πŸ“˜ Article 07 Β· Personal Loan Basics Β· PAA

Personal Loan vs. Line of Credit: What's the Difference?

Personal loans and lines of credit are both unsecured borrowing products β€” but they operate on fundamentally different structures that make each one right for entirely different situations. Choosing the wrong structure for your borrowing need costs money and creates unnecessary risk. This guide explains the structural difference in plain language, provides a complete head-to-head comparison, and tells you exactly when to choose each product.

πŸ“… Updated: April 2026
✍️ Author: Shahid Hassan Naik, Global Loan Advisor
πŸ“‚ Category: Personal Loan Basics
⏱️ Read time: ~7 min
Closed-End
Personal Loan Structure β€” Fixed Amount, Fixed Term
Open-End
Line of Credit Structure β€” Draw, Repay, Draw Again
11.65%
Avg Personal Loan APR Β· Federal Reserve G.19 Q1 2026
Variable
Most LOC Rates β€” Tied to Prime Rate + Margin
⚑ Quick Answer

What is the difference between a personal loan and a line of credit? A personal loan is closed-end: you receive a fixed lump sum, repay it in equal monthly installments over a set term of 1–7 years, and the account closes when paid off. A line of credit (LOC) is open-end revolving credit: you're approved for a credit limit, draw as much or as little as you need, repay it, and can draw again β€” with no fixed payoff date. Personal loans are better for large defined one-time expenses. Lines of credit are better for ongoing or unpredictable borrowing needs. The core distinction: personal loans have a defined end; lines of credit do not. For the foundational definition of what a personal loan is, see: What Is a Personal Loan? Official Definition + 5 Key Facts (Article 02).

The Structural Difference β€” Closed-End vs. Open-End Credit

The difference between a personal loan and a line of credit is not about the interest rate, the lender, or the creditworthiness required. It is about the fundamental credit structure β€” closed-end versus open-end.

Under the Truth in Lending Act (TILA) and Federal Reserve Regulation Z, all consumer credit is classified into exactly two structural categories: closed-end credit and open-end credit. A personal loan is closed-end β€” the total credit extended, the term, and the repayment schedule are all defined at origination and cannot be changed. A line of credit is open-end β€” the credit limit is established, but the actual amount borrowed, the repayment amount each period, and the total cost are all variable.

🏦 Personal Loan β€” Closed-End Structure
Single Disbursement β†’ Fixed Repayment β†’ Defined End Date
1
Apply and get approved for a specific amount
2
Full loan amount deposited to your account on day 1
3
Fixed equal monthly payments begin 30 days later
4
Each payment reduces principal and interest
5
Final payment closes account β€” debt fully extinguished
πŸ”„ Line of Credit β€” Open-End (Revolving) Structure
Credit Limit Approved β†’ Draw as Needed β†’ Repay β†’ Draw Again
1
Apply and get approved for a credit limit (e.g., $10,000)
2
Draw any amount up to the limit when you need it
3
Interest accrues only on the drawn balance
4
Repay some or all β€” available credit is restored
5
Draw again as needed β€” no defined payoff date
πŸ’‘ The Key Regulatory Distinction

Under Regulation Z (TILA), personal loans require disclosure of the total finance charge and total of all payments at origination β€” you know the complete cost upfront. Lines of credit are exempt from total-cost disclosure because the total is unknowable β€” it depends on how much you draw and how quickly you repay. This regulatory asymmetry reflects the fundamental difference: personal loans have a fixed cost; LOCs have a variable cost determined entirely by how you use the credit. For a full glossary of credit terms, see: Personal Loan Glossary: 40 Key Terms Defined Simply (Article 09).

Head-to-Head: Personal Loan vs. Line of Credit β€” 11 Criteria

🏦 Personal Loan
VS
πŸ”„ Line of Credit
Fixed β€” same payment every month, zero surprise βœ“
Monthly Payment
Variable β€” based on current drawn balance
Fixed APR β€” same rate for full term βœ“
Interest Rate
Usually variable β€” tied to prime rate + margin
Defined β€” 1–7 years, set at origination βœ“
Payoff Date
None β€” open-ended revolving credit
Lump sum on day 1 β€” cannot draw more
Flexibility
Draw any amount any time, up to limit βœ“
Interest on full balance from day 1 β€” but predictable βœ“
Interest Charges
Interest only on drawn amount β€” efficient if unused
Known exactly at signing β€” TILA total disclosed βœ“
Total Cost
Unknown at origination β€” depends on usage
Banks, credit unions, online lenders β€” widest choice βœ“
Availability
Banks and credit unions primarily
1–5 business days at online lenders βœ“
Funding Speed
Approval in days; draws available immediately after
580–670+ depending on lender
Min. Credit Score
620–680+ typically required
Installment β€” does not affect credit utilization βœ“
Credit Utilization
Revolving β€” drawn balance affects utilization ratio
Ideal for large defined one-time expense βœ“
Best Use Case
Ideal for ongoing variable borrowing needs βœ“
πŸ’‘ Score: Personal Loan 7 Β· Line of Credit 2 Β· Tie 2

