βœ… Article 47 Β· Eligibility & Qualification Β· Info

Personal Loan With a Co-Signer: How It Works and Who Qualifies

A co-signer can be the single most powerful tool available to a borrower with fair credit, a thin file, or a high debt-to-income ratio. When the right co-signer is involved, lenders can price the loan based on a stronger credit profile β€” unlocking approvals and APRs that would otherwise be out of reach. This research-based guide explains exactly how co-signed personal loans work, what qualifications both parties need, the risks each person takes, and when a co-signer is β€” and isn't β€” the right strategy.

πŸ“… Updated: April 2026
✍️ Author: Shahid Hassan Naik, Global Loan Advisor
βœ… Category: Eligibility & Qualification
⏱️ Read time: ~8 min
5–8%
Typical APR Reduction With Strong Co-Signer
700+
Recommended Co-Signer Credit Score
100%
Of Payments Affect Both Credit Reports
Equal
Legal Liability for Both Parties
⚑ Quick Answer

What does a co-signer do on a personal loan? A co-signer agrees to be equally and fully responsible for repaying the loan if the primary borrower cannot. The lender underwrites the loan using the stronger of the two credit profiles β€” typically the co-signer's. This can reduce the borrower's APR by 5–8 percentage points and unlock approvals that wouldn't be possible otherwise. The key risk: any missed payment appears on both people's credit reports. For alternative strategies that don't require another person, see: Personal Loan With No Credit History (Article 45) or How to Improve Your Approval Chances (Article 46).

What Is a Co-Signer on a Personal Loan?

A co-signer is a person who signs a loan agreement alongside the primary borrower, taking on equal legal responsibility for the debt. Unlike a reference or a guarantor in some international contexts, a co-signer in the U.S. lending system is a co-obligor β€” meaning the lender can pursue them for the full loan balance if the primary borrower fails to pay, without first exhausting collection efforts against the borrower.

The purpose of a co-signer is straightforward: they provide the lender with a second, typically stronger, creditworthy party to evaluate. When your own credit score, income, or debt-to-income ratio falls below a lender's threshold, the co-signer's financial profile can bridge the gap β€” allowing the lender to approve and price the loan based on the combined or stronger profile.

Co-signed personal loans are most commonly used by:

  • Young adults (18–24) who have no credit history but need access to a personal loan
  • Borrowers with fair credit (580–669) who want to qualify for a lower APR than their score alone would produce
  • Borrowers with high DTI who struggle to meet lender income-to-debt thresholds on their own
  • Recent immigrants who lack a U.S. credit file regardless of their financial strength abroad
  • Borrowers rebuilding after bankruptcy or a period of financial difficulty
πŸ’‘ Co-Signing Is Not Guaranteeing

In many countries, a "guarantor" is only called upon after the primary borrower has defaulted and been pursued. In the U.S., a co-signer is typically treated as equally and immediately liable β€” meaning the lender can demand payment from the co-signer without first going after the borrower. This distinction is critical and often misunderstood by people asked to co-sign.

Co-Signer vs. Co-Borrower: The Critical Difference

These two terms are frequently confused β€” sometimes even by lenders in their marketing. The distinction has significant practical consequences for both parties.

Primary Borrower
The Person Who Receives and Uses the Funds
  • Receives the loan proceeds directly
  • Makes all monthly payments
  • Has primary responsibility for repayment
  • Loan appears on their credit report
  • Can use the funds for their stated purpose
  • May have weaker credit profile
Co-Signer
The Person Whose Credit Backs the Loan
  • Does not receive the loan proceeds
  • Does not make payments (unless borrower defaults)
  • Has equal legal responsibility for the full balance
  • Loan appears on their credit report too
  • Cannot use the funds or direct their use
  • Typically has a stronger credit profile
Co-Signer vs. Co-Borrower β€” Key Differences
FeatureCo-SignerCo-Borrower (Joint Loan)
Receives loan fundsNoYes β€” shared access
Makes paymentsOnly if primary defaultsBoth parties share obligation
Credit report impactAppears on both reportsAppears on both reports
Primary motivationHelping borrower qualifyShared financial need or purchase
Can be released from loanYes β€” with co-signer release or refinanceOnly via refinance or payoff
Income counted toward DTIMay or may not be countedYes β€” both incomes considered
Common relationshipParent, family memberSpouse, domestic partner

For situations where two people both need access to the loan funds β€” such as a couple making a joint purchase β€” a joint personal loan (Article 48) is often more appropriate than a co-signed loan. The key distinction: both parties in a joint loan receive and can use the funds; in a co-signed loan, only the primary borrower does.

