Creditor Explained
A creditor is any individual or business entity that is owed money by another party (the debtor). In B2B contexts, a creditor is typically a company that has delivered goods or services on credit terms and is waiting for payment.
Creditors come in two main categories: secured creditors who hold a legal claim (lien) on the debtor's assets as collateral, and unsecured creditors who have no collateral backing the debt. Most B2B trade creditors — companies that sell products or services on Net 30/60/90 terms — are unsecured creditors.
The distinction matters most in bankruptcy: secured creditors are paid first from the sale of collateral, while unsecured creditors share whatever remains. This is why some B2B creditors use UCC filings, personal guarantees, or retention-of-title clauses to improve their position.
What You Need to Know About Creditors
- Creditors bear the risk of non-payment. When you sell on credit, you are financing your customer's operations. If they don't pay, you absorb the loss. This is why credit policies and collection processes are critical.
- Secured vs. unsecured determines your priority. In bankruptcy, secured creditors recover 50-80% on average. Unsecured creditors recover 5-20%. Consider UCC filings or personal guarantees for large accounts.
- Creditors have extensive legal rights. B2B creditors can: make collection calls, send demand letters, hire collection agencies, file lawsuits, garnish business accounts (with judgment), file UCC liens, and report to credit bureaus.
- Time is a creditor's enemy. The probability of collecting a receivable drops from 90%+ at 30 days past due to under 50% at 90 days. Every week of inaction costs real money.
- First-party collection preserves relationships. Collecting under your own name (first-party) maintains the business relationship. Sending to a third-party agency signals the relationship is damaged. Choose wisely and act early.
Creditor in Practice: B2B Example
Scenario: Technology Services Provider
Situation: A managed IT services company provides $15,000/month in services to 40 clients on Net 30 terms. Their total AR is $600,000 at any given time. They are a creditor to all 40 clients.
Portfolio view: 32 clients (80%) pay within terms. 5 clients (12.5%) pay 15-30 days late. 3 clients (7.5%) are 60+ days past due, representing $135,000 in at-risk AR.
As a creditor, their options for the 3 problem accounts: Continue internal follow-up, send formal demand letters, engage a first-party collection service (like AgentCollect), escalate to a third-party agency, or file lawsuits.
The cost of inaction: If those 3 accounts reach 180 days without intervention, the expected recovery drops to under 30%. That $135,000 shrinks to $40,000 or less in expected value. Early action as a creditor is not optional — it's math.
How AgentCollect Empowers Creditors
Collect Under Your Name, With AI Efficiency
AgentCollect acts as a first-party collection extension of your business. AI agents contact debtors under your company name, preserving the creditor-customer relationship while bringing professional persistence that most internal AR teams cannot match.
For creditors, the biggest challenge is consistency — following up on every overdue account, every time, without fail. AgentCollect automates this entirely, ensuring no receivable is forgotten and every debtor receives timely, professional outreach.
Related AR Glossary Terms
Creditor FAQ
Collect what you're owed — without the friction.
AgentCollect gives creditors AI-powered collection that preserves relationships. Success-only fees — you pay nothing unless we collect.
Start a free pilot →