🟣 Article 94 · Comparison

Personal Loan vs. Signature Loan: What's the Difference in 2026?

If you've searched for "signature loan" and found results that look identical to "personal loan" results β€” you're not confused, you're correct. A signature loan is another name for an unsecured personal loan. The two terms describe the same product: a fixed-rate, fixed-term, unsecured consumer loan backed by nothing but the borrower's signature (their creditworthiness and promise to repay). The term "signature loan" is older, historically used by traditional banks and credit unions; "personal loan" is the more common modern term, particularly among online fintech lenders. This article explains where the terminology divergence comes from, how to identify when the terms are being used interchangeably vs. when there's a meaningful product difference, and what actually matters when you compare lenders regardless of what they call the product.

πŸ“… Updated: April 2026
✍️ Author: Shahid Hassan Naik, Global Loan Advisor
🟣 Category: Comparison
⏱️ Read time: ~7 min
= Same
Signature Loan = Personal Loan: Both Are Unsecured Consumer Loans Backed Only by Borrower Creditworthiness
6
Common Alternative Names for an Unsecured Personal Loan β€” Signature, Character, Good Faith, Unsecured, Consumer, Individual
11.65%
Average Personal / Signature Loan APR β€” Federal Reserve G.19 Q1 2026 (Same Rate Regardless of Label)
1980s
When "Signature Loan" Was Dominant Terminology β€” Traditional Bank Era; "Personal Loan" Now the Common Term
⚑ Quick Answer

A signature loan and a personal loan are the same product. Both are unsecured, fixed-rate consumer installment loans where the borrower's signature (creditworthiness) is the only collateral. "Signature loan" is the older traditional bank term; "personal loan" is the common modern term. When comparing lenders, ignore the label β€” focus on APR, origination fees, repayment term, and total cost. A credit union advertising "signature loans" at 9% APR with a $0 fee may be better than a fintech advertising "personal loans" at 12% APR with a 4% origination fee. The label tells you nothing about the rate or cost. Compare options at Global Loan Advisor.

Why "Signature Loan" and "Personal Loan" Mean the Same Thing

The term "signature loan" originates from the lending terminology of traditional banks in the mid-20th century. When a bank made an unsecured consumer loan β€” one backed by no collateral, only the borrower's creditworthiness β€” the only thing securing the bank's position was the borrower's signature on the promissory note. The loan was "secured" by the signature alone. The term captured what made the product distinctive from secured loans (mortgages, auto loans) where a physical asset served as collateral.

As online lending emerged in the 2000s and 2010s, fintech companies and online marketplaces popularized the term "personal loan" for the same product β€” emphasizing the personal (consumer, individual) rather than the collateral mechanism. SoFi, LightStream, Upstart, Marcus, and Prosper all use "personal loan." Traditional banks and credit unions β€” many of which predate the fintech era β€” often still use "signature loan," "character loan," or "unsecured personal loan" on their product pages.

The product is structurally identical regardless of label: fixed lump sum disbursed once, fixed interest rate, fixed monthly payments, fixed repayment term, no collateral. The borrower's credit score and income determine approval and rate. CFPB and Regulation Z apply to both. Credit bureaus classify both as installment debt. Neither the rate structure, the amortization schedule, nor the regulatory treatment differs between a "signature loan" and a "personal loan" from the same or comparable lender.

βœ… One-Line Answer to Search Confusion

If you searched "signature loan vs personal loan" because search results showed what looked like the same product: your instinct was correct. They are the same product. Apply to whichever lender β€” bank, credit union, or online fintech β€” offers the best APR, the lowest or zero origination fee, and the best terms for your credit profile. The name on the product page is irrelevant to the cost.

All the Names for an Unsecured Personal Loan

"Personal loan" and "signature loan" are two of the most common labels β€” but the same product appears under at least six different names across lenders. Understanding the full alias set helps borrowers find options they might otherwise miss when searching.