How a Co-Signed Personal Loan Works β€” Step by Step

The co-signing process follows a specific sequence. Understanding each step helps both the borrower and the co-signer set accurate expectations and prepare properly.

1
Borrower Identifies a Willing Co-Signer
The borrower identifies a person β€” typically a parent, spouse, sibling, or close friend β€” who has strong credit (700+ FICO), stable income, and manageable existing debt. Crucially, the co-signer must fully understand what they are agreeing to. This conversation should cover: the loan amount, monthly payment, loan term, and the co-signer's full legal exposure if the borrower misses payments. Never rush this conversation. The co-signer's credit score is the primary factor that determines whether the strategy works.
2
Both Parties Apply Together
The lender's application collects information from both the primary borrower and the co-signer: name, address, Social Security number, income, employment, and existing debts. Most lenders pull a hard credit inquiry on both parties simultaneously. This means both credit reports are affected by the application. To minimize the impact of inquiries, use soft-pull pre-qualification tools first to test whether the combined profile is likely to be approved before triggering hard inquiries on either party.
3
Lender Underwrites Using the Stronger Profile
Different lenders handle co-signer profiles differently. Some use the primary borrower's score for the credit decision but consider the co-signer's income to improve DTI. Others use the lower of the two credit scores (a conservative approach). The most favorable lenders use the higher of the two scores to price the APR β€” this is the arrangement you're seeking. Always ask a lender explicitly how they use co-signer profiles before applying. Current 2026 personal loan rate benchmarks (Article 30) give you the context to evaluate any rate offer you receive.
4
Both Parties Sign the Loan Agreement
Upon approval, both the primary borrower and the co-signer must sign the loan agreement. The co-signer should read the full agreement carefully β€” not just the summary page. Key clauses to identify: the co-signer's exact liability, whether there is a co-signer release provision (and its terms), the prepayment penalty policy, and what constitutes default. The co-signer has no right to the loan funds but has full liability for the debt. This is a legally binding commitment β€” both parties should understand every clause before signing.
5
Funds Are Disbursed to the Primary Borrower Only
After signing, the lender disburses the funds to the primary borrower's bank account only. The co-signer receives no funds. Most online lenders fund within 1–3 business days after document signing. Credit unions may take 3–5 business days. From this point forward, the primary borrower makes all monthly payments β€” but the co-signer receives notification of missed payments and is equally liable for them. Both parties should ideally set up payment notifications to catch any issues immediately.
6
Loan Appears on Both Credit Reports Throughout the Term
From the moment the loan is reported to the credit bureaus (typically within the first billing cycle), the account appears on both the borrower's and co-signer's credit reports. Every on-time payment builds credit history for both parties. Every late or missed payment damages both credit reports. The co-signer's credit score can fluctuate based on the payment behavior of someone else β€” making this a significant ongoing commitment. For the borrower, this is also their opportunity to start building the credit history that will eventually allow them to borrow independently. See our credit improvement guide (Article 46) for how to maximize the credit-building benefit of this loan.

Who Should Be Your Co-Signer? Qualification Requirements

Choosing the right co-signer is as important as choosing the right lender. The co-signer's profile directly determines whether the strategy improves your approval odds and APR β€” and the wrong choice can harm both parties.

