βœ… Article 44 Β· Eligibility & Qualification Β· Info

Can I Get a Personal Loan With a 620 Credit Score?

A 620 FICO score sits in a uniquely positioned zone β€” meaningfully above the 580 floor where options become very limited, but still below the 670 threshold where mainstream lenders fully open up. At 620, you have real borrowing options with real lenders, a wider choice than at 580, and a clear, achievable path to the "Good" credit tier. This guide tells you exactly which lenders approve 620 FICO, what rates to expect, what 620 unlocks that 580 didn't, and how to cross the 670 threshold in 30–60 days.

πŸ“… Updated: April 2026
✍️ Author: Shahid Hassan Naik, Global Loan Advisor
βœ… Category: Eligibility & Qualification
⏱️ Read time: ~8 min
Yes
More Lenders Approve 620 Than 580
16–26%
Typical APR Range at 620 FICO in 2026
30–60
Days to Reach 670 FICO From 620
50 pts
Gap to "Good" Credit β€” Achievable in One Billing Cycle With Utilization Fix
⚑ Quick Answer

Can I get a personal loan with a 620 credit score? Yes β€” and with meaningfully more options than at 580. At 620 FICO, fintech lenders (Upstart, LendingPoint, LendingClub), most credit unions, and CDFIs will consider your application. Traditional banks still require 660+. Typical APR at 620 FICO: 16%–26% β€” higher than prime, but lower than the 20%–32% range at 580. The most important insight for a 620 borrower: you are only 50 points from the "Good" tier (670+), where a dramatically wider lender selection and 10%–18% APR becomes accessible. A single billing cycle of aggressive utilization reduction can close that gap. See: How to Improve Your Approval Chances (Article 46) for the fastest path from 620 to 670.

What 620 FICO Means: How It Differs From 580 and 670

Understanding where 620 sits relative to the scores just below and above it is the most important context for making smart borrowing decisions at this tier. The 620–669 band is the upper range of the "Fair" credit tier β€” much closer to "Good" than to the 580 floor, but still definitively in the territory where some mainstream lenders decline applications automatically.

580
Fair β€” Lower Boundary
  • Banks: decline
  • Online banks: decline
  • Fintech: limited (Upstart, LendingPoint, Avant)
  • Credit unions: possible with strong profile
  • Typical APR: 20%–32%
  • Max loan: typically $5K–$12K
620
Fair β€” Upper Mid ← You Are Here
  • Banks: still decline (need 660+)
  • Online banks: mostly decline
  • Fintech: more options (adds LendingClub, SoFi possible)
  • Credit unions: likely with member relationship
  • Typical APR: 16%–26%
  • Max loan: typically $8K–$18K
670
Good β€” Your Target Tier
  • Banks: some approve (need 680+ for best)
  • Online banks: Marcus, Discover, Ally open up
  • Fintech: full access (SoFi, LightStream near)
  • Credit unions: strong approval odds
  • Typical APR: 10%–18%
  • Max loan: $15K–$40K typical

The 50-point gap between 620 and 670 represents one of the most meaningful improvement thresholds in personal loan qualification. Crossing it unlocks online banks like Marcus and Discover, significantly lowers APRs, increases maximum loan amounts, and shifts your lender negotiations from "can you approve me?" to "what's your best rate?" For the complete picture of what every score tier unlocks, see: Minimum Credit Score for a Personal Loan in 2026 (Article 40).

πŸ’‘ 620 Is 40 Points Above Where Most Fair-Credit Options Disappear

At 620, you are meaningfully better positioned than a 580 borrower. The number of lenders willing to consider your application is higher, the maximum loan amounts available are larger, and the APR you'll receive is materially lower. If you're reading this at 580 and wondering how much better 620 is β€” the answer is: noticeably. At 620, LendingClub (600 minimum) and many credit unions become more comfortable approvals, and the typical high-end APR drops from 32% to 26%. See our 580 credit score guide (Article 43) to understand where you've come from.

Lenders That Approve 620 FICO: Complete Breakdown

At 620, your lender universe expands beyond 580, but some lenders remain inaccessible until you reach 660+. Here is the honest, research-based verdict on each lender type.

