Answer

Does checking my own credit affect a loan application?

No — checking your own credit is a soft search that only you can see and never affects your score. Doing it before you apply is one of the smartest, safest steps you can take.

2 min read

No impactOn your score
Soft searchOnly you see it
Pre-applicationSmart move
Fix errorsBefore lenders look

Self-checks are harmless

Looking at your own business or personal credit is recorded as a soft search visible only to you. It carries none of the effect of a lender's hard search, and no lender treats it as an application. You can check as often as you like without consequence.

Why to do it before applying

Checking first lets you see exactly what a lender will see, correct any errors, and understand where you stand before you commit to an application. It is the single best way to avoid a surprise decline over a mistake on your file. The business credit report guide walks through it.

Acting on what you find

If you spot an error, dispute it with the credit reference agency before applying. If the file is thin, work on building business credit. Either way, you enter the application knowing the ground. Then confirm the ask is affordable with the affordability calculator.

Frequently asked questions

Is a self-check different from a lender's check?

Yes. Your own check is a soft search invisible to others with no score impact. A lender's full-application check is usually a hard search that others can see. Only the latter affects how your file reads.

How often should I check my business credit?

Regularly — before any application, and periodically otherwise, so errors are caught early and you always know your position. There is no downside, since self-checks never affect your score.

Funding for UK limited companies

Credicorp lends to your company, not to you personally — short-term working capital with no personal guarantee. See what your business could access.