Requirement 01
Credit Score β€” The Primary Factor
Minimum: 670 FICO Β· Ideal: 720+ FICO
The co-signer's credit score must be meaningfully higher than the borrower's to provide value. A co-signer with a 680 score helping a 620-score borrower provides modest benefit. A co-signer with a 750+ score helping the same borrower unlocks dramatically better rates. For the APR impact at specific score levels, see our 700 score APR guide and 750+ score APR guide β€” those are the rates your co-signer can help you access. Lenders typically require a minimum 670 FICO for any co-signer, though requirements vary.
Requirement 02
Income & Employment Stability
Stable verifiable income Β· Ideally 2+ years same employer
The co-signer must have documentable income sufficient to cover the monthly loan payment on top of their existing obligations β€” because lenders calculate whether the co-signer could repay the loan entirely on their own if needed. Two or more years with the same employer is ideal. Self-employed co-signers face higher documentation requirements. The co-signer's income also contributes to the combined debt-to-income ratio calculation that lenders evaluate. Some lenders count co-signer income toward your DTI; others do not β€” ask explicitly.
Requirement 03
Clean Recent Credit History
No derogatory marks in last 24 months
Even a co-signer with a high credit score can be disqualified if they have recent late payments, collections, or a bankruptcy within the past 2–4 years. Lenders look at the co-signer's payment history and recent account behavior β€” not just the score number. A co-signer with a 720 FICO but a missed payment from 18 months ago may provide less value than expected. The co-signer should pull their own credit report at AnnualCreditReport.com before the application to ensure there are no surprises.
Requirement 04
Low Existing Debt Load
DTI below 40% before adding co-signed loan
The co-signed loan will appear on the co-signer's credit report and be counted in their DTI if they apply for any other credit while the loan is active. A co-signer with a mortgage, car loan, and existing credit card balances may have their own borrowing capacity limited by co-signing. Both parties should understand this before proceeding. If the co-signer plans to apply for a mortgage or major loan in the next 12–24 months, they should carefully weigh whether co-signing is wise at this time.
Requirement 05
Trust, Communication & Relationship Stability
Non-negotiable: full transparency about loan terms
The most underrated co-signer qualification is the quality of the relationship. Financial disagreements are one of the leading causes of family and relationship breakdowns. A co-signer must trust that the borrower will make every payment on time. The borrower must be comfortable committing fully β€” not just hoping for the best. If there is any uncertainty about the borrower's ability to repay reliably, the co-signer should decline. The relationship is worth more than any loan. Before asking anyone, review whether improving your profile independently is possible first β€” see Article 46: How to Improve Your Approval Chances.
Requirement 06
U.S. Residency & Legal Eligibility
Must be a U.S. resident; most lenders require SSN
Most U.S. personal loan lenders require the co-signer to be a U.S. citizen or permanent resident with a valid Social Security number. Some lenders accept Individual Taxpayer Identification Numbers (ITINs) for co-signers, but this is lender-specific. Non-resident co-signers β€” regardless of their international credit standing β€” cannot be used for most U.S. personal loans. This is a particular consideration for recent immigrants who may have family abroad with excellent financial profiles that are nonetheless ineligible to co-sign.

Rate Impact: How Much Does a Co-Signer Actually Save You?

The financial value of a co-signer is most clearly seen in the APR reduction it produces. Here is a data-driven breakdown of what a strong co-signer can realistically deliver at different borrower credit tiers β€” based on CFPB data and lender rate tier disclosures.

APR Impact of Adding a 730+ FICO Co-Signer β€” 2026 (Based on $10,000 / 36-Month Loan)
Borrower Score APR Without Co-Signer APR With 730+ Co-Signer Rate Reduction Interest Saved (Total)
580 (Poor) 28%–35% 12%–17% ~13–18 pp ~$2,100–$3,200
620 (Fair-Low) 22%–29% 11%–16% ~10–15 pp ~$1,700–$2,600
650 (Fair) 18%–25% 10%–15% ~7–12 pp ~$1,200–$2,100
670 (Good-Low) 14%–20% 9%–14% ~4–8 pp ~$700–$1,400
No Credit History 20%–36% 10%–18% ~8–18 pp ~$1,400–$3,200

To understand these savings in the context of current market rates, the Federal Reserve G.19 average for a 24-month personal loan stood at 11.65% APR in November 2025. A co-signer helping a poor-credit borrower move from 32% to 14% APR is a genuinely transformative financial difference. For the full 10-year rate context, see our Personal Loan Rate History guide (Article 30). For a breakdown of rates specifically by credit score, see rates at 600 FICO (Article 32), rates at 700 FICO (Article 33), and co-signer APR impact analysis (Article 37).

Real Savings: $10,000 Loan Β· 36 Months Β· Poor-Credit Borrower (580 FICO)
$2,480
Total interest at 30% APR (no co-signer)
$726
Total interest at 13% APR (with co-signer)
$1,754
Total interest saved by having a co-signer
βœ… The Two-Stage Strategy: Co-Signer Now, Refinance Later

The optimal use of a co-signer is as a bridge, not a permanent arrangement. Use the co-signed loan to access better rates now while simultaneously building your credit history. After 12–18 months of on-time payments, your own credit score should improve enough to qualify independently. At that point, refinance the remaining balance in your own name β€” removing the co-signer from the obligation entirely. This protects the relationship and gives the co-signer their credit freedom back.