βœ… Strong Approval Odds
Credit Unions
APR: 10%–18%
At 620 FICO with an established membership, credit unions are your best option for both approval odds and rate. Human underwriting at credit unions weighs your full financial picture β€” income, employment stability, and membership history β€” alongside the score. NCUA 2025 data shows 18 pp higher approval rates than banks for this tier. If you don't have membership yet, join now and apply in 3–6 months for maximum benefit.
βœ… Strong Approval Odds
Upstart
APR: 7.4%–35.99%
AI model that considers education, employment, and cash flow alongside score. 620 FICO borrowers typically receive better terms than 580 borrowers at Upstart because the model adjusts for all inputs. Minimum $12K/yr income. Soft-pull pre-qualification available. A 620 borrower with $40K income and low DTI can receive APRs meaningfully below the 620 average β€” often 16%–22%. Funding in 1–3 days.
βœ… Strong Approval Odds
LendingPoint
APR: 7.99%–35.99%
Stated 580 minimum β€” 620 is comfortably above threshold. Income-forward model rewards borrowers who have solid income relative to their loan request. $20K minimum income. Loan amounts $2,000–$36,500. 620 borrowers with DTI below 40% typically receive APRs in the 18%–26% range. Funding same or next business day. Soft-pull pre-qualification available.
βœ… Strong Approval Odds
Avant
APR: 9.95%–35.99%
Minimum 550 β€” 620 well within range. Purpose-built for fair-credit borrowers. $20K minimum income. Administrative fee up to 9.99%. Loan amounts $2,000–$35,000. At 620, typical APR range 18%–28%. Mobile app for account management. Soft-pull pre-qualification. Funding within 1 business day after approval.
βœ… Likely Approve
LendingClub
APR: 8.98%–35.99%
Stated 600 minimum β€” 620 clears this comfortably. P2P-derived funding model; loans funded by investors. $24,000 minimum income. Loan amounts $1,000–$40,000. Origination fee 3%–8%. At 620, typical APR 16%–26%. Strong debt consolidation option β€” LendingClub specializes in this use case and approval rates are higher when loan purpose is consolidation.
βœ… Likely Approve
Oportun (CDFI)
APR: up to 35.99%
No minimum score β€” income-primary. 620 is above their typical borrower profile β€” income-strong 620 borrowers may receive better terms than Oportun's average. Available 35+ states. Loan amounts $300–$18,500. APR capped at federal standards. Best for lower loan amounts with limited alternatives. Spanish-language service.
⚠️ Possible β€” Profile Dependent
SoFi
APR: 8.99%–29.49%
Stated 650 minimum β€” so 620 is below threshold. However, SoFi's soft-pull pre-qualification is worth testing: some borrowers in the 620–649 range with very strong income (>$80K), excellent DTI (<28%), and stable employment receive pre-qualified offers. If SoFi's pre-qualification returns no offer, do not formally apply. Try again at 650+.
⚠️ Possible β€” Existing Relationship
Discover
APR: 7.99%–24.99%
Stated 660 minimum β€” below threshold. Existing Discover cardholders may receive pre-approved offers at 620 based on their account relationship. Check the Discover card account portal for personal loan offers before applying through the standard channel. No hard inquiry for checking offers. Otherwise wait until 660+.
❌ Will Decline at 620
Marcus, LightStream, Chase, BofA
Require 660–700+
All require 660–700+ FICO minimum. A 620 application will be declined automatically. Do not waste a hard inquiry on these lenders until you reach 660+. Use the 30–60 days you'd otherwise spend on these applications to improve your score β€” the improvement process is described in Section 6.
620 FICO Lender Approval Comparison Table β€” 2026
Lender620 Approval?Min ScoreMin IncomeTypical APR at 620Best Use at 620
Credit Unionsβœ… Strong~580$18K/yr10%–18%Best rate; join 3–6 months before applying
Upstartβœ… StrongNone$12K/yr16%–24%Strong income; education/employment profile
LendingPointβœ… Strong580$20K/yr18%–26%Income-forward; low DTI strengthens application
Avantβœ… Strong550$20K/yr18%–28%Fair-credit specialist; moderate loan amounts
LendingClubβœ… Likely600$24K/yr16%–26%Debt consolidation; P2P model
Oportunβœ… YesNoneVerifiableUp to 35.99%Small loan amounts; no score requirement
OneMain Financialβœ… PossibleNot disclosedFlexible22%–35.99%Physical branch; secured option available
SoFi⚠️ Borderline650+HighN/ATest soft-pull only; expect no offer at 620
Discover⚠️ Possible (existing cardholders)660$25K/yrN/ACheck card account portal for pre-approved offers
Marcus❌ No660+$30K+N/AWait until 660+
LightStream❌ No660+$40K+N/AWait until 700+