Personal Loan
= Signature Loan
Used by: SoFi, LightStream, Upstart, Marcus, Discover, LendingClub. The dominant modern term from online fintech lenders. Emphasizes the consumer / individual use case.
Signature Loan
= Personal Loan
Used by: traditional banks, many credit unions. Emphasizes that the only collateral is the borrower's signature. Common in banking terminology from the 1970s–2000s before fintech popularized "personal loan."
Unsecured Personal Loan
= Personal Loan
Used by: some banks and comparison sites to distinguish from secured personal loans (which use a savings account or other asset as collateral). The "unsecured" modifier is technically redundant for the standard product but adds clarity.
Consumer Loan
= Personal Loan (sometimes)
A broader term used by some community banks and credit unions for any non-mortgage, non-business consumer installment loan β€” including personal loans. May also cover auto loans in some contexts. Verify the product type when this term appears.
Character Loan
= Signature Loan = Personal Loan
An older term emphasizing that the bank is lending based on the borrower's character (creditworthiness, reputation) rather than collateral. Used occasionally by community banks and credit unions, particularly in rural markets. Functionally identical to a signature loan.
Good Faith Loan
= Signature Loan = Personal Loan
Another historical term occasionally used by smaller community lenders. Emphasizes the trust-based nature of unsecured lending β€” the bank trusts the borrower in good faith to repay without collateral backing. Extremely rare in modern usage but still appears at some community banks.
πŸ’‘ Why Knowing the Aliases Matters Practically

When shopping for an unsecured personal loan, search your credit union's website for "signature loan" or "unsecured loan" in addition to "personal loan" β€” you may find a product that didn't appear in your initial search. Many community banks and credit unions that offer competitive rates under the "signature loan" label don't appear in personal loan comparison aggregators that only crawl "personal loan" product pages. A Navy Federal Credit Union "Personal Expense Loan," a PenFed "Personal Loan," or a local credit union "Signature Loan" may all describe the same product β€” and credit union rates are capped at 18% APR by NCUA, making them competitive options worth the search effort. Find top options at Global Loan Advisor's lender comparison.

Where the Terms Are Used Differently β€” and What Actually Matters

While "signature loan" and "personal loan" are nearly always identical, there are two narrow contexts where lenders use "signature loan" to describe something slightly different from a standard personal loan. Knowing these distinctions prevents confusion.

Context 1: Credit Unions Using "Signature Loan" for Smaller Amounts

Some credit unions segment their unsecured loan products by size β€” offering "signature loans" for smaller amounts (typically $500–$5,000) with slightly different terms than their larger "personal loans." In this context, the two terms are not synonyms β€” they describe different products in the same institution's lineup. Always verify the specific terms for each product rather than assuming the labels are interchangeable at a given lender.

Context 2: "Secured Personal Loan" vs. "Unsecured Personal Loan" (Signature Loan)

Some banks and credit unions offer both "secured personal loans" (using a savings account or CD as collateral β€” typically called a "share-secured" or "savings-secured" loan) and "unsecured personal loans" (signature loans). In this context, "signature loan" specifically distinguishes the unsecured product from the secured variant. When a lender uses both terms, the signature loan is the unsecured one; the secured personal loan typically offers lower rates in exchange for the collateral commitment.

Feature Signature Loan / Personal Loan (Unsecured) Secured Personal Loan / Share-Secured Loan
Collateral requiredNone β€” signature onlySavings account or CD (blocked during loan)
APR advantageStandard rate (Fed G.19 avg 11.65%)Lower rate (typically 2%–4% above savings yield)
Credit check importanceHigh β€” credit drives rateLower β€” collateral reduces credit score sensitivity
Savings account accessNo impact β€” savings unrestrictedSavings blocked/restricted during loan term
Credit building potentialFull payment history reportingFull payment history reporting β€” same
Best forBorrowers without savings to pledge; most personal loan use casesBorrowers with savings who want a credit-building tool or lower rate

The practical implication: if you have savings in a credit union and are considering borrowing, ask specifically about both "signature loans" and "share-secured loans" β€” the secured version may offer a meaningfully lower rate in exchange for temporarily restricting access to your savings. If you need your savings accessible, the signature/personal loan is the only option.

⚠️ The One Scenario Where "Signature Loan" May Mean Something Different Online

A small number of online lenders and lead-generation sites use "signature loan" as a marketing term for high-rate, short-term consumer credit products β€” similar to the way "installment loan" is used by some subprime lenders (Article 93). These products may not be traditional personal loans despite the familiar-sounding label. Warning signs: prominent display of monthly payment rather than APR; acceptance of very low credit scores with no clear rate disclosure; "instant approval" language; lender not identifiable as an FDIC-insured bank or NCUA-regulated credit union. When you see "signature loan" from an unfamiliar online lender, verify the APR prominently displayed in the loan agreement before proceeding β€” the CFPB requires APR disclosure under Regulation Z for all closed-end consumer credit.