Pros and Cons for Both the Borrower and the Co-Signer

A co-signed loan creates two distinct sets of outcomes β€” one for the borrower, one for the co-signer. Both parties must weigh their own pros and cons independently before agreeing to proceed.

For the Primary Borrower

βœ… Pros for the Borrower
  • Access to approvals that would otherwise be denied based on credit score alone
  • Significantly lower APR β€” potentially saving thousands in total interest
  • Larger loan amounts available than you could access independently
  • Longer repayment terms at better rates, reducing monthly payment pressure
  • Every on-time payment builds your own credit history β€” the loan is a credit-building tool
  • Can be refinanced in your own name once your credit improves, releasing the co-signer
⚠️ Cons and Risks for the Borrower
  • Requires finding a willing co-signer β€” not always possible and puts pressure on relationships
  • Any missed payment harms the co-signer's credit β€” creating real relationship and moral stakes
  • The co-signer's debt load increases, which can affect their ability to borrow independently
  • Not all lenders offer co-signed personal loans β€” limits your lender choices
  • The hard inquiry affects both credit reports, not just yours
  • If the relationship deteriorates during the loan term, the shared liability becomes complicated

For the Co-Signer

βœ… Pros for the Co-Signer
  • Helps a family member or trusted person access credit they couldn't get alone
  • If the borrower makes all payments on time, the co-signer's credit is unaffected (or slightly improved)
  • Can be released from the obligation once borrower establishes their own creditworthiness
  • No financial cost if borrower pays on time β€” the co-signer incurs no out-of-pocket expense in the ideal scenario
⚠️ Cons and Risks for the Co-Signer
  • Full legal liability β€” lender can pursue co-signer for the entire balance without going after borrower first
  • Missed or late payments appear on the co-signer's credit report and can drop their score by 60–110 points
  • The loan appears in the co-signer's DTI, potentially affecting their own future borrowing (mortgage, car loan)
  • Hard inquiry on co-signer's credit report temporarily reduces their score
  • Relationship may be strained if borrower struggles financially and co-signer must be contacted by the lender
  • In a worst-case default, the co-signer may face collections, judgments, and wage garnishment
🚨 The Co-Signer's Worst-Case Scenario

If the primary borrower defaults, stops communicating, and cannot be reached, the lender will contact the co-signer directly β€” demanding payment of the remaining balance, which may include late fees, penalty interest, and collection costs. The co-signer's credit report will show the default. The lender may sue the co-signer and obtain a judgment, potentially leading to wage garnishment or bank account levies. This is not a theoretical risk β€” it happens regularly. The co-signer should only agree if they have complete trust in the borrower AND could personally absorb the loan payments if necessary.

When a Co-Signer Is the Right Strategy β€” and When It Isn't

A co-signer is a powerful tool, but it is not always the right tool. Use this framework to determine whether a co-signer is appropriate for your specific situation.

βœ… When a Co-Signer Makes Sense

  • You have no credit history and need a personal loan now rather than waiting 6–12 months to build a credit file. A co-signer bridges this gap immediately. For context on alternative paths, see: Personal Loan With No Credit History (Article 45).
  • You have a credit score between 580–650 and the co-signer's 720+ score would reduce your APR by 10+ percentage points β€” saving you over $1,000 in interest on the loan.
  • Your DTI is borderline (40%–48%) and the co-signer's income, counted by the lender, brings the combined DTI below the lender's threshold.
  • You need the loan urgently β€” for a medical expense, emergency home repair, or time-sensitive opportunity β€” and don't have the 60–90 days needed to organically improve your credit score. See: How to Improve Your Approval Chances (Article 46) for whether organic improvement is feasible in your timeframe.
  • You have a trusted family member (parent, spouse) who understands and genuinely accepts the full risk β€” not someone who feels pressured or doesn't fully understand the co-signer liability.

