Business verification failed?
Common KYC and address mismatches
When a business verification review gets stuck, the issue is usually not one missing file. It is usually a mismatch between the account profile, company record, tax identity, and proof set. This guide shows what reviewers compare and what to clean before you resubmit.
Keep the reader inside the same problem cluster: proof rejection, KYC consistency, payout setup, banking friction, EIN delays, and restricted-account cleanup.
Start from the conflict you actually have
People landing here usually already have a live problem. Give them a fast path, not broad service language.
Business verification failed
The profile and the proof stack do not line up cleanly enough for review to move.
- Name in dashboard does not match company record
- Business type looks inconsistent
- Tax details feel out of sync with the file
KYC or address mismatch
The document is real, but it supports the wrong address, person, or business identity for that field.
- Registered address and proof do not match
- Owner or representative details are unclear
- Address role is mixed across the stack
Proof set feels scattered
Too many stale, cropped, weak, or conflicting documents make the whole file harder to clear.
- Proof of address rejected
- Missing EIN or filing support
- Documents requested after signup
What the reviewer sees versus what you should fix
This is usually not an abstract compliance problem. It is a matching problem. One record says one thing, another says something else, and the reviewer cannot tell which record should control the case.
The legal name changes from one record to another
The account uses a shortened name, the company record shows the full legal name, and the tax or bank trail still reflects an older version.
Unclear entity identity. They cannot tell which version of the business should control the file.
Use one exact legal name version anywhere the platform expects the legal business identity to match.
The proof supports a different address than the field being checked
You uploaded a real document, but it supports a mailing address, operator address, or another location instead of the address the platform is verifying.
Address conflict. The proof does not actually verify the field that needs to be cleared.
Match the proof to the exact address role being reviewed: registered, business, or mailing.
The business type does not line up
The dashboard is set one way, but the supporting company documents describe another structure. This often happens when sole prop and LLC records get mixed.
Inconsistent legal form. The business identity looks unstable or partly wrong.
Make sure the dashboard and company record describe the same legal structure before resubmitting.
The document conflicts behind stuck business reviews
Most delayed reviews are not dramatic. They are small inconsistencies across a file that should have been saying one clean thing from the start.
Legal business name mismatch
The business name in the dashboard, company record, and tax trail do not all reflect the same entity version.
Address mismatch
The proof supports a different address than the one the reviewer is actually checking inside the account.
Business type mismatch
The account setup and company documents describe different legal structures, which forces manual reconciliation.
Owner or representative mismatch
The person tied to the review is not clearly connected to the business, or the ownership chain is incomplete.
Tax identity mismatch
The EIN exists, but the business name, responsible party, or address linked to that record does not cleanly support the current file.
Weak proof quality
The document may be real, but it is cropped, stale, unreadable, incomplete, or mixed with other records that tell a different story.
When the issue is live, the job is not “upload more”
The job is cleaning the file so the profile, proof set, entity record, and tax identity stop fighting each other. That is where Utility & KYC support fits best: one tighter file, clearer supporting logic, fewer avoidable review loops.
Tighten the file in this order
The wrong move is uploading everything you can find. The better move is tightening the file in order, starting with the identity that should control the record.
Lock the exact legal name
Pick the precise business name that should appear in the account and across the proof set. Remove shorthand versions where the legal name is required.
Use the correct address role
Make sure the proof matches the exact field being checked. Registered, business, and mailing address are not always interchangeable.
Match the business structure
Confirm that the dashboard and underlying company documents describe the same legal form before the file goes back under review.
Re-check the tax identity
Where tax details are part of the case, confirm that the business name, address, and responsible-party information still support the current setup.
Trim weak or conflicting proofs
Cut stale documents, blurry screenshots, duplicate uploads, and anything that introduces a second story into the file.
Resubmit one clean stack
Two or three strong matching records usually beat a bloated file that forces the reviewer to guess which document should control the case.
External references that actually help
These are not filler outbound links. They matter when the issue touches EIN identity, business name changes, address updates, responsible-party changes, or accepted verification documents.
Employer Identification Number
Use this when the tax identity side of the business record is part of the issue and you need the IRS reference for EIN basics.
Open source → IRSBusiness name change
Useful when the file is split between an old legal name and a new one and the business record has not been fully aligned yet.
Open source → IRSAddress or responsible-party change
Relevant when the mismatch is tied to business address or responsible-party information that no longer matches the current setup.
Open source → Stripe DocsAcceptable verification documents
Useful reference for common proof categories used in business identity, address, and legal-entity verification flows.
Open source → Stripe DocsRequired verification information
Helpful when the case involves business type, owners, directors, capabilities, or other information requirements tied to review.
Open source →Use the related internal guides together
This topic works better as part of a cluster. Keep this page linked to proof-of-address rejection, payout setup, EIN delay, account restriction, and KYC mismatch articles.
See supporting article →Business verification failed, KYC mismatch, and address mismatch
Short answers for search clarity without turning the page into a wall of repeated filler.
The review is not only checking whether a document exists. It is checking whether the details across the profile, company record, tax identity, and proof set reconcile cleanly. Real documents can still support different versions of the same business.
A KYC mismatch happens when the identity details being verified do not line up across the file. That can include business name, business type, address, representative details, owner information, or tax identity.
Yes. Address mismatch is one of the most common reasons a review stalls. The issue is often not that the proof is fake, but that it supports a different address than the one the platform expects for the field under review.
Not blindly. Uploading more documents can make the file worse if they introduce more conflicts. The better move is identifying the mismatch first, then resubmitting a tighter proof set.
It helps when the issue is not just “how do I upload this,” but “which record should control, which proof is weak, what needs to be removed, and how do I rebuild the file so the reviewer sees one consistent business.”