Personal loan wins: fixed payment, fixed rate, defined payoff, total cost transparency, lender availability, funding speed, credit utilization. LOC wins: draw flexibility and best-use fit for variable ongoing needs. Two criteria tie: credit score requirement and interest-on-drawn-amount efficiency. The LOC's flexibility advantage is real β€” but it comes at the cost of unpredictability in both payment and total cost.

How Each Product Works: Step-by-Step

Personal Loan: Fixed From Day One

You apply, get approved, and the full loan amount is deposited into your bank account β€” typically within 1–5 business days. From that point, the loan is fully drawn and interest begins accruing on the entire balance immediately. You make the same fixed monthly payment every month for the entire loan term. The payment never changes; the only variable is how much of each payment goes to interest vs. principal (which shifts via amortization β€” more to principal each month as the balance declines). On the final scheduled payment date, the balance reaches exactly zero and the account closes. For the complete mechanics of how amortization works, see: How Does a Personal Loan Work? Step-by-Step for Beginners (Article 03).

Line of Credit: Draw, Repay, Draw Again

You apply for a credit limit β€” say $20,000. The lender approves you for that amount and establishes the credit line. On day one, you draw nothing. You only draw when you need funds β€” $3,000 this month for a repair, repay $2,000 next month, draw $5,000 the month after for an unexpected expense. Interest accrues only on the outstanding drawn balance, not on the full $20,000 limit. The available credit replenishes as you repay. There is no scheduled end date; the line remains available until the lender closes it or you choose to close it.

The minimum payment on a personal line of credit is typically interest-only on the drawn balance each month β€” similar to a credit card. This minimum-payment structure is the core risk: it is technically possible to maintain a line of credit indefinitely without meaningfully reducing the principal, paying interest perpetually on a balance that never fully disappears. For how the personal loan's structured repayment compares in total cost, see: Personal Loan Repayment Terms: 1 to 7 Years Explained (Article 14).

⚠️ LOC Variable Rate Risk: When Rates Rise, Your Payment Rises Too

Most personal lines of credit carry variable interest rates tied to the prime rate plus a margin. When the Federal Reserve raises rates β€” as it did aggressively from 2022–2023 β€” the rate on an existing LOC increases immediately. A borrower with a $15,000 outstanding balance on a LOC at prime + 4% saw their rate jump from ~7.5% to ~12.5% within 18 months, with no ability to lock in. Personal loans lock your rate at origination β€” you are entirely insulated from subsequent rate increases. This rate certainty is a significant advantage for long-term planning. For more on fixed vs. variable rate distinctions, see: Fixed vs. Variable Rate Personal Loan: Which to Choose? (Article 12).

Cost Comparison: Fixed Rate vs. Variable Rate

The fixed vs. variable rate distinction between personal loans and most lines of credit creates meaningfully different total cost scenarios. The chart below shows how a $15,000 balance compares under a personal loan's fixed APR versus a LOC's variable rate across different rate environments.

Total Interest Cost β€” $15,000 Balance: Personal Loan (Fixed) vs. LOC (Variable) Β· 3-Year Comparison
Personal loan at 11.65% fixed (Federal Reserve G.19 Q1 2026 avg). LOC scenarios at different prime + margin environments. Fixed $500/month payment for both.
$15,000 Balance β€” Personal Loan vs. Line of Credit: Total 3-Year Cost Scenarios
Scenario Rate Type APR Monthly Payment Total Interest (3 yr)
Personal Loan (Fed avg) Fixed 11.65% $496 (fixed) $2,856
LOC β€” Low Rate Env. Variable 8.50% $473 (variable) $2,030
LOC β€” Current Env. Variable 12.50% $503 (variable) $3,090
LOC β€” High Rate Env. Variable 16.50% $530 (variable) $4,080
LOC β€” Min. Payment Only Variable 12.50% ~$156 interest-only $5,620+ (never ends)