What APR to Expect at 620 FICO in 2026

The Federal Reserve G.19 benchmark for a 24-month personal loan was 11.65% APR (November 2025). At 620 FICO, expect to pay 16%–26% at most fintech lenders β€” meaningfully lower than the 20%–32% range at 580 FICO, but still significantly above the prime-borrower benchmark. Credit unions consistently offer the best rates in this tier: 10%–18% for members with positive account history.

APR Ranges at 620 FICO β€” Real Cost on $10,000 / 36 Months (2026)
Lender TypeLow APRHigh APRMonthly PaymentTotal Interest Paidvs. Prime (11%)
Credit Union (member, 620)10%18%$323–$361$1,616–$2,900+$500–$1,784
Upstart (620, good income)16%22%$352–$378$2,630–$3,600+$1,514–$2,484
LendingPoint (620)18%26%$361–$406$2,900–$4,260+$1,784–$3,144
LendingClub (620)16%26%$352–$406$2,630–$4,260+$1,514–$3,144
Avant (620)18%28%$361–$417$2,900–$4,640+$1,784–$3,524
What you'd pay at 670+ (Good tier)10%16%$323–$352$1,616–$2,630Baseline target

For a dedicated breakdown of what rates look like across the full 600 FICO range, see: Personal Loan Rate With 600 Credit Score: What to Expect (Article 32). And to put these rates in historical context, see: Personal Loan Rate History: 10-Year Federal Reserve Data (Article 30).

The 50-Point Improvement Value β€” 620 β†’ 670 FICO on a $10,000 / 36-Month Loan
$3,600
Total interest at 22% APR (borrowing now at 620)
$2,270
Total interest at 14% APR (after improving to 670)
$1,330
Savings from waiting 30–60 days to cross 670

What Strengthens a 620 Application

At 620 FICO, the approval decision is rarely automatic in either direction. The surrounding profile determines whether you receive an approval, a decline, or a high-rate counter-offer. These factors consistently separate approved applications from declined ones at this score tier.

Low DTI Is the Single Strongest Compensating Factor

A 620 FICO borrower with a 28% DTI is a fundamentally different risk profile from one with a 48% DTI. At the 620 tier, income-forward lenders (Upstart, LendingPoint) explicitly design their models to reward low DTI even when credit scores are in the fair range. Calculating and optimizing your DTI before applying is the highest-leverage action for this score tier. Use our DTI calculator in Article 41 to determine your current position and identify what debt eliminations would most improve your DTI before applying.

Income Strength and Documentation Completeness

At 620 FICO, lenders need two confident signals to offset the score risk β€” your ability to pay (income) and your history of paying (score). When the score is weak, income does extra work. A 620 borrower with $55,000/year well-documented income receives a materially better offer than one with $22,000/year. Document every income source completely using the guidance in our Income Requirements guide (Article 42). Every additional verified dollar of income reduces DTI and strengthens the application.

Clean Recent Payment History (Last 24 Months)

A 620 score held down by old derogatory marks (3–5 years ago) with a clean payment record for the past 24 months is a meaningfully different risk than a 620 score with recent late payments. Lenders can see the timeline. Emphasize clean recent history by checking that your most recent 24 months of payment behavior is pristine β€” no late payments, no new collections, no new derogatory marks. If you have any recent negatives, address them before applying.

Loan Amount Proportionate to Income

At 620 FICO, keep the requested loan amount below 40% of your annual gross income. On $40,000 annual income, requesting $14,000 or less is appropriate. Requesting $22,000 will be viewed as aggressive and may result in a counter-offer for a lower amount or an outright decline. Starting with a smaller, proportionate request and building your credit history through successful repayment positions you well for a larger loan at better terms in 12–18 months.

