Trade Credit Guide for B2B Sellers

Mar 18, 2026 8:13:12 AM

Trade credit is one of the most common ways businesses sell to each other. Instead of paying upfront, buyers receive goods and services first, then settle the invoice later under agreed-upon terms, such as Net 30, 60, or 90.

For B2B sellers, this kind of business financing is a powerful tool that drives volume and builds customer loyalty. But managing it poorly in-house creates cash flow gaps, bad debt, and collection headaches that pull your team away from what they do best: selling.

This guide explains how trade credit works, why B2B sellers offer it, and how platforms like Credit Key make it easier to offer net terms without taking on credit risk.

What Trade Credit Means for B2B Sellers (And How It Works)

Trade credit is a short-term, interest-free loan in which a seller provides goods or services upfront and allows the buyer to pay later within an agreed-upon period, typically 30, 60, or 90 days. Trade credit arrangements are invoiced, and payment terms are agreed upon before the sale takes place.

These two terms are often used interchangeably, so it's worth noting that trade credit differs from trade finance.

Trade finance is an "umbrella term" that mainly supports macroeconomic and international commerce, with longer repayment windows that usually involve banks and credit checks.

Trade credit, on the other hand, is much more specific. It refers to the deferred payment arrangement between a supplier and a buyer, where a customer pays after receiving goods or services. This differs from other financial instruments, such as letters of credit (L/Cs), which generally involve banks helping with international trade transactions.

How trade credit works

Unlike a bank loan, trade credit doesn't usually require a formal application or collateral. Instead, business suppliers tend to extend credit to their business customers based on the "three C's of credit":

  1. Capacity to pay
  2. Character (willingness to pay)
  3. Capital

A buyer's credit rating and the strength of their relationship with the supplier also play a role in this decision. For buyers, this interest-free loan gives them time to generate revenue or manage cash flow before settling the invoice.

In practice, it looks like this:

  • A wholesale distributor ships inventory to a retailer on Net 30 terms. The retailer has 30 days to pay in full.
  • A restaurant equipment company extends Net 30 terms to a hospitality group buying commercial kitchen gear.

Offering trade credit to your customers is a smart move, giving you a competitive advantage over businesses that don't. Extending trade credit terms, whether over 30, 60, or 90 days, increases buyers' purchasing power, which brings in higher order volumes and stronger long-term working relationships.

Common Trade Credit Terms

Trade credit terms explain how long the buyer has to pay the outstanding invoice, along with any incentives for early settlement. The credit period is pretty straightforward, but the right terms for your business depend on cash flow needs and how much risk you're willing to take.

  • Net 30: Buyers have 30 calendar days from the invoice date to pay in full. This is the most widely used trade credit term in the B2B sector and is quite often the baseline expectation.
  • Net 60: Payment is due within 60 days, commonly seen in industries with longer project cycles or where buyers need more time to bump up cash flow before settling the invoice.
  • Net 90: A 90-day payment window is typically given to trusted buyers, those with high-volume accounts and/or those with long-standing supplier-buyer relationships. These extended payment terms allow a buyer's cash flow to generate for three months from the sale of goods/services before payment is due, so suppliers need a high level of confidence in the purchaser's ability to pay.
  • Early payment discounts (2/10 Net 30): The buyer receives a 2% discount if they pay the invoice within 10 days. If they don't, the full amount is due within 30 days. This helps incentivize faster payments, but it comes at a cost to margins on every transaction.

The Pros and Cons of Managing Trade Credit In-House for B2B Sellers

Offering delayed payments in the form of trade credit can seriously help grow your business. But managing it alone (without a financing partner) means you absorb the risk, the admin, and the cash flow pressure that comes with it.

Below, we take a closer look at the advantages and disadvantages of trade credit for B2B sellers:

Benefits

  • Increased order and sales volume: Removing upfront payment friction allows your customers to make purchases that would otherwise seem out of reach. Buyers not obliged to make immediate payments tend to order more, driving higher average order values and frequent purchases.
  • Stronger customer relations: Extending payment terms gains trust with customers. Buyers who receive trade credit are more likely to stick around with a B2B supplier for the long-term rather than switching on price.
  • Competitive edge: In volatile markets, payment flexibility is often the deciding factor for buyers. If competitors offer Net 30 trade credit agreements, and you don't, you're already on the back foot.
  • Faster sales cycle: Less friction at the point of sale means quicker decisions and shorter sales cycles. Buyers offered deferred payments are more likely to commit on the spot.

Risks

  • Bad debt exposure: When you extend credit in-house, non-payment eats directly into your bottom line. Some level of default is inevitable, but the real question comes in on how much you can absorb.
  • Cash flow pressure: Waiting 30, 60, or 90 days to get paid while covering everything else can strain working capital, especially if your business operates on tight margins.
  • Collection overheads: Chasing late trade credit payments takes time, energy, and resources away from higher-priority tasks. The more business credit you offer, the more the administrative burden grows.

Read more:

Trade Credit vs B2B Buy Now, Pay Later (BNPL)

Both B2B trade credit and B2B Buy Now, Pay Later (BNPL) give buyers time to pay outstanding invoice balances. But, from a seller's perspective, they work very differently.

This comparison is important for sellers to understand because the gap between the two directly relates to who carries the risk and when you are paid.

Feature

Trade credit

B2B BNPL

Who carries the risk

The seller

The financing partner, like Credit Key

When the seller gets paid

When the buyer pays (30-90 days)

Within 48 hours of shipment

Collections

Seller's responsibility

Managed by a financing partner

Approval speed

Slow; often requires manual review

Near-instant

Flexibility for buyers

Fixed payment terms set by the seller

4 interest-free installments or extended terms of up to 12 months

Financing providers, like Credit Key, make it easier to offer net terms without taking on credit risk.

Read more: B2B BNPL vs Net Terms: Which Should You Offer?

Trade Credit for B2B Sellers Done Right

Trade credit is commonly used in business-to-business sales. When structured well, it increases sales volume, strengthens customer loyalty, and gives B2B sellers a genuine competitive edge.

But managing it internally can also introduce risks like chasing late payments and cash flow pressure. That's why more and more B2B sellers are turning to Credit Key to handle their net payment terms.

FAQs

Which B2B industries use trade credit?

  • Wholesale distributors
  • Technology and electronics
  • Resturant equipment and supply
  • Accountants and bookkeepers
  • Creative agencies

What are the advantages of trade credit for buyers?

Trade credit allows buyers to purchase goods or services immediately without paying upfront. This frees up working capital for other operational costs.

Topics from this blog: Finance B2B Sales

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