When a Personal Loan Is the Better Choice

βœ… Choose Personal Loan When…
Large Defined One-Time Expense
  • You need a specific amount for a specific purpose
  • The total is known upfront (home renovation, medical bill)
  • You want a defined payoff date and fixed monthly cost
  • Variable rate risk is unwelcome given your income stability
βœ… Choose Personal Loan When…
Debt Consolidation
  • Paying off multiple credit cards at higher APRs
  • A fixed rate eliminates rate-reset risk during payoff
  • Defined payoff date creates accountability
  • Converting revolving to installment debt improves credit score
βœ… Choose Personal Loan When…
Budget Certainty Required
  • Fixed income or tight budget demands payment predictability
  • Rising rate environment makes variable rate risky
  • You want the debt cleared by a known calendar date
  • You lack disciplined spending habits with revolving credit
βœ… Choose Personal Loan When…
Credit Utilization Matters
  • Applying for a mortgage or auto loan soon
  • Installment debt doesn't affect revolving utilization ratio
  • Lowering utilization will meaningfully improve your FICO
  • Want to diversify credit mix from revolving-only profile

For the complete personal loan application guide, see: How to Apply for a Personal Loan: Step-by-Step Guide (Article 16). For the full pros and cons analysis, see: Personal Loan Pros and Cons: Complete Honest Guide 2026 (Article 17).

When a Line of Credit Is the Better Choice

βœ… Choose Line of Credit When…
Ongoing Variable Expenses
  • Costs recur but vary month-to-month in amount
  • You need flexible access to funds without reapplying
  • Total borrowing need is uncertain at the outset
  • You'll draw and repay multiple times over 1–2 years
βœ… Choose Line of Credit When…
Emergency Buffer / Safety Net
  • You want available credit for emergencies without borrowing it now
  • You pay no interest on undrawn credit limit
  • Medical or home repair emergencies are your primary concern
  • A standing credit facility replaces depleting your emergency fund
βœ… Choose Line of Credit When…
Home Improvement (Staged)
  • Renovation happens in phases over 12–24 months
  • Total cost is uncertain until contractors price each phase
  • Drawing progressively avoids paying interest on unused funds
  • A HELOC specifically offers rates below unsecured LOCs
βœ… Choose Line of Credit When…
Business Bridge Financing
  • Self-employed with uneven cash flow between client payments
  • Need short-term bridging between invoices and receipts
  • Will repay quickly and draw again β€” revolving suits the cycle
  • Amount needed each month is unpredictable
βœ… The LOC Efficiency Advantage: Pay Interest Only on What You Draw

The most genuine financial advantage of a line of credit over a personal loan: you only pay interest on what you've drawn. If you take a $20,000 personal loan but only need $8,000 in the first six months, you're paying interest on $20,000 from day one. With a $20,000 credit line where you draw $8,000, you pay interest on $8,000 only β€” the remaining $12,000 costs nothing until drawn. For borrowers whose needs are phased or uncertain, this efficiency is real and meaningful.

Types of Lines of Credit Explained

"Line of credit" is itself an umbrella term covering several distinct products. Understanding which type is being offered β€” or which fits your need β€” matters because the collateral requirements, rates, and risk profiles differ significantly.

Lines of Credit β€” Product Comparison 2026
Type Secured? Typical APR Credit Limit Best For
Personal Line of Credit (PLOC) Unsecured 9%–25% variable $1,000–$100,000 General ongoing borrowing needs with good credit
Home Equity Line of Credit (HELOC) Secured by home 7%–11% variable Up to 85% of home equity Large home improvement or major expenses β€” homeowners only
Business Line of Credit Often secured 8%–20% variable $10,000–$500,000 Business cash flow management; separate from personal credit
Credit Union Share LOC Share-secured Below 18% (cap) Up to savings balance Credit union members needing flexible access at low rate
🚫 HELOC vs. Personal Loan: Not the Same Risk Level