βœ… The 620 Borrower Who Gets the Best Rate Available

The 620 FICO borrower who receives the best terms in this tier has: (1) 620 FICO with no derogatory marks in the past 24 months; (2) DTI of 28%–32% including the new loan payment; (3) $45,000+/year in fully documented income; (4) stable employment for 18+ months; (5) requesting a loan amount under 35% of annual income; (6) membership at a credit union for 6+ months. This profile can access credit union rates of 10%–14% APR β€” significantly better than the fintech 620-tier average of 18%–26%.

Applying With 620: Step-by-Step Strategy

1
Check Whether Credit Union Membership Is Available to You
At 620 FICO, credit unions consistently offer the best combination of approval odds and interest rates. Before approaching any other lender, identify whether you're eligible for credit union membership β€” through your employer, geographic area, military service, or association membership. Almost every American qualifies for at least one credit union. Navy Federal (military/DoD), PenFed (open to anyone via $17 donation to Voices for America's Troops), Alliant (open to anyone via $10 donation to Foster Care to Success), and hundreds of local CUs are options. If you're not already a member, join now β€” the 3–6 months of membership history before applying meaningfully improves your standing. NCUA 2025 data confirms credit union personal loan approval rates are 18 percentage points higher than banks for borrowers in this score tier.
2
Calculate Post-Loan DTI and Reduce If Above 40%
Before contacting any lender, calculate your post-loan DTI using our DTI calculator (Article 41). If your post-loan DTI exceeds 40%, take 2–4 weeks to eliminate the smallest monthly debt obligations β€” paying off a credit card balance entirely removes its minimum payment from your DTI calculation immediately. At 620 FICO, dropping from 44% DTI to 32% DTI can be the difference between an approval at 18% APR and a decline at the same lender.
3
Run Soft-Pull Pre-Qualification at 3–4 Lenders
Use soft-pull pre-qualification at your credit union (if member), Upstart, LendingPoint, and LendingClub before committing to any formal application. Zero credit score impact. Compare the pre-qualified rate offers you receive β€” a meaningful difference between lenders at this tier is common. A credit union pre-qualified offer of 12% APR versus a fintech pre-qualified offer of 22% APR on the same $10,000 / 36-month loan saves $1,330 in total interest. This 10-minute comparison is worth doing. For the full reasoning on why soft pull matters at this tier, see: Does Getting Denied Hurt Your Credit? (Article 49).
4
Prepare Income Documentation Before Formal Application
At 620 FICO, lenders request more documentation than they do from prime borrowers. Prepare in advance: two most recent pay stubs, most recent W-2, two months of bank statements, and any additional income documentation (1099 forms, SS letter, rental lease). Having all documents ready prevents processing delays and back-and-forth requests that can reset your application timeline. For the complete income documentation guide by income type, see: Income Requirements for a Personal Loan (Article 42).
5
Apply to Your Top Pre-Qualified Lender β€” One Application Only
Submit a formal application to the lender whose pre-qualified offer is best. One application at a time. Multiple simultaneous applications create multiple hard inquiries that reduce your score and signal desperation to every lender in your history. If declined, wait at least 30–60 days before reapplying β€” using that time to address the specific denial reasons from the Adverse Action Notice. For the complete post-denial action plan with waiting periods by denial reason, see: How Long to Wait After a Personal Loan Rejection (Article 50).

From 620 to 670 in 30–60 Days: The Fastest Path

The 670 FICO threshold unlocks the "Good" credit tier β€” where online banks like Marcus and Discover become accessible, APRs drop to 10%–18%, and the balance of power in lender negotiations shifts noticeably in your favor. At 620, you are 50 points away. Here is the fastest evidence-based path to close that gap.

The 50-Point Improvement Roadmap

Step 1: Pay credit card balances below 10% utilization (fastest route to +20–40 points)
Credit utilization is recalculated every billing cycle. If you're currently at 40%–60% utilization across your cards, paying down to below 10% can produce a 20–40 point improvement within 30–45 days of the next statement close. On a $5,000 total credit limit, this means keeping balances below $500. This single action has moved many 620 borrowers to 650–660 FICO within a single billing cycle.

