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Personal loans, explained: how to qualify, apply, and compare

The short version

  • A personal loan is borrowed cash with a fixed rate and a fixed end date. You get the money once, pay the same amount monthly, and it's over in two to seven years. No collateral — your credit is the promise.
  • The price tag is the APR (annual percentage rate): the interest rate plus fees, as one yearly number. Compare APRs, never monthly payments.
  • Lenders decide using your credit score, income, and existing debts. You can check most lenders' estimated rates with a "soft pull" that doesn't touch your score.
  • Used well, it turns expensive card debt into one cheaper, scheduled payment. Used badly, it's a new debt on top of old habits.
  • Anyone promising "guaranteed approval" or asking for money up front is a red flag, every time.

What a personal loan actually is

Borrow a chunk of money — commonly a few thousand dollars up to $50,000 or more — and pay it back in equal monthly payments over a set number of years. The rate is usually fixed, so the payment never changes. Most personal loans are "unsecured," meaning you don't pledge your car or house; the lender relies on your track record.

That's the whole product. It's less exciting than credit cards make borrowing look, and that's the point: a fixed payment with an end date is much harder to lose control of than a revolving balance.

What people use them for — and shouldn't

The good fits: paying off higher-rate credit cards (called debt consolidation), one big planned expense like a home repair or a medical bill, or replacing a payday-style debt with something sane.

The poor fits: everyday spending you can't otherwise cover (the loan delays the problem and adds interest), investments (borrowed money magnifies losses too), and anything you could save for in a few months instead. Lenders also set their own no-go lists — college costs and business expenses are commonly excluded.

What lenders look at

  • Your credit score and history. The score sets your price more than anything else. Higher score, lower APR — the same loan can cost wildly different amounts to different people.
  • Your income. You'll state it and usually prove it (pay stubs, tax forms).
  • Your DTI — debt-to-income ratio. Your monthly debt payments divided by your monthly income before taxes. Too high and lenders decline you no matter the score. Check yours first: the DTI calculator ↗.

How applying works, step by step

  • 1. Check rates with soft pulls. Most online lenders show an estimated rate after a few questions, using a "soft" credit check that doesn't affect your score. Do this with three or more lenders — it's free comparison shopping.
  • 2. Pick one and formally apply. This triggers a "hard" credit inquiry (small, usually temporary score effect) and a request for documents: ID, proof of income, sometimes bank statements.
  • 3. Read the offer before signing. The APR, the term, the exact monthly payment, any origination fee, and whether there's a prepayment penalty (a charge for paying early — good lenders don't have one). Our page on personal-loan paperwork decodes every form.
  • 4. Get funded. Often within a day or two. With consolidation loans, some lenders pay your card companies directly — a good feature, because the money never tempts you from your checking account.

The two fees that matter

Origination fee: a one-time charge subtracted from your loan before it reaches you. Borrow $10,000 with a 5% fee and $9,500 arrives — but you repay $10,000. Plenty of lenders charge nothing; that's a real difference worth shopping for.

Prepayment penalty: a fee for finishing early. Most reputable personal-loan lenders don't charge one — if an offer does, ask why and look elsewhere.

Both are baked into the APR, which is why the APR — not the advertised rate, not the payment — is the number to compare.

How to actually compare offers

Line up your soft-pull quotes and ask three questions: Which APR is lowest? Which term gets it paid off fastest at a payment I can truly afford? And what's the total I'll pay back on each? A longer term shrinks the payment but grows the total — the difference can be thousands. Run the term-length calculator ↗ to see it with your own numbers.

And check at least one credit union alongside the online lenders. They're member-owned, their pricing is often better, and several accept nearly anyone as a member. Most comparison sites skip them; ours doesn't.

Red flags that end the conversation

  • "Guaranteed approval" or "no credit check" — real lenders always check. These phrases mark the expensive traps.
  • Any request for a fee before you get the loan. Legitimate fees come out of the loan, never up front by gift card, wire, or app.
  • Pressure to "act today." A real offer survives a night's sleep.
  • An APR nobody will put in writing. It's your legal right to see it before you sign.
Ready to look at actual lenders? See the verified list, filter by what matters to you, and check a few soft-pull rates: Compare personal loan opportunities →
Sources to cite before publish: CFPB (what is a personal loan; prequalification and credit inquiries; comparing offers), FTC (advance-fee loan scams). Terms vary by lender and state — readers should confirm against the lender's own disclosures.