Average Personal Loan Interest Rates in 2026: Federal Reserve Data
The average personal loan interest rate in the United States is 11.65% APR as of Q1 2026, per the Federal Reserve's G.19 Consumer Credit Statistical Release — the definitive primary source for U.S. consumer credit rate data. But this single average conceals a range from 6.99% (excellent credit, zero-fee online lenders) to 36% (poor credit, subprime lenders). This article documents the complete 2026 rate landscape with primary-source data, explains every factor driving your personal rate, and shows where rates stand in historical context.
What is the average personal loan interest rate in 2026? The national average is 11.65% APR (Federal Reserve G.19, Q1 2026) — down from the 2023 peak of approximately 12.35% as the Federal Reserve's rate-cutting cycle reduced market rates. This average spans all lender types, all credit tiers, and all loan amounts. Borrowers with excellent credit (760+) can access rates as low as 6.99%–10% APR from top online lenders. Borrowers with poor credit (below 620) may face 28%–36% APR. The rate you receive depends primarily on your credit score, DTI, loan amount, and lender type. For the full breakdown by credit score tier, see: Personal Loan Rates by Credit Score: Full Chart 2026 (Article 22).
2026 Average Rates: The Three Primary Benchmarks
Three authoritative federal sources report consumer lending rates — each with different scope and methodology. Understanding which benchmark applies to which product prevents the comparison errors that cost borrowers money.
All lenders · All credit tiers · All loan amounts
Published monthly · Actuarial APR methodology
Primary benchmark — most cited
Federally chartered credit unions · Capped at 18%
Member-only rates · 580+ credit typically accepted
Best rates for eligible borrowers
All issuers · All credit tiers · Revolving balance
Context: personal loan saves 9.82 pct points avg
Comparison benchmark for consolidation
The Federal Reserve's G.19 Consumer Credit Statistical Release reports average finance rates for consumer credit using the actuarial method — the same methodology required by the Truth in Lending Act (TILA) for APR disclosure. The personal loan rate is a weighted average across all commercial banks, credit unions, and finance companies that report data to the Fed. It is published monthly and represents new loans originated in the reporting period — not the stock of all outstanding loans. This makes it the most accurate reflection of what new borrowers are actually paying in the current market. For the full 10-year rate history and how 2026 fits in context, see: Personal Loan Rate History: 10-Year Federal Reserve Data (Article 30).
Average Rate by Lender Type
The national 11.65% average masks wide variation by lender category. The same borrower profile can receive meaningfully different rates depending on which lender type they approach — a difference that can amount to thousands of dollars on the same loan amount and term.
| Lender Type | Average APR Range | Min. Credit Score | APR Cap | Key Advantage |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Top Online Lenders (680+ credit) | 6.99%–14% | 660–680+ | None | Lowest rates, same-day funding, zero-fee options |
| Mid-Market Online Lenders | 10%–25% | 580+ | None | Broader approval range, alternative data underwriting |
| Traditional Banks | 9%–22% | 660+ | None | Relationship discounts for existing customers |
| Federal Credit Unions | 7%–18% | 580+ (flexible) | 18% max (NCUA) | Lowest cap — best for all credit tiers who qualify |
| State-Chartered Credit Unions | 7%–24% | 580+ (flexible) | Varies by state | Member-owned, often flexible underwriting |
| Subprime / Fintech Lenders | 25%–36% | 500–580 | 36% (state laws vary) | Approval when other lenders decline |
The federal credit union 18% APR cap is the most significant rate advantage in the market — a borrower with 580 credit who might receive 28%–32% APR from an online lender can receive 12%–18% APR from a federal credit union. For a full comparison of credit union rates vs. bank rates, see: Credit Union Personal Loan Rates vs Banks: Full Comparison (Article 27).
Average Rate by Loan Amount and Term
Loan amount and term both influence the APR you receive — separate from your credit score. Lenders apply different risk pricing at different loan sizes and term lengths.
| Loan Amount | Typical APR Range | Monthly Payment (36 mo) | Total Interest (36 mo) | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| $1,000–$4,999 | 16%–28% | $36–$180 (varies) | Higher rate than large loans | Small loans carry higher origination cost per dollar — lenders price up |
| $5,000–$9,999 | 12%–20% | ~$166–$331/month | Moderate | Most lenders' sweet spot — broad availability, competitive pricing |
| $10,000–$24,999 | 10%–18% | ~$323–$805/month | Better rates — larger balance offsets fixed costs | Primary consolidation range — most competitive pricing |
| $25,000–$50,000 | 8%–16% | ~$544–$1,610/month | Lower rates for qualified borrowers | Stricter income requirements; 720+ FICO typically required |
| $50,000–$100,000 | 8%–14% | ~$1,087–$3,220/month | Best rates — limited lender availability | LightStream, SoFi main options; 720+ FICO, strong income required |
Small personal loans ($1,000–$3,000) consistently carry higher APRs than large loans, even for the same borrower. The reason: lenders have fixed origination costs (underwriting, servicing setup, compliance) regardless of loan size. On a $2,000 loan, a $100 fixed cost represents a 5% fee — meaningfully elevating the APR. On a $20,000 loan, the same $100 fixed cost is 0.5% — barely noticeable. Additionally, default recovery on small loans produces less recoverable principal, increasing lender risk. For small-loan borrowers needing $1,000–$3,000, a credit union share-secured loan or credit-builder product often offers better terms than an unsecured small personal loan.