Step 2: Dispute any errors on your credit report (+10–30 points possible)
Pull all three bureau reports from AnnualCreditReport.com. The FTC estimates 1 in 5 reports contains a material error. At 620, a single error removal β€” an incorrect late payment notation, an account that should have been removed after 7 years, or a collection account that isn't yours β€” can produce 10–30 points of improvement within 30–45 days. Even if you don't find errors, checking is zero cost and zero credit impact.

Step 3: Become an authorized user on a strong account (+15–25 points in 1–2 billing cycles)
A family member with a long-standing, low-utilization card can add you as an authorized user. Their account history transfers to your file within 1–2 billing cycles. This is particularly effective for reaching 670 when your existing accounts are relatively young β€” adding a 5–10 year old account to your file improves your average account age, which counts for 15% of your FICO score.

Combining all three strategies simultaneously, most 620 FICO borrowers can reach 655–680 FICO within 45–60 days. For the complete 10-step improvement framework, see: How to Improve Your Personal Loan Approval Chances (Article 46).

βœ… The Honest Calculation: Apply Now at 620 or Wait 45 Days?

If you borrow $10,000 today at 22% APR (620 FICO), your total interest over 36 months is $3,600. If you wait 45 days and improve to 670 FICO, you may access 14% APR β€” total interest $2,270. That's a $1,330 saving for 45 days of disciplined action. Most borrowers β€” unless facing a genuine financial emergency β€” benefit from taking the 45-day improvement window. This is not advice anyone who earns commissions from loan referrals will give you. It is what the numbers say.

Alternatives If 620 Doesn't Qualify for What You Need

If soft-pull pre-qualification returns offers but at rates or amounts that don't meet your needs, these structural alternatives may bridge the gap while you continue improving your profile.

Co-Signer (700+ FICO)

A co-signer with strong credit can significantly lower your APR and increase your maximum loan amount at 620 FICO. The co-signer's 700+ score allows the lender to price the loan based on the stronger profile β€” potentially dropping your APR from 22% to 12% on the same $10,000 loan, saving $2,000+ in interest. See: Personal Loan With a Co-Signer: How It Works (Article 47) for the complete guide, and Co-Signer Rate Impact Guide (Article 37) for the quantified APR reduction.

Joint Personal Loan

If both you and another person need the funds and they have a better credit profile (670+), a joint personal loan (Article 48) combines both incomes and credit profiles. The stronger applicant's credit anchors the APR while the combined income supports a larger loan amount.

