How a Dun & Bradstreet PAYDEX Score Really Works & Why Most People Never Reach It
If you’re building business credit, you’ve probably heard some version of this advice:
”Get a few Net 30 accounts and you’ll get a PAYDEX score.
That’s not totally wrong, but it leaves out the part that matters most.
A PAYDEX score is not something you “unlock” by signing up. It’s built over time from reported payment experiences from vendors that actually report to Dun & Bradstreet (D&B).
This resource breaks down what PAYDEX measures, how to generate a score, and why consistency is the real barrier.
What is a PAYDEX Score
PAYDEX is a business credit score from D&B that focuses on how quickly your business pays bills, compared to the payment terms you agreed to. It’s a 1-to-100 score based on trade payment experiences reported to D&B.
The easiest way to understand PAYDEX is this:
- Paying on time tends to land around 80
- Paying early pushes the score higher
- Paying late pulls the score down quickly
Read This Table Like a Lender Would
Here’s a table summary of how a PAYDEX Score works:
| PAYDEX Score | Payment Time Frame | Risk Level |
| 100 | Paid 30 days early (The same day of the invoice) |
Low Risk |
| 90 | Paid 20 days early | Low Risk |
| 80 | Paid on time (Paid in 30 days) |
Low Risk |
| 70 | Paid 15 days late | Medium Risk |
| 60 | Paid 22 days late | Medium Risk |
| 50 | Paid 30 days late | Medium Risk |
| 40 | Paid 60 days late | High risk |
| 30 | Paid 90 days late | High risk |
| 20 | Paid 120 days late | High risk |
| 1-19 | Paid 120+ days late | High risk |
If Your PAYDEX Is Under 80, Read This
Many credit-building conversations reference “80” for a reason.
An 80 generally signals you pay within terms, which is typically viewed as lower risk.
Here’s the simple pattern used in common PAYDEX explanations:
- 100–80: Lower risk, pays on time or early (up to 30 days early)
- 79–50: Moderate risk, typically pays up to 30 days late
- 49–0: Higher risk, often pays 30 to 120+ days late
Why an 80 PAYDEX Score Matters
A higher PAYDEX score may result in better:
- Payment terms
- Insurance premiums
- Credit limits
Allowing you to better manage your company’s cash flow.
The Part Most People Miss About PAYDEX
PAYDEX is also dollar weighted.
That means larger invoices can move your score more than smaller ones. A fast payment on a $1,000 bill usually carries more weight than a fast payment on a $100 bill. So it’s not only about paying on time, but it’s also about the size of what you’re paying.
Now the reality check.
If your vendors are all sub $100 invoices, it can take longer to see meaningful movement.
NAMYNOT’s Net 30 reporting is built around a higher monthly service cost, so each on-time payment carries more weight.
Ready to build your payment history the smart way? Sign up for the NAMYNOT Net 30 account.
What you need before D&B can generate a PAYDEX score
There’s a lot of misinformation online about minimum requirements, so here’s clarity.
D&B’s own guidance says you need at least 4 trade references on file before a PAYDEX score can be determined.
A “trade reference” is essentially a vendor or supplier relationship that can contribute payment experience data used in business credit scoring.
Important detail: it’s not just about having accounts. It’s about having payment experiences actually reported.
Why “3 Months” Gets Mentioned So Often
You’ll hear people say things like “give it 90 days.” That’s not a strict PAYDEX rule. It’s a practical reality of how reporting works.
Here’s what usually slows it down:
- Vendors report on different schedules
- Trade data has to be matched to your business profile
- Your file needs enough reported experiences to produce a stable score
So “90 days” is often shorthand for, “give the reporting pipeline time to populate.”
Aim for multiple vendors that actually report to D&B, and plan to stay consistent long enough for those payments to show up on your file.
If you want a clean target: four reporting vendors and a few months of on-time payments is a practical benchmark for many businesses.
Why Most People Don’t Qualify in Real Life
In many subscription-based credit-building programs, the biggest drop-off happens right after the first month.
Here’s an example retention pattern from our program serving a higher-risk audience segment:

- About 60% pay for one month and do not renew
- About 40% make it to month two
- About 26% make it to month three
If only about one in four people reach month three, most never create the consistency that business credit scoring is based on.
And the issue is not just churn. Payment failures and instability show up early, which adds operational friction and disrupts the on-time pattern that scores a reward.
5 Key Factors in Assessing a Business’s Creditworthiness
- Years in Business: Newer businesses have less history, fewer payment experiences, and are viewed as higher risk.
- Payment History (Trade References): On-time payments reported by vendors build credibility. D&B requires at least 4 trade references to generate a PAYDEX score.
- Financial Statements: Financials help validate the ability to repay, and can be submitted to D&B for a fuller profile.
- Public Records: Bankruptcies, tax liens, lawsuits, and judgments can signal financial stress.
- Industry Norms: Lenders compare your business to typical patterns in your industry.
The Takeaway
PAYDEX doesn’t reward hype. It rewards repeatable behavior. If you want the score to move, your plan should be boring:
- Use vendors that report
- Pay on time, ideally early when possible
- Stay consistent long enough for payment experiences to appear on your file
That’s the real barrier most people run into, not “finding a Net 30.”
Sources
- D&B: minimum trade references before PAYDEX can be determined
- Capital One: PAYDEX is based on trade experiences reported by suppliers and vendors
- Nav: PAYDEX breakdown table and what scores mean
- D&B documentation: PAYDEX meaning of 80 and early payments
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