Pricing

Buy depth only when the decision needs it.

The free snapshot should already help. The paid layer exists for cases where you want deeper analysis, clearer recommendation, comparison, or a PDF you can keep.

Free Snapshot
£0

Generous first-pass due diligence before you spend anything.

Score, verdict, and top drivers
Accounts and filing status
Top red flags and positive signals
Latest financial snapshot where available
Data freshness and completeness view
Most useful
Full Report
£4.99

One-off depth for a decision that matters.

AI narrative in plain English
3-year financial analysis
Director deep-dive
PDF export
Benchmarking, charges, and practical recommendation
Best for one-off decisions where you want a clearer recommendation, not just more data.
Comparison
£6.99

Best for choosing between two quotes or two clients.

Two score gauges
Dimension and metric comparison
Practical recommendation
Best for choosing between suppliers or clients
Pro Monthly
£9.99/month

For repeat checks without repeat friction.

Monthly allowance of full reports
Lower friction for repeat work
Comparison access included
Designed for freelancers and small teams
Commercial framing: the free report is designed to be generous enough for quick screening. Upgrading should feel like buying clarity for a higher-stakes decision, not paying to unlock the basics.
Secure payment via Stripe
No account required to buy
Access available immediately after checkout
Is Vettit a credit bureau?

No. Vettit analyses public company data, filing behaviour, director history, charges, and official enforcement datasets. It does not use private payment data or regulated credit files.

Is the free report genuinely useful?

Yes. The free report includes the score, verdict, top red flags, filing status, key financial snapshot where available, and data freshness. The paid layer goes deeper rather than withholding the basics.

What if the company has limited accounts?

Vettit keeps the report useful by leaning harder on filing behaviour, director history, charges, enforcement signals, and company profile context. Limited disclosure reduces confidence, which is shown explicitly.