Historical Rate Context: 2015–2026
The current 11.65% average sits at the upper end of the historical range for personal loan rates — elevated from the 2020–2021 lows but declining from the 2023 peak following the Federal Reserve's rate-cutting cycle. Understanding where 2026 rates sit relative to history helps assess whether the current rate environment favours borrowing or waiting.
| Period | Avg APR (Approx.) | Fed Funds Rate | Rate Environment |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2015–2018 | 10.1%–10.7% | 0.25%–2.50% | Gradual tightening — stable personal loan market |
| 2019–2020 | 9.5%–10.2% | 1.75% → 0.25% | COVID-era cuts drove rates to multi-decade lows |
| 2021 | 9.3% | 0.25% | Historical low — cheapest era for personal loan borrowing |
| 2022–2023 | 10.7%–12.4% | 0.25% → 5.50% | Aggressive Fed hiking cycle drove rates sharply higher |
| 2024 | 12.0%–12.4% | 5.50% → 4.50% | Rate-cutting cycle begins — partial normalisation |
| Q1 2026 (current) | 11.65% | 4.25%–4.50% | Stable — Fed cuts paused; rates down from 2023 peak |
The 2026 rate of 11.65% is elevated compared to the 2019–2021 low-rate era — but meaningfully lower than the 2023 peak of ~12.35%. For where rates may move over the next 12–24 months and what that means for borrowing decisions, see: Personal Loan Rate Forecast 2026–2027: What Experts Say (Article 36). For how Federal Reserve decisions directly affect personal loan APRs, see: How the Federal Reserve Rate Affects Personal Loan APRs (Article 31).
What the G.19 Average Doesn't Show
The 11.65% national average is useful as a benchmark but has important limitations that can mislead borrowers who use it as a target without understanding the underlying distribution.
- It is a volume-weighted average across all credit tiers. Borrowers with 760+ FICO (who receive 6.99%–10% APR) pull the average down; subprime borrowers (28%–36% APR) pull it up. The "average" may not represent any particular borrower's actual experience.
- It includes origination fees in the APR. The G.19 reports actuarial APR, which includes origination fees — meaning a 9% interest rate with a 5% origination fee contributes a ~14% APR to the average. Borrowers comparing only interest rates against the G.19 average are not making a valid comparison.
- It does not distinguish by loan purpose. A consolidation loan, a home improvement loan, and a credit-builder loan all carry different risk profiles and may receive different rates from the same lender — but all appear equally in the average.
- It reflects new loans, not existing loan portfolios. The G.19 captures new originations in the reporting period — it does not include the outstanding stock of loans at legacy rates. Borrowers who took out loans at 2021's 9.3% average are still paying that rate.
The correct use of the national average: if your pre-qualified APR is below 11.65%, you are receiving a below-average rate — you're doing well. If your pre-qualified APR is above 11.65%, you are paying above average — this is expected for borrowers below the median credit score, but worth checking whether a credit union or alternative lender can do better. For what specifically constitutes a "good" rate for your credit tier in 2026, see: What Is a Good Interest Rate on a Personal Loan in 2026? (Article 29).
The Five Factors That Determine Your Personal Rate
The national average is the starting point — your individual APR is determined by how you compare to the average borrower on five primary factors.
| Factor | How It Affects Your Rate | Typical Rate Impact |
|---|---|---|
| Credit Score | Primary driver — 100-point improvement can cut rate by 5–10 pct points | ±10–15% APR range |
| Debt-to-Income Ratio | High DTI (35%+) signals repayment risk — lenders price up or decline | ±1–3% APR |
| Loan Amount | Small loans ($1,000–$5,000) carry higher rates; large loans ($25K+) get better rates | ±3–8% APR |
| Loan Term | Longer terms may carry slightly higher rates; origination fee impact is larger on shorter terms | ±0.5–2% APR |
| Lender Type | Credit union vs. bank vs. online can produce 2–6% APR difference for same borrower | ±2–6% APR |
Frequently Asked Questions
- [1] Federal Reserve — G.19 Consumer Credit Statistical Release, Q1 2026. Personal loan average APR 11.65%; credit card average APR 21.47%; actuarial APR methodology; monthly reporting schedule. federalreserve.gov/releases/g19/
- [2] Federal Reserve — G.19 Historical Data, 2015–2026. Annual average APR series; rate environment documentation; methodology notes for actuarial calculation. federalreserve.gov/releases/g19/hist/
- [3] Federal Reserve — H.15 Selected Interest Rates Release, April 2026. Federal funds rate 4.25%–4.50%; prime rate 7.50%; FOMC rate decision history 2022–2026. federalreserve.gov/releases/h15/
- [4] National Credit Union Administration (NCUA) — Q4 2025 Credit Union Data Summary. Credit union average personal loan rate (~9.8%); 18% federal APR cap; member rate distribution. ncua.gov
- [5] Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) — "Consumer Credit Trends: Personal Loans" (2025). Loan amount distribution; credit tier breakdown; origination volume by lender type. consumerfinance.gov
- [6] Bankrate — "Personal Loan Rates Weekly Survey, April 2026." Lender-by-lender current rates; range by credit tier; origination fee prevalence; APR floor tracking. bankrate.com
- [7] LendingTree — "Personal Loan Market Trends Report, Q1 2026." Approval rate by credit tier; average APR by loan purpose; lender type market share. lendingtree.com
- [8] LightStream — "Personal Loan Rates, April 2026." Floor rate 6.99% APR; eligibility criteria for lowest rate; rate range by credit profile. lightstream.com
- [9] NerdWallet — "Current Personal Loan Interest Rates, April 2026." Market rate tracking; lender rate survey; rate trend analysis. nerdwallet.com
- [10] Experian — "Average Personal Loan Interest Rates by Credit Score, 2026." Credit tier APR distribution; historical rate comparison; borrower profile data. experian.com