
5 Steps to Evaluate International Buyer Credit Risk
A practical five-step process to vet international buyers, reduce fraud, set credit limits, and protect receivables with monitoring and trade credit insurance.
With your business receivables insured, you leverage your acounts receivable to borrow more money at a relatively low incremental cost.

A practical five-step process to vet international buyers, reduce fraud, set credit limits, and protect receivables with monitoring and trade credit insurance.

Learn how credit insurance protects unpaid invoices, reduces write‑offs, and stabilizes cash flow by using aging reports to flag high‑risk accounts.

How insureds must protect coverage: accurate applications, timely reporting, credit-limit checks, correct claims submission, and clear documentation.

Debunks six common myths about credit insurance for manufacturers — cost, company size, coverage scope, growth limits, self-insurance and claims.

How sanctions disrupt cross-border disputes and the compliance, contract and insurance steps businesses should take to reduce enforcement and financial risks.

Convert risky invoices into reliable cash flow with accounts receivable insurance that covers 80–95% of unpaid invoices and improves financing.
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A. No. Credit life or credit disability insurance is obtained by individuals to help pay debts in case of loss of income. Business credit insurance (also known as trade credit insurance, export credit insurance, or just credit insurance) is used to reduce the risk of non-payment in B2B transactions and is obtained by the company offering the goods or services, rather than the company receiving the goods or services.
A. There is no additional fee to use a broker. By law, you will pay the same rates for the coverage you choose whether you use a broker or work directly with the insurance company. However, a broker helps you evaluate quotes and implement your new policy. Brokers can also help with mandatory reporting requirements and may help you review future claims submissions.
A. The short answer is yes — because things can change. Business insolvency is predicted to increase due to global events. Evaluating the risk of non-payment requires considerable data collection and analysis. Your broker can help you figure out the right amount of coverage for your situation.
A. Trade credit can help you grow your business. When a business is able to purchase goods or services with trade credit, it frees up cash flow, making it a source of short-term financing. This practice allows the business to potentially expand its market or customer base without the negative impact of running out of cash, potentially putting them out of business. Many trade credit agreements incentivize paying early with a discount, so the business is able to decide whether to pay early at a cheaper price or to take longer to pay at full price — based on both money coming into the business and other expenses that need to be paid.
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A. No. Credit life or credit disability insurance is obtained by individuals to help pay debts in case of loss of income. Business credit insurance (also known as trade credit insurance, export credit insurance, or just credit insurance) is used to reduce the risk of non-payment in B2B transactions and is obtained by the company offering the goods or services, rather than the company receiving the goods or services.
A. There is no additional fee to use a broker. By law, you will pay the same rates for the coverage you choose, whether you use a broker or work directly with the insurance company. However, a broker can be a valuable resource, helping you evaluate quotes, implement your new accounts receivable insurance policy, and navigate mandatory reporting requirements. They may also assist with future claim submissions.
A. The short answer is yes — because things can change. Business insolvency is predicted to increase due to global events. Evaluating the risk of non-payment requires considerable data collection and analysis. Your credit insurance broker can help you figure out the right amount of coverage for your situation.
A. Trade credit can help you grow your business. When a business is able to purchase goods or services with trade credit, it frees up cash flow, making it a source of short-term financing. This practice allows the business to potentially expand its market or customer base without the negative impact of running out of cash, potentially putting it out of business.
Many trade credit agreements incentivise paying early with a discount, so the business is able to decide whether to pay early at a cheaper price or to take longer to pay at full price based on both money coming into the business and other expenses that need to be paid.
However, it also comes with the inherent risk of non-payment. Accounts receivable insurance can mitigate this risk by protecting you from losses due to customer default.
Address: Trade Credit Insurance, Inc 412 E. Madison Street, Suite 1000 Tampa, FL
33602
Phone: 800 320 7338
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