If you are building business credit, you have probably heard of Dun & Bradstreet, Experian Business, and Equifax Business. But there is another player in business credit reporting that most small business owners overlook: the Small Business Financial Exchange (SBFE).
What Is the SBFE?
The Small Business Financial Exchange (SBFE) is a nonprofit business credit data exchange founded in 2001. It collects and shares business credit data between its member organizations — primarily banks, credit card companies, and alternative lenders.
Think of it as a shared database where financial institutions report how small businesses handle their credit obligations. This data is then used by the major business credit bureaus to create more complete credit profiles.
How the SBFE Works
The SBFE operates on a give-to-get model:
- Member organizations (banks, lenders, credit card issuers) submit data about their small business customers
- Data includes: Payment history, credit limits, balances, account status
- The SBFE aggregates this data and makes it available to other members
- Credit bureaus like Experian and Equifax incorporate SBFE data into their business credit reports
SBFE vs Traditional Business Credit Bureaus
| Feature | SBFE | D&B / Experian / Equifax |
|---|---|---|
| Type | Data exchange | Credit bureaus |
| Data Sources | Banks, lenders, credit cards | Vendors, public records, financial data |
| Focus | Financial credit data | Trade credit + financial data |
| Members | ~1,100+ financial institutions | Millions of trade creditors |
| Consumer Access | Through partner bureaus | Direct access available |
Why SBFE Data Matters for Your Business
1. More Complete Credit Picture
SBFE data fills in gaps that trade credit alone cannot cover. If you have a business credit card, business line of credit, or SBA loan, that data likely flows through the SBFE to appear on your Experian or Equifax business reports.
2. Better Lending Decisions
When you apply for a business loan, the lender may check SBFE data to see your full financial picture — not just vendor payment history.
3. Earlier Credit Building
Even before you have trade credit from vendors, your business credit card and bank account activity may be reported through the SBFE.
How to Leverage SBFE for Your Business
- Open a business credit card — Many issuers report to the SBFE
- Maintain a business bank account — Some banks share data with the SBFE
- Pay all financial obligations on time — This data is shared just like trade credit data
- Open net 30 vendor accounts — Combine trade credit (from vendors like Crown Office Supplies) with financial credit (from the SBFE) for the strongest possible profile
SBFE Member Organizations
Major SBFE members include:
- American Express
- Bank of America
- Capital One
- Chase
- Citibank
- Wells Fargo
- PayPal Working Capital
- Kabbage (now part of AmEx)
- OnDeck
The Bottom Line
The SBFE is a behind-the-scenes powerhouse in business credit. While you cannot report directly to it, you can ensure your financial credit data is captured by:
- Using business credit cards from major banks
- Maintaining business lines of credit
- Paying all obligations on time
Combined with trade credit from net 30 vendors like Crown Office Supplies, SBFE data helps create the most complete business credit profile possible.