Comparing Lenders When They Use Different Labels

Because "signature loan" and "personal loan" describe the same product, the comparison between lenders using these different labels should focus entirely on the economic terms β€” APR, origination fee, repayment term, total cost. The label is marketing; the APR is the product.

APR Comparison β€” Lenders Using "Personal Loan" vs. "Signature Loan" Labels (April 2026)
Product is functionally identical regardless of label. Rate differences are driven by lender type (online fintech vs. credit union vs. bank), not terminology. Source: individual lender disclosures April 2026; NCUA Q4 2025.
Same Product, Different Names β€” Lender Comparison by Label Used (April 2026)
LenderLabel UsedAPR RangeOrigination FeeMin CreditFunding
LightStream (Truist)Personal Loan6.99%–25.49%$0660+Same day
SoFiPersonal Loan8.99%–29.99%$0Not specifiedSame day
Marcus (Goldman Sachs)Personal Loan6.99%–24.99%$0Not specified1–4 days
PenFed Credit UnionPersonal Loan7.74%–17.99%$0Not specified1–3 days
Navy Federal CUPersonal Expense Loan8.99%–18% (NCUA cap)$0MemberSame day
Local Credit Union (typical)Signature Loan9%–18% (NCUA cap)MinimalVaries1–5 days
Community Bank (typical)Signature Loan / Personal Loan10%–24%VariesVaries2–5 days
UpstartPersonal Loan7.80%–35.99%0%–12%300+Next day

