, for instance, scores businesses from 0 to 100, with a higher number indicating lower insolvency risk.

When you check a company’s credit score, you’ll typically see a numerical rating alongside a risk band (low, moderate, high). The score reflects factors such as how promptly the business pays suppliers, whether accounts are filed on time, the level of outstanding debt, and any adverse markers such as CCJs, Company Voluntary Arrangements (CVAs), or winding-up petitions.

This score is often the first thing a lender looks at. High-street banks tend to have rigid cut-off thresholds, which results in high decline rates for businesses with adverse markers. 

How to Run a Company Credit Check: Step by Step

Choose a credit reference agency. The three main providers in the UK are Experian, Equifax, and Creditsafe. Each uses slightly different scoring models, so results can vary between them. For a quick overview, Creditsafe and Companies House itself offer basic reports at no cost.

Search for your company. You’ll need either your registered company name or your Companies House number. Enter the details on the agency’s website, and the report is usually generated instantly.

Review the report. Look beyond the headline score. Pay attention to the payment data, the credit limit recommendation, and any adverse filings. A CCJ from three years ago carries a different weight than one registered last month. Context matters.

Check for errors. Credit files aren’t always accurate. Outdated information, incorrect CCJ entries, or misattributed debts can all drag your score down unfairly. If you spot something wrong, you can dispute it directly with the agency or with the court that issued the judgment.

Run the check regularly. Your score isn’t static. It shifts as new data comes in, filed accounts, payment records, and resolved disputes. Checking quarterly gives you time to address problems before they surface in a lender’s assessment.

If you want a free company credit check to get started, both Creditsafe and the Companies House register offer no-cost searches that cover the basics. These won’t give you the full analytical breakdown of a paid report, but they’ll flag the major issues.

What Lenders Actually See

Lenders look at the full credit profile, and different lenders weigh different factors. A traditional bank might auto-decline based on a single CCJ. An alternative lender might look at the same CCJ, note that it was satisfied two years ago, and focus instead on your current trading performance and cash flow.

This is where many SME applications diverge between mainstream and specialist lenders.  Many businesses assume a bank decline closes off all funding options, but it’s often based on a narrow, automated reading of your credit file. It doesn’t account for the story behind the numbers: a difficult trading year during Covid, a disputed invoice that escalated to a CCJ, or a CVA that’s now successfully been completed.

Specific things that drive a credit score down

  1. Late payments to suppliers. Paying invoices past their due dates is one of the most common drags on a business’s credit score. Payment behaviour is tracked over months, so a pattern of late settlements builds up on your file and takes consistent on-time (or slightly early) payments to reverse.
  2. County Court Judgments (CCJs). An outstanding CCJ is a significant red flag for lenders and credit reference agencies. Satisfying the judgment helps, but the record of it remains visible for six years, so the sooner it’s resolved, the sooner the impact starts to fade.
  3. Overdue filings at Companies House. Late accounts attract automatic penalties from Companies House and also act as a red flag on your credit file. Bringing filings up to date is one of the quickest wins available, since it’s entirely within your control.
  4. Thin credit history. A business with little borrowing or trade credit activity gives agencies very little to score against, which often results in a low or cautious rating. Building a track record through trade accounts and well-managed credit facilities helps over time.
  5. Unresolved disputes with suppliers. Open disputes that result in defaults or adverse markers will pull a score down. Settling them, even where the amount is contested, removes the negative entry and stops it from weighing on future applications.

Where to check your business credit score

A quick comparison of the main providers UK businesses use to check their credit profile:

ProviderGood forFree optionPaid detail
Companies HouseFiled accounts and company recordsYesNo full credit score
CreditsafeQuick business credit scoreOften availableMore detailed reports
ExperianDetailed business credit dataLimited/free trial options varyYes
EquifaxBusiness credit checksVariesYes

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FAQ's

Yes. Any business or individual can run a credit check on a UK-registered company. Credit reference agencies such as Experian, Equifax, and Creditsafe provide business credit reports, and basic company information is available for free through the Companies House register. You don’t need the company’s permission to search their publicly filed data.
A company credit check typically shows the business’s credit score, recommended credit limit, payment history with suppliers, any County Court Judgments or winding-up petitions, director details, filed accounts, and overall insolvency risk. The exact content varies by provider; paid reports generally include more detail than free ones, but the aim is to give a picture of how reliably the business meets its financial obligations.
You can check a company’s credit rating by searching for the business on a credit reference agency’s website using either the registered company name or Companies House number. Creditsafe offers a free company credit report that includes a credit score and key financial data. Experian and Equifax offer more detailed paid reports. For basic information like filed accounts and officer details, the Companies House service is free to use.
Running a credit check on your own company does not affect your score. Searching another company’s credit file won’t affect their score either, as these are informational lookups rather than credit applications. However, when you formally apply for finance, the lender may carry out their own checks as part of due diligence.

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