A Home Equity Line of Credit (HELOC) is often compared to a personal line of credit, but they are fundamentally different in risk. A HELOC is secured by your home β€” defaulting can lead to foreclosure. A personal loan or personal line of credit is unsecured β€” default consequences are credit damage, collections, and potential civil judgment, but your home cannot be seized without court involvement. Never treat a HELOC as an equivalent to an unsecured LOC or personal loan. The lower HELOC rate reflects the dramatically higher collateral risk you're accepting.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the main difference between a personal loan and a line of credit? +
The main difference is structure. A personal loan is closed-end: a fixed lump sum is disbursed upfront; you repay it in equal monthly installments over a defined 1–7 year term; the account closes when paid off. A line of credit is open-end revolving credit: a credit limit is approved; you draw what you need, when you need it; you pay interest only on drawn amounts; you repay and the credit restores; there is no fixed payoff date. Personal loans are better for defined large one-time expenses. Lines of credit are better for ongoing or unpredictable borrowing needs. For the foundational definition of what a personal loan is, see: What Is a Personal Loan? Official Definition + 5 Key Facts (Article 02).
Which has a lower interest rate β€” personal loan or line of credit? +
It depends on the type of line of credit and the current rate environment. A HELOC typically offers the lowest rates (7%–11%) because it's secured by home equity β€” but that security comes with foreclosure risk. An unsecured personal line of credit typically carries rates of 9%–25% variable, which is broadly comparable to or higher than personal loan APRs. A personal loan at 11.65% fixed (Federal Reserve G.19 Q1 2026 average) is often cheaper than a variable-rate LOC in a rising or elevated rate environment. The LOC rate advantage, when it exists, is primarily for HELOCs or in low-rate environments β€” and it comes with the risk that rates can rise after you've drawn the balance.
Can I pay off a line of credit like a personal loan? +
Yes β€” you can pay more than the minimum on a line of credit, paying it down aggressively the same way you would a personal loan. Many financially disciplined borrowers choose a LOC for its flexibility but commit to making the same fixed payment every month to ensure it is fully paid off within a target timeframe. The critical difference: a personal loan requires this discipline structurally β€” the fixed payment eliminates the option to underpay. A LOC allows underpayment (minimum interest-only), which means discipline must come from the borrower rather than the loan structure. If you're not confident in your ability to maintain payments above the minimum on a LOC, a personal loan's mandatory fixed payment is the safer structural choice.
Does a personal line of credit hurt your credit score? +
Applying for a personal line of credit creates a hard inquiry (βˆ’5 to βˆ’10 points temporarily) β€” the same as a personal loan application. The key difference in ongoing credit score impact is that a LOC is revolving credit, so your drawn balance contributes to your revolving utilization ratio (30% FICO weight). If you draw $8,000 against a $10,000 LOC, your utilization on that account is 80% β€” which significantly harms your score. A personal loan, being installment debt, does not affect revolving utilization at all. If credit score management is important to you β€” particularly before a major borrowing event like a mortgage application β€” a personal loan is the credit-friendlier choice for carrying a large balance. For what happens to credit when you pay off a personal loan, see: What Happens When You Pay Off a Personal Loan? (Article 10).
Which is better for home improvement β€” personal loan or line of credit? +
It depends on your renovation structure. If the project has a known total cost and is completed at once, a personal loan is often better β€” you lock in a fixed rate, receive the full amount, and have a defined payoff date. If the renovation is phased over 12–24 months with uncertain total costs, a line of credit (particularly a HELOC for homeowners) may be more efficient β€” you draw as each phase requires funds and pay interest only on amounts drawn. The HELOC specifically offers substantially lower rates than personal loans (7%–11% vs. 11.65% average), but only homeowners with sufficient equity can access it, and it carries foreclosure risk on default. For borrowers without home equity or who prefer no collateral risk, a personal loan at a fixed rate is the cleaner choice for home improvement regardless of project timeline. For the complete application guide for personal loans, see: How to Apply for a Personal Loan: Step-by-Step Guide (Article 16).
References & Data Sources
  • [1] Federal Reserve β€” G.19 Consumer Credit Statistical Release, Q1 2026. Average personal loan APR 11.65%; closed-end vs. open-end credit product classification; consumer credit outstanding by type. federalreserve.gov/releases/g19/
  • [2] Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) β€” Regulation Z (Truth in Lending Act). Closed-end vs. open-end credit definitions; TILA total finance charge disclosure requirements; variable rate disclosure rules. consumerfinance.gov
  • [3] Federal Reserve β€” H.15 Selected Interest Rates Release, April 2026. Prime rate and margin data; HELOC average rate benchmarks; LOC rate environment 2022–2026. federalreserve.gov/releases/h15/
  • [4] myFICO β€” "Credit Utilization: What Is It and How Does It Impact Your Score?" Revolving utilization 30% FICO weight; installment debt exclusion from utilization calculation; LOC balance impact. myfico.com
  • [5] CFPB β€” "What Is a Home Equity Line of Credit?" HELOC structure, draw/repayment period mechanics; foreclosure risk on default; variable rate reset rules. consumerfinance.gov
  • [6] National Credit Union Administration (NCUA) β€” Q4 2025 Credit Union Data Summary. Share-secured LOC rate structures; CU personal LOC availability; federal 18% APR cap applicability. ncua.gov
  • [7] Experian β€” "Personal Loan vs. Line of Credit: What's the Difference?" (2025). Structural comparison; variable rate risk analysis; credit score impact by product type. experian.com
  • [8] Bankrate β€” "Personal Loan Rates and Personal Line of Credit Rates Survey, April 2026." Current APR ranges by product and lender; variable vs. fixed rate availability. bankrate.com
  • [9] LendingTree β€” "Personal Loan vs. Line of Credit" (2026). Use-case analysis; total cost comparison; lender availability by product type. lendingtree.com
  • [10] NerdWallet β€” "Personal Loan vs. Personal Line of Credit: Which Is Right for You?" (2026). Home improvement scenario analysis; variable rate environment comparisons; LOC minimum payment risk. nerdwallet.com