❌ When a Co-Signer Is NOT the Right Strategy

  • The co-signer doesn't fully understand their liability. A co-signer who thinks they're "just helping with the paperwork" is a disaster waiting to happen β€” for both parties and the relationship.
  • You're not confident you can make every single payment on time. If there's genuine uncertainty about your repayment ability, you should fix your financial situation before borrowing, not shift the risk to someone who trusts you.
  • The co-signer is planning to apply for a major loan soon. A co-signed loan in their DTI could affect their mortgage or auto loan approval. Have this conversation explicitly before proceeding.
  • You can qualify independently, even at a higher rate. If you can qualify at 580 FICO or 620 FICO and the rate is acceptable, consider preserving the relationship's financial independence. The 30–90 day credit improvement process may produce a better outcome than involving a third party.
  • You cannot or will not commit to full transparency. The co-signer must have visibility into the loan status. Hiding payment issues from a co-signer is a breach of the trust that the arrangement requires.

How to Protect Your Co-Signer (and Your Relationship)

If you proceed with a co-signed loan, these practices are not optional β€” they are the minimum standards of respect for someone who has put their financial reputation on the line for you.

1
Set Up Autopay Immediately Upon Funding
Set up automatic payments from your bank account on the day you receive the funds. Many lenders offer a 0.25%–0.50% autopay discount (Article 35) β€” an added financial benefit on top of the protection it provides. Autopay eliminates the risk of missing a payment due to oversight, travel, or forgetfulness. The co-signer should verify that autopay is active β€” this is a reasonable request they are entitled to make.
2
Give the Co-Signer Read-Only Account Access
If the lender allows it, add the co-signer as an authorized viewer of the loan account β€” so they can see payment status, remaining balance, and account health independently. This is not about distrust; it's about giving the co-signer the visibility they're entitled to as a legally liable party. If the lender doesn't offer this, commit to sending the co-signer a monthly payment confirmation screenshot or statement.
3
Communicate Immediately If Any Payment Is at Risk
If a payment is ever at risk β€” due to job loss, unexpected expense, or financial difficulty β€” contact the co-signer immediately, before the payment date. Give them the opportunity to either help cover the payment or work with you on a plan. Never let the lender be the one to inform the co-signer of a missed payment. That is the moment most co-signer relationships break down permanently. Also contact the lender proactively β€” most regulated lenders have hardship programs that can defer a payment or extend the term.
4
Work Toward Removing the Co-Signer as Fast as Possible
From day one of the loan, your goal should be to make the co-signer relationship temporary. Use the loan as a credit-building tool β€” every on-time payment improves your score. After 12–18 months, your FICO score should have improved sufficiently to refinance in your own name. A lender refinance removes the co-signer from the obligation entirely. This is the best outcome for everyone: the borrower accesses better initial terms, builds credit, and ultimately takes full ownership of the debt.

How to Remove a Co-Signer After the Loan Starts

Removing a co-signer from an existing personal loan is possible β€” but it requires one of two approaches. Understanding both options helps you plan from the outset.

Option 1: Co-Signer Release (Lender-Specific)

Some personal loan lenders offer a formal co-signer release provision β€” a process by which the primary borrower can apply to have the co-signer removed from the loan after meeting certain conditions. Typical conditions include: a minimum number of consecutive on-time payments (usually 12–24), the borrower's credit score reaching a specified threshold (typically 650–700), and a fresh income and credit review showing the borrower can now support the loan independently.

Not all lenders offer co-signer release. This is a critical question to ask before signing any co-signed loan agreement. If co-signer release is important to you, choose a lender that explicitly offers it and understand the exact qualifying conditions. Read the loan agreement carefully β€” some lenders describe the process in the fine print.

Option 2: Refinance the Loan in Your Own Name

The more universally available option is to refinance β€” pay off the co-signed loan with a new loan taken entirely in your own name. After 12–18 months of on-time payments on the co-signed loan, your credit score should have improved meaningfully. Use our credit improvement guide (Article 46) alongside this loan period to maximize your score gains. When your score reaches 650–700+, pre-qualify for a new personal loan in your own name. If approved at an acceptable rate, use those funds to pay off the co-signed loan β€” releasing the co-signer from all liability.

