Trade Accounts vs Cash Buying: Builders Merchant Credit, Discount Structures & Credit Checks

Quick Answer: A trade account at a builders merchant gives you access to better pricing (typically 10–30% below retail), 30-day credit terms, and consolidated invoicing for accounting purposes. Apply with your business bank details, company registration or UTR, and a credit reference. Maintain accounts with 2–3 main merchants for price comparison and supply security. Always pay within terms — a late-paying account loses its negotiating leverage.

Summary

Trade accounts are one of the most underutilised business tools for small and medium-sized trades businesses. The difference in pricing between retail (what a member of the public pays at Screwfix or B&Q) and trade pricing (what a contractor with a negotiated account pays) can be 15–40% on common materials. On a £100,000 annual materials spend, that is £15,000–£40,000 in savings available by maintaining the right trade accounts.

Beyond price, trade accounts offer credit (buy now, pay at the end of the month), consolidated invoicing (one statement per month for accounting), and relationship benefits (credit terms extended in a pinch, goods held for collection, priority for scarce stock). Building relationships with your local branch staff and buying account managers is as important to running a profitable trade business as the technical work itself.

Key Facts

Quick Reference Table

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Merchant Type Typical Products Main Brands Account Benefits
General builders merchant Timber, blocks, cement, fixings, basic plumbing Travis Perkins, Jewson, Buildbase Wide product range, local branches
Plumbing specialist Boilers, pipe, fittings, sanitary ware, heating Wolseley/Plumb Center, Graham, City Plumbing Heating brand relationships, technical support
Electrical specialist Cable, CUs, lighting, tools CEF, Edmundson, Rexel Price matching, project quotes
Roofing specialist Tiles, slates, membrane, battens SRS Roofing, Bradfords Delivery to site, specialist stock
Tool specialist Power tools, hand tools, PPE Toolstation, Screwfix Pro, Howdens Convenience, next-day delivery
Discount Trigger Typical Discount
Trade account (any spend) 5–15% below retail
Monthly spend £2,000–£5,000 Additional 3–5%
Monthly spend £5,000–£20,000 Additional 5–10%
Annual negotiation / tender Up to 25–30% below retail
Special order / project pricing Negotiate case by case

Detailed Guidance

Opening a Trade Account

What you need:

The application: Most merchants have an online application form and a branch-based application form. Complete both if possible — a walk-in application with a conversation with the account manager is faster and gives you the opportunity to negotiate on opening terms.

Credit decision: The merchant's credit team will run a credit check. For established businesses with good payment history, this is typically approved within 24–48 hours. For new businesses, expect either a small credit limit or a request for trade references (names of suppliers who can confirm you pay on time).

First order: Make a meaningful first order — a small first transaction shows you are genuinely using the account. Introduce yourself to the branch manager.

Building the Relationship

The relationship with your branch account manager is a commercial asset. A good account manager will:

In return:

Understanding the Pricing Structure

List price: The starting point for all pricing — typically close to recommended retail price.

Trade discount: Applied automatically to account holders. Typically displayed as a percentage off list price. Example: List price £10.00, trade discount 20% = trade price £8.00.

Volume discount / rebate: Some merchants operate a quarterly or annual rebate scheme where you receive a cash payment or account credit based on total spend in the period. These rebate schemes can be worth 3–8% of your total annual spend.

Project pricing: For large individual projects (over £5,000–£10,000 of materials), ask for a project quote. This is typically better than your standard trade rate and locked in for the project duration.

Price matching: Most merchants will match a like-for-like quote from a competitor. Bring a written quote, not just a verbal claim. Price matching works best for standard products — it is harder to match on specialist or own-brand items.

Managing Multiple Accounts

Maintain accounts with 2–3 main merchants for the product categories you use most. Benefits:

Avoid spreading your spend too thin — three accounts with meaningful spend at each will get better pricing and service than eight accounts with minimal spend.

Credit Management

Paying trade accounts on time is non-negotiable. Late payments:

Set up bank standing orders or calendar reminders to pay merchant statements by the due date. Many merchants run end-of-month statements payable by the 20th of the following month. Automate this.

If you have a cash flow problem that will cause a late payment, call your account manager before the due date and explain the situation. Merchants typically give more latitude to customers who communicate proactively than to those who simply go silent.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I open a trade account as a new business with no trading history?

Yes, but expect a smaller initial credit limit (£500–£2,000) and possibly a requirement for trade references. Some merchants require 6–12 months of trading history before offering credit. In the meantime, many offer a cash account with trade pricing — you get the discount but pay immediately. This is often the right starting point.

Is Screwfix/Toolstation better than a trade account at a main merchant?

For convenience and small-quantity purchases, yes — Screwfix and Toolstation are unbeatable. Their trade pricing is competitive, they have broad stock, and they're open late. For large or regular purchases, a negotiated account at a specialist merchant will usually beat them on price. Many contractors use Screwfix for small quick purchases and their main merchant account for larger orders.

My merchant increased prices without notice. What can I do?

Review the original account terms — most do not guarantee prices and can change them. For significant increases on regularly purchased items, request a meeting with the account manager to negotiate. If they won't move, get quotes from competitors and use those as leverage. For project work, lock in prices at project start by requesting a formal project quote with a price validity period.

Do I need separate accounts for different product types?

Not necessarily — most general builders merchants stock electrical and plumbing basics as well as building materials. However, specialist merchants (Wolseley for heating and plumbing, CEF for electrical) typically have better pricing, broader stock, and more knowledgeable staff for their specialist product categories. Most experienced contractors have a general merchant account plus one or two specialist accounts.

Regulations & Standards