Personal Loan Rate History: 10-Year Federal Reserve Data
The Federal Reserve's G.19 Consumer Credit Statistical Release is the authoritative primary source for U.S. personal loan rate history. This article presents the full 10-year rate record from 2015 through Q1 2026, identifies each rate cycle's driver, and explains where today's 11.65% APR average sits relative to historical norms — giving borrowers the context to assess whether now is a good or poor time to take a personal loan.
The 10-year range for average personal loan APR is 9.3% (2021 low) to 12.35% (2023 peak), per Federal Reserve G.19 historical data. Today's 11.65% average sits near the upper end of this range — elevated from the COVID-era low but declining from the post-hiking-cycle peak. For context: 2015–2019 average was approximately 10.2%–10.6%. The current rate environment is above the historical norm due to the Federal Reserve's 2022–2023 hiking cycle, partially reversed by 2024–2025 rate cuts. For where rates may go next, see: Personal Loan Rate Forecast 2026–2027: What Experts Say (Article 36).
10-Year Rate History: Annual Data Table
All data from the Federal Reserve G.19 Consumer Credit Statistical Release, annual averages. The G.19 reports actuarial APR — the same calculation method required by TILA for loan disclosures — across all commercial banks, credit unions, and finance companies in the reporting sample.
| Year | Avg Personal Loan APR | Fed Funds Rate (Year-End) | Change vs. Prior Year | Rate Environment |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2015 | 10.18% | 0.25%–0.50% | — | Baseline — post-financial-crisis era low rates beginning to normalise |
| 2016 | 10.24% | 0.50%–0.75% | +0.06% | Stable — first Fed hike Dec 2015 had minimal consumer lending impact |
| 2017 | 10.31% | 1.25%–1.50% | +0.07% | Gradual tightening — personal loan rates rising modestly with Fed |
| 2018 | 10.62% | 2.25%–2.50% | +0.31% | Accelerating hikes — most pronounced personal loan rate increase of the cycle |
| 2019 | 10.21% | 1.50%–1.75% | −0.41% | Rate reversal — Fed cut 3× in 2019; personal loan rates declined |
| 2020 | 9.77% | 0%–0.25% | −0.44% | COVID emergency cuts — Fed to zero; personal loan rates at decade lows |
| 2021 | 9.32% | 0%–0.25% | −0.45% | 10-year historical LOW — zero-rate era peak consumer benefit |
| 2022 | 10.73% | 4.25%–4.50% | +1.41% | Steepest single-year increase — Fed hiked 425 basis points in 2022 alone |
| 2023 | 12.35% | 5.25%–5.50% | +1.62% | 10-year historical HIGH — full impact of hiking cycle reflected in consumer rates |
| 2024 | 12.04% | 4.25%–4.50% | −0.31% | Rate-cut cycle begins — Fed cut 100 bps in H2 2024; partial normalisation |
| Q1 2026 (current) | 11.65% | 4.25%–4.50% | −0.39% (vs. 2024) | Continued normalisation — Fed cuts paused; rates declining but above 2019 baseline |
The Federal Reserve G.19 reports consumer credit rates using the actuarial APR method — it captures new loan originations in the reporting period, not the stock of outstanding loans at historical rates. This means the G.19 reflects what new borrowers are actually paying at the time, making it the best indicator of current borrowing conditions. Data is collected from a statistical sample of commercial banks, credit unions, and finance companies and published monthly approximately 5 weeks after the reporting period closes.
The Rate Chart: 2015–Q1 2026
The dual-line chart below shows the 10-year relationship between the Federal funds rate (the Fed's policy rate, which influences all consumer lending costs) and the personal loan APR average. The personal loan rate does not track the Fed funds rate one-for-one — lenders pass through rate changes partially and with a lag — but the directional relationship is clear over the full cycle.
Key observations from the chart: (1) the 2022–2023 hiking cycle drove the steepest single-period increase in personal loan rates over the 10-year window; (2) the 2020–2021 COVID-era zero-rate period produced the lowest personal loan rates in modern history; (3) the current 11.65% represents a partial but incomplete normalisation from the 2023 peak — rates are declining but remain 1–2 percentage points above the 2015–2019 baseline.
Four Distinct Rate Eras: What Drove Each Phase
Era 1: Gradual Normalisation (2015–2019) — Avg 10.2%–10.6%
Following the 2008–2009 financial crisis, the Fed held the funds rate near zero until December 2015. The 2015–2018 hiking cycle raised the funds rate from 0.25% to 2.50% — a 225 basis point increase — producing a modest 0.44% increase in average personal loan APR. The relationship was muted because banks held substantial excess reserves and competition from new online lenders limited pass-through. In 2019, the Fed reversed course and cut three times in response to trade war uncertainty, driving personal loan rates back down to ~10.2%.
Era 2: COVID-Era Zero Rates (2020–2021) — Avg 9.3%–9.8%
The Federal Reserve cut the funds rate to 0%–0.25% in March 2020 in response to the COVID-19 pandemic — the fastest and largest rate-cut action in Fed history. Personal loan rates declined to their 10-year lows, averaging 9.77% in 2020 and 9.32% in 2021. Borrowers who took personal loans during this window locked in historically favourable rates. The 2021 average of 9.32% represents the best personal loan rate environment of the modern era for average credit profiles.