The table illustrates the only thing that matters: APR and origination fees vary based on lender type and credit tier, not the label used. A credit union offering a "signature loan" at 9%–18% is offering the same product as SoFi's "personal loan" β€” and may be cheaper in total cost for borrowers who qualify for credit union membership. Always compare the economics, not the marketing terminology.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a signature loan? +
A signature loan is an unsecured consumer installment loan where the borrower's signature β€” representing their promise to repay based on creditworthiness β€” is the only collateral. No physical asset secures the loan. The term is an older traditional bank and credit union term for what fintech lenders and modern comparison sites now call a "personal loan." Both describe the same product: a fixed lump sum, fixed interest rate, fixed monthly payments, and fixed repayment term of 12–84 months. The label has no effect on the product's structure, rate, regulatory treatment, or credit bureau reporting. When comparing lenders, focus on APR and origination fees regardless of whether the lender calls it a "signature loan" or "personal loan."
Is a signature loan the same as a personal loan? +
Yes β€” in virtually all cases, a signature loan and a personal loan describe the same product. Both are unsecured consumer installment loans backed only by the borrower's credit profile. The term "signature loan" is used primarily by traditional banks and credit unions; "personal loan" is used primarily by online fintech lenders and modern financial comparison sites. The only context where the terms might differ is within a single institution that uses both labels to distinguish different-sized or differently-structured products β€” for example, a credit union might use "signature loan" for amounts under $5,000 and "personal loan" for amounts above. In that context, verify the specific product terms rather than assuming the labels are interchangeable. For most borrowers searching across multiple lenders, the terms refer to the same product and the comparison should focus entirely on APR, fees, and total cost.
Where can I find a signature loan? +
Signature loans (under that label) are most commonly offered by traditional banks and credit unions. National banks like Wells Fargo and Chase often list "personal loans" on their consumer pages, but many regional and community banks still use "signature loan." Federal credit unions (Navy Federal, PenFed, Alliant, and thousands of local credit unions) frequently use "signature loan" or "unsecured loan" for the same product β€” often at rates capped at 18% APR by NCUA, making them cost-competitive with or better than online fintech lenders for eligible members. You can search directly on your bank or credit union's website for "signature loan," "unsecured loan," or "consumer loan" in addition to "personal loan" β€” the same product may appear under any of these labels. For a consolidated comparison of 40+ lenders (including credit union options): Credit Union Personal Loans: How to Join and Get One (Article 115).
What credit score do I need for a signature loan? +
The credit score requirement for a signature loan (= unsecured personal loan) is the same as for a personal loan from the same lender type. At online fintech lenders: Upstart accepts from 300+ FICO; Avant accepts from 580 FICO; SoFi, LightStream, and Marcus don't publicly disclose minimums but typically require 660+. At federal credit unions (18% APR cap): credit score requirements vary by institution β€” many credit unions use holistic underwriting that weighs membership history alongside credit score, making them more accessible for fair-credit members than some banks. At traditional banks: typically 650+ for unsecured products. Best signature loan / personal loan rates (below 10% APR) generally require 720+ FICO. Credit score requirements by lender: Minimum Credit Score for a Personal Loan in 2026 (Article 40).
Is a signature loan better than a secured personal loan? +
It depends on your situation. A secured personal loan (also called a share-secured or savings-secured loan) uses a savings account or CD as collateral β€” the lender freezes the pledged amount for the loan term. In exchange, the rate is typically much lower: often 2%–4% above the savings yield, meaning a rate of 3%–6% APR vs. 9%–18% for an unsecured signature loan at a credit union. If you have savings you can afford to keep temporarily inaccessible (you don't need them for an emergency), a secured personal loan produces significant interest savings and builds the same credit history as an unsecured loan. If you need your savings accessible β€” or don't have savings to pledge β€” the signature (unsecured) loan is the only option. The secured loan is also useful for borrowers with poor credit who can't qualify for a signature loan at a reasonable rate: the savings collateral reduces the lender's risk and improves approval odds at a much lower rate than available on the unsecured market. Full secured vs. unsecured comparison: Secured vs. Unsecured Personal Loans: Key Differences (Article 6).
References & Primary Data Sources
  • [1] Federal Reserve β€” G.19 Consumer Credit Statistical Release Q1 2026. Average personal loan / signature loan APR 11.65%; consumer installment credit outstanding; classification of unsecured consumer installment loans regardless of label. federalreserve.gov
  • [2] Consumer Financial Protection Bureau β€” Regulation Z (12 C.F.R. Part 1026). APR disclosure requirements for all closed-end consumer credit including signature loans and personal loans; definition of installment credit; Truth in Lending Act application to unsecured consumer loans. consumerfinance.gov
  • [3] NCUA β€” Q4 2025 Credit Union Data Summary; 12 C.F.R. Β§701.21. Federal credit union 18% APR cap on all consumer loans including signature loans; average credit union personal loan rate ~9.8%; share-secured loan product availability. ncua.gov
  • [4] myFICO / FICO β€” Credit Score Components. Signature loan classified as installment debt β€” excluded from utilization ratio; payment history reporting; credit mix benefit; scoring treatment identical to all unsecured consumer installment loans. myfico.com
  • [5] Navy Federal Credit Union β€” Personal Expense Loan Disclosure April 2026. APR range 8.99%–18%; $0 origination fee; same-day funding; "Personal Expense Loan" label used for unsecured personal / signature loan product. navyfederal.org
  • [6] PenFed Credit Union β€” Personal Loan Disclosure April 2026. APR range 7.74%–17.99%; $0 origination fee; 1–3 day funding; "Personal Loan" label used for unsecured installment loan product. penfed.org
  • [7] LightStream (Truist) β€” Personal Loan Disclosure April 2026. APR range 6.99%–25.49%; $0 origination fee; same-day funding; rate-beat guarantee; 660+ FICO minimum. lightstream.com
  • [8] SoFi β€” Personal Loan Disclosure April 2026. APR range 8.99%–29.99%; $0 origination fee; same-day funding; unemployment protection benefit; "Personal Loan" label for unsecured consumer installment product. sofi.com
  • [9] Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) β€” Consumer Compliance Examination Manual. Definition of unsecured consumer loans; TILA compliance for signature loans; equal credit treatment under ECOA; historical context for "signature loan" terminology in bank examination manuals. fdic.gov
  • [10] Individual Lender Disclosure Pages β€” Marcus, Discover, Upstart, Avant (verified April 2026). APR ranges, origination fees, minimum credit requirements, and funding timelines cited directly from each lender's product disclosure pages; "personal loan" label used uniformly across these lenders for the same unsecured consumer installment product.