
U.S. Bank Business Leverage Visa Signature Card
U.S. Bank

The U.S Bank Business Leverage Visa Signature Card offers a 75,000 points offer with a $0 annual fee for the first year. Just spend $7,500 in eligible net purchases in the first 4 months of account opening to earn the 75k points offer.
Requirements:
- Personal Credit Score 720+ (for good credit applicants)
- EIN Number
- Company email address
- Legal business name
- Business address and phone number
Business Credit:
- Earn 75,000 bonus points worth $750 cash back
- Earn 2X points in your top 2 categories where you spend the most
- Variable APR 15.99% - 24.99%, based on creditworthiness
- Reports to SBFE (Small Business Financial Exchange)
CLICK HERE to apply
- $0 annual account fee for first year ($95 thereafter)
Good Credit Requirements - Only apply if you meet the following criteria:
- You have not declared bankruptcy in the past 5 years
- You have not defaulted on a loan in the past 5 years
- You have not been 60 days late on any credit card, medical bill or loan in the past 24 months.
- You have a loan or credit card (primary not authorized user) for 2 years or more with a credit limit above $5,000
Documents and information to have ready (may require you to submit proof of ownership)
Business Information
- EIN letter
- Address verification (business utility bill, bank statement, etc.)
- Legal business name
- Date business was formed
- State of legal formation
- Gross annual sales and net profit
Owner and Controlling Manager
- Name and title of person opening account
- Name and address of entity for the account
- Name, date of birth, ss#, residential address for each controlling individual of the business
Personal Information form Card Holders
- Social security number (used to verify identity)
- Date of birth
- Address
- Valid email address
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Remember - Credit Reporting
Not all card issuers report business credit card account activity to a business credit reporting agency. Some card issuers "may" report to personal reports or "may" only report to personal reports in the event of default.
Some card issuers may report to both personal and business credit reports. For example, Capital One business credit cards report to both personal and business credit reports. -
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Note - Hard Inquiry
Some issuers are more forthcoming than others, but the majority indicate they make a hard inquiry on a personal credit report during the application process. A hard pull could cause a small, temporary drop in your credit scores. (typically up to 5 points)
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Tip - Personal Guarantor
If you stop paying the business credit card bill, you will be held personally responsible for what is owed, even if the account does not report to your personal credit report.