Secured Personal Loan

If you have savings, a secured personal loan backed by a savings account or CD gives you access to 4%–10% APR regardless of credit score β€” far below any unsecured option at 620 FICO. The tradeoff: your savings are locked as collateral during the loan term. This is the best rate available to any 620 FICO borrower who has savings and is willing to secure the loan.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is a 620 credit score good enough for a personal loan? +
620 FICO is sufficient to access personal loans at fintech lenders (Upstart, LendingPoint, Avant, LendingClub), credit unions, and CDFIs β€” which together represent a wide range of loan amounts and terms. It is not sufficient at traditional banks or most online banks (which require 660+). "Good enough" depends on what you need: if a 16%–26% APR serves your purpose and the loan amount available at 620 meets your need, then yes. If you need a larger loan or better rates, the 30–60 day improvement path to 670 is worth considering first.
How does 620 FICO compare to 580 for personal loan purposes? +
At 620 FICO compared to 580 FICO: (1) more lenders are accessible β€” LendingClub (600 minimum) becomes an option; (2) the typical APR drops from 20%–32% to 16%–26% β€” a meaningful savings on a $10,000 loan; (3) maximum loan amounts increase β€” from typically $5K–$12K to $8K–$18K; (4) credit unions are more comfortable approvers at 620 vs. 580. The improvement from 580 to 620 is the equivalent of gaining access to one more significant lender category and saving $500–$1,500 in total interest on a typical loan. See our 580 credit score guide (Article 43) for the 580 comparison baseline.
Can I get a $15,000 personal loan with a 620 credit score? +
A $15,000 personal loan at 620 FICO is possible but depends heavily on your income and DTI. As a guideline, most fintech lenders will approve amounts up to approximately 40%–50% of annual gross income for 620 FICO borrowers. On $40,000/year income, $15,000 (37.5% of annual income) is reasonable. On $28,000/year income, $15,000 (53.6% of annual income) may be declined or counter-offered at a lower amount. Use soft-pull pre-qualification to test your specific eligibility before applying. If $15,000 is not available at 620, consider whether improving to 650–670 within 30–60 days would increase the maximum approvable amount.
What is the fastest way to go from 620 to 670 FICO? +
The fastest path from 620 to 670 FICO combines three simultaneous actions: (1) Pay credit card balances to below 10% of each card's limit β€” this is the highest-impact action, potentially adding 20–40 points within 30–45 days of your next statement close; (2) Dispute any credit report errors β€” if found and removed, adds 10–30 points within 30–45 days; (3) Become an authorized user on a family member's long-standing, low-utilization account β€” adds 15–25 points within 1–2 billing cycles. Combining all three simultaneously, most 620 FICO borrowers can reach 655–680 FICO within 45–60 days. The complete 10-step guide is in: How to Improve Your Approval Chances (Article 46).
Will getting pre-qualified at multiple lenders hurt my 620 credit score? +
No β€” soft-pull pre-qualification does not affect your credit score at all. You can test your profile at as many lenders as you want using soft-pull pre-qualification tools, with zero impact on your 620 FICO score. Only formal applications (hard inquiries) affect your score. This is why soft-pull pre-qualification is especially important at the 620 tier β€” at 620, a single hard inquiry reducing your score by 5–10 points can push you to 610–615, potentially below some lenders' thresholds. Always pre-qualify with soft pulls first, identify your best match, and then submit one formal application (hard pull) to that lender only.
Do I need a co-signer with a 620 credit score? +
No β€” a co-signer is not required at 620 FICO. Multiple lenders approve 620 FICO borrowers without a co-signer. However, a co-signer is a powerful optional tool if you want to access lower rates or larger loan amounts than 620 FICO produces independently. A co-signer with 700+ FICO can reduce your APR by 6–12 percentage points β€” from a typical 22% to potentially 12%–14% β€” saving $1,000–$2,000+ in interest on a $10,000 loan. Whether the relationship cost and risk of involving a co-signer is worth that saving depends on your specific situation. For the complete analysis, see: Personal Loan With a Co-Signer (Article 47).

Related Articles in This Eligibility & Rates Series

References & Data Sources
  • [1] Experian β€” "State of Credit 2025." Average US FICO score ~718; score distribution data; Fair credit tier (580–669) definition and borrower percentage. experian.com
  • [2] Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) β€” "Consumer Credit Trends: Personal Loans" (2025). Approval rates by credit score tier; fair-credit borrower data; denial rate analysis. consumerfinance.gov
  • [3] Federal Reserve G.19 Consumer Credit Release (FRED: TERMCBPER24NS) β€” 24-month personal loan average APR: 11.65% (Nov 2025). Prime borrower benchmark. Referenced in Article 30: Rate History. fred.stlouisfed.org
  • [4] National Credit Union Administration (NCUA) β€” Q4 2025 Credit Union Data Summary. 18 percentage point higher approval rates at credit unions vs. banks for fair-credit borrowers (580–669 FICO). ncua.gov
  • [5] myFICO / FICO β€” "FICO Score Ranges" and tier definitions. Fair credit: 580–669; Good: 670–739. Credit utilization recalculation timeline; authorized user impact on credit files. myfico.com
  • [6] Federal Trade Commission (FTC) β€” "Facing Facts: What We Know About Credit Reporting" (2023). 1 in 5 credit reports contains a material error; dispute outcomes by error type. ftc.gov
  • [7] LendingTree β€” "Personal Loan Statistics 2026." Approval rate and APR data by credit score tier; lender-specific minimum requirements; borrower income distribution. lendingtree.com
  • [8] NerdWallet β€” "Best Personal Loans for Fair Credit 2026." Lender minimum score requirements; APR ranges for 600–669 FICO borrowers; credit union vs. bank approval comparison. nerdwallet.com