Personal Loan Rates by Credit Score: Full Chart 2026
Your credit score is the single most powerful variable in determining your personal loan APR — a 100-point improvement can reduce your rate by 8–15 percentage points and save thousands in interest on the same loan. This article documents the complete 2026 APR range for every FICO tier from 580 to 800+, with exact monthly payment and total interest figures so you can benchmark any offer against your tier's market rate.
What personal loan rate can I get with my credit score? APR ranges by 2026 market data: 760+: 6.99%–10% · 720–759: 10%–14% · 680–719: 14%–20% · 640–679: 20%–28% · 600–639: 26%–35% · Below 600: 28%–36% (limited lenders). National average is 11.65% APR (Federal Reserve G.19, Q1 2026). Use the interactive calculator below to see your estimated rate, monthly payment, and total cost. For strategies to lower your rate at any score level, see: How to Get the Lowest Personal Loan Rate: 9 Proven Ways (Article 24).
APR by Credit Score: Full Tier Chart
The table below shows the full APR range for each FICO credit score tier in 2026, sourced from Federal Reserve G.19 data, Experian's Q1 2026 lender survey, and Bankrate's weekly rate monitor. The "market range" reflects actual pre-qualified offers from major lenders — not advertised starting rates.
APR within each credit tier still varies based on DTI, loan amount, term, and lender type. Two borrowers at 695 FICO can receive 15% and 22% APR from different lenders — the tier range reflects the full market spread. The most important action for any tier: prequalify at 3–5 lenders simultaneously using soft pulls to find your personal best rate within your tier. For the full prequalification strategy, see: Rate Shopping Personal Loans: Does It Hurt Your Credit? (Article 26).
Cost Comparison: What Each Tier Pays on $15,000
Using a $15,000 loan over 36 months — a representative consolidation or major-expense loan — the table below shows the exact monthly payment and total interest cost at the midpoint APR of each tier. The interest savings from moving from "Poor" to "Exceptional" credit on this single loan exceed $6,000.
| Credit Tier | FICO Range | Midpoint APR | Monthly Payment | Total Interest | vs. Best Tier |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Exceptional | 760–850 | 8.50% | $472 | $1,991 | — baseline |
| Very Good | 720–759 | 12.00% | $498 | $2,928 | +$937 |
| Good | 680–719 | 17.00% | $535 | $4,260 | +$2,269 |
| Fair | 640–679 | 24.00% | $588 | $6,168 | +$4,177 |
| Below Avg | 600–639 | 30.50% | $630 | $7,680 | +$5,689 |
| Poor | Below 600 | 33.00% | $649 | $8,364 | +$6,373 |
Rate Calculator: Your Score, Your Payment
Enter your FICO score range and loan details to see your estimated APR range, monthly payment, and total interest for 2026.
Lender Availability by Credit Tier
Not every lender serves every credit tier. The table below identifies which lender types are available at each FICO range and the typical APR advantage or disadvantage of each.
| FICO Range | Best Lender Option | Why | Lenders to Avoid |
|---|---|---|---|
| 760+ | LightStream, SoFi, Marcus | Floor rates 6.99%–9%; zero fees; same-day funding | Subprime lenders — no reason to use them |
| 720–759 | LightStream, SoFi, Upgrade | 10%–14% APR from zero-fee lenders | High-fee lenders with same rate but lower net proceeds |
| 680–719 | Federal credit union, SoFi, LendingClub | CU 18% cap; online lenders 14%–20% | Banks with 660+ floor but higher rates than CU |
| 640–679 | Federal credit union (18% cap), Upstart | CU cap saves 4–8% vs. online lenders at this tier | Payday or installment loan lenders (200%+ APR) |
| 600–639 | Federal credit union, Avant | CU most competitive; Avant 27%–35% acceptable floor | OppLoans, NetCredit at 100%+ APR |
| Below 600 | Credit-builder loan, secured personal loan | Build score first; unsecured at 36% rarely worth it | Any lender at 36%+ APR — cost exceeds value |
Federal credit unions are capped at 18% APR regardless of the borrower's credit score — a regulatory advantage that becomes progressively more valuable as credit scores decline. A 650 FICO borrower receiving 26% APR from an online lender would pay $4,928 more in interest on a $15,000 / 36-month loan than the same borrower receiving 16% APR from a federal credit union. Joining a credit union before applying (typically requiring a $5–$25 deposit) is the single highest-ROI credit improvement action for borrowers in the 580–680 FICO range. For the full rate comparison, see: Credit Union Personal Loan Rates vs Banks: Full Comparison (Article 27).
How to Improve Your Tier Before Applying
Moving from one tier to the next can save thousands of dollars in interest on the same loan. Here are the fastest legitimate actions to improve your FICO score before a personal loan application.
- Pay down revolving credit card balances. Reducing utilisation from 70% to 30% can add 40–80 points within one billing cycle — the fastest single action available. Every dollar of card balance paid down directly reduces utilisation and improves your score.
- Dispute credit report errors. Approximately 26% of Americans have at least one material error on a credit report (FTC study). Correcting an erroneous derogatory mark can add 20–100 points. Pull all three bureau reports free at AnnualCreditReport.com before applying.
- Become an authorised user on a high-limit, low-balance card. A spouse or family member with a strong credit profile can add you as an authorised user — their account history and utilisation add to your report immediately, potentially adding 10–30 points.
- Wait out a hard inquiry. If you have multiple recent hard inquiries, waiting 6–12 months for them to lose scoring weight can add 5–15 points before applying.
- Don't close old accounts. Closing credit cards reduces available credit (raising utilisation) and may lower average account age — both score-negative. Keep old accounts open and minimally active.
For the comprehensive guide to lowering your personal loan rate by any available method — not just credit score improvement — see: How to Get the Lowest Personal Loan Rate: 9 Proven Ways (Article 24).
Frequently Asked Questions
- [1] Federal Reserve — G.19 Consumer Credit Statistical Release, Q1 2026. National avg APR 11.65%; tier distribution data. federalreserve.gov/releases/g19/
- [2] Experian — "Average Personal Loan Interest Rates by Credit Score, 2026." APR by FICO tier; tier boundary definitions; lender survey methodology. experian.com
- [3] myFICO — "FICO Score Ranges." Exceptional/Very Good/Good/Fair/Poor tier definitions; score distribution data; credit improvement strategies. myfico.com
- [4] NCUA — Q4 2025 Credit Union Data. 18% federal APR cap; CU approval rates by tier; member benefit analysis. ncua.gov
- [5] Bankrate — "Personal Loan Rates by Credit Score, April 2026." Weekly lender survey; tier-specific APR ranges; zero-fee lender availability by tier. bankrate.com
- [6] LendingTree — "Personal Loan Offers by Credit Score, Q1 2026." Actual pre-qualified offer distribution by FICO tier; lender participation by credit range. lendingtree.com
- [7] CFPB — "Consumer Credit Trends: Personal Loans" (2025). Approval rates by credit tier; pricing distribution; subprime lender market share. consumerfinance.gov
- [8] FTC — "Free Credit Reports." Credit report error prevalence data; dispute rights; AnnualCreditReport.com access. consumer.ftc.gov
- [9] NerdWallet — "Personal Loan Rates by Credit Score 2026." Lender-by-lender tier comparison; credit union vs. online comparison. nerdwallet.com
- [10] LightStream — "Personal Loan Rates, April 2026." Floor rate 6.99% for 720+; rate range by credit profile. lightstream.com