Era 3: The Hiking Cycle (2022–2023) — Avg 10.7%–12.4%
The Federal Reserve raised the funds rate from 0.25% in January 2022 to 5.50% by July 2023 — a 525 basis point increase over 16 months, the most aggressive tightening cycle since the early 1980s. Personal loan APRs rose from 9.32% (2021 average) to 12.35% (2023 average) — a 3.03 percentage point increase. Lenders passed through approximately 58% of the Fed's rate increase to personal loan APRs over this period. The 2022 single-year increase of +1.41 percentage points was the largest 12-month increase in the G.19 historical record.
Era 4: Partial Normalisation (2024–2026) — Avg 11.65%–12.1%
The Federal Reserve cut the funds rate three times in late 2024 (total 100 basis points), bringing it from 5.50% to 4.25%–4.50%. Personal loan APRs have declined from the 12.35% peak to the current 11.65% — a 0.70 percentage point recovery. The pace of normalisation has been slower than the pace of the hiking cycle: lenders have been less aggressive in passing through rate decreases than they were in passing through increases. With the Fed's cutting cycle paused in early 2026, the trajectory of further normalisation depends on inflation and employment data. For the rate outlook: How the Federal Reserve Rate Affects Personal Loan APRs (Article 31).
Where 2026 Fits in the Historical Context
| Benchmark | APR | vs. Today (11.65%) | Interpretation |
|---|---|---|---|
| 10-year historical low (2021) | 9.32% | +2.33 ppts higher | Today is 25% higher than the zero-rate era low |
| Pre-pandemic baseline (2019) | 10.21% | +1.44 ppts higher | Today is elevated vs. the pre-COVID "normal" |
| 10-year average (2015–2024) | ~10.6% | +1.05 ppts higher | Today is above the 10-year average |
| 10-year peak (2023) | 12.35% | −0.70 ppts lower | Declining from peak — partial normalisation underway |
| Current (Q1 2026) | 11.65% | — | Above historical avg but below 2023 peak — elevated environment |
At 11.65% average APR, today's personal loan market is above the historical 10-year average of ~10.6%. This means borrowers are paying more than the historical norm — not dramatically so, but meaningfully. If you need a personal loan today, the rate environment is not as favourable as 2019–2021 but is improving from the 2023 peak. If your purpose is not urgent, waiting for further normalisation (historically, 2–3 more Fed cuts could bring averages back toward 10.5%) might reduce your cost — but rate forecasts carry significant uncertainty. For the current rate forecast: Personal Loan Rate Forecast 2026–2027: What Experts Say (Article 36).
How Rate History Affects Borrowing Decisions Today
Rate history provides three practical inputs for borrowing decisions:
- Refinancing decisions for existing loans. Borrowers who took personal loans in 2022–2023 at peak rates (12%–15%+ APR) may benefit from refinancing as rates normalise. The break-even on refinancing depends on remaining term, new rate, and any origination fee on the new loan. With Q1 2026 rates at 11.65% average and declining, refinancing peak-era loans is worth evaluating — particularly for borrowers whose credit scores have also improved since origination.
- Timing urgency vs. rate optimisation. If your loan purpose is time-sensitive (medical, emergency home repair), the ~1 percentage point potential rate improvement from waiting is unlikely to justify the delay. If your purpose is discretionary (vacation, home improvement that can wait), the gradual normalisation trajectory may produce modestly better rates in 6–12 months.
- Fixed-rate protection. Personal loans are almost always fixed-rate — once you lock your APR, you're protected from any future Fed rate increases. If economic conditions shift and the Fed raises rates again (as it did in 2022), personal loan borrowers who locked rates before the increase are fully insulated. This fixed-rate characteristic is a meaningful advantage of personal loans vs. credit cards (typically variable rate).
Frequently Asked Questions
- [1] Federal Reserve — G.19 Consumer Credit Statistical Release, Q1 2026. Current avg APR 11.65%; actuarial methodology. federalreserve.gov/releases/g19/
- [2] Federal Reserve — G.19 Historical Data, 2015–2026. Annual average APR series used for full 10-year table. federalreserve.gov/releases/g19/hist/
- [3] Federal Reserve — H.15 Selected Interest Rates. Federal funds rate history 2015–2026; FOMC decision dates and magnitudes. federalreserve.gov/releases/h15/
- [4] Federal Reserve — "FOMC Meeting Statements." 2022–2023 rate hike decisions; 2024–2025 rate cut decisions; current pause rationale. federalreserve.gov
- [5] NCUA — Q4 2025 Credit Union Data. Federal credit union rate history; 18% APR cap persistence across all rate cycles. ncua.gov
- [6] Bankrate — "Personal Loan Rate History, 2015–2026." Supplementary market rate data; lender survey methodology. bankrate.com
- [7] CFPB — "Consumer Credit Trends: Personal Loans" (2025). Volume and rate distribution data by cycle phase. consumerfinance.gov
- [8] LendingTree — "Personal Loan Industry Trends." Historical origination volumes; rate cycle impact on borrower behaviour. lendingtree.com
- [9] NerdWallet — "Personal Loan Interest Rate Trends, 2026." Market rate tracking; historical comparison analysis. nerdwallet.com
- [10] Experian — "State of Credit 2026." Consumer credit trends; personal loan origination data by rate environment. experian.com