⚠️ You Cannot Remove a Co-Signer Unilaterally

Simply asking the lender to "remove the co-signer" without a formal co-signer release process or refinance is not possible. Both parties signed the loan agreement, and both are bound by it until the loan is paid off or refinanced. The co-signer cannot remove themselves from the loan either β€” their only exit is through a co-signer release (if offered) or the borrower refinancing in their own name. This is another reason the two-stage strategy β€” co-sign now, refinance after credit improves β€” is so important to plan from the beginning.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does a co-signer appear on my credit report, or only the borrower's? +
The loan appears on both credit reports β€” the primary borrower's and the co-signer's. Every payment history event (on-time or late), the outstanding balance, and the loan type are reflected on both reports. This is why a co-signer's credit score can be affected by the borrower's payment behavior throughout the entire loan term. On the positive side, consistent on-time payments build credit history for both parties simultaneously. On the negative side, a single missed payment damages both credit reports equally.
Can a co-signer be removed from a personal loan mid-term? +
Yes β€” but only through one of two formal processes: (1) a co-signer release, if the lender specifically offers this program and the borrower meets the qualifying conditions (typically 12–24 on-time payments and a credit score improvement to the lender's threshold); or (2) a refinance, where the borrower takes out a new loan in their own name and uses it to pay off the co-signed loan. You cannot simply request the lender to remove the co-signer informally β€” both methods require a formal application process and credit review of the primary borrower standing alone.
Does adding a co-signer guarantee loan approval? +
No β€” a co-signer improves the strength of the application significantly, but it does not guarantee approval. The lender still evaluates both profiles holistically. If the primary borrower's debt-to-income ratio is extremely high, if the loan purpose is flagged as high-risk, or if the borrower has recent major derogatory marks (such as a bankruptcy within the past 1–2 years), the application may still be declined even with a strong co-signer. Additionally, if the co-signer's own credit profile has weaknesses β€” recent late payments, high existing debt β€” this can offset the benefit they provide. Use soft-pull pre-qualification to test the combined profile before committing to hard inquiries on both parties.
What happens to the co-signer if the borrower declares bankruptcy? +
This is one of the most serious risks of co-signing. When a primary borrower files for bankruptcy and the personal loan debt is discharged, the co-signer is not protected by the borrower's bankruptcy. The lender can β€” and typically will β€” pursue the co-signer for the full remaining balance, since the co-signer did not file bankruptcy themselves. The co-signer may need to pay off the debt entirely or negotiate a settlement. Their credit report will reflect the loan's delinquency and eventual charge-off if they cannot pay. This scenario, while uncommon, is the most catastrophic outcome for a co-signer and underscores why trust in the borrower's financial stability is so critical before agreeing to co-sign.
Will co-signing a loan hurt the co-signer's ability to get their own mortgage? +
Potentially, yes. The co-signed loan appears on the co-signer's credit report and counts in their debt-to-income ratio when they apply for their own mortgage, car loan, or any other credit. If the co-signer was already close to the typical 36%–43% DTI threshold that mortgage lenders prefer, the addition of a co-signed personal loan payment to their obligations could push them over it β€” reducing the mortgage amount they qualify for or resulting in a denial. Any co-signer who plans to apply for a major loan in the next 12–24 months should carefully model this impact before agreeing. It is a legitimate reason to decline co-signing, and the borrower should respect that decision.
Is a co-signer the same as a guarantor? +
Not exactly β€” though the terms are sometimes used interchangeably. In U.S. personal lending, a co-signer is typically a co-obligor: equally and immediately liable from the moment the loan is originated. A guarantor in some international lending contexts is a secondary party who is only called upon after the primary borrower has defaulted and been exhausted through collections. In practice, most U.S. lenders treat co-signers as fully equal obligors β€” not secondary guarantors. Always read the exact language in the loan agreement to confirm the co-signer's legal position, regardless of what the lender's marketing calls them.

Related Articles in This Eligibility & Rates Series

References & Data Sources
  • [1] Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) β€” "What Is a Co-Signer?" and "Consumer Credit Trends: Personal Loans" (2025). Co-signer legal liability framework; personal loan application denial data. consumerfinance.gov
  • [2] myFICO / FICO β€” Credit Score Factor Weights; impact of new accounts and hard inquiries on co-signer credit profiles. Payment history 35% of FICO score; credit mix 10%. myfico.com
  • [3] Federal Reserve G.19 Consumer Credit Release (FRED: TERMCBPER24NS) β€” 24-month personal loan average APR: 11.65% (Nov 2025). Referenced alongside Article 30: Personal Loan Rate History. fred.stlouisfed.org
  • [4] National Credit Union Administration (NCUA) β€” Q4 2025 Credit Union Data Summary. Co-signed loan approval rates and DTI treatment methodology at credit unions. ncua.gov
  • [5] Experian β€” "How Does Co-Signing Affect Your Credit?" (2025). Credit report impact of co-signed accounts; inquiry effects on both parties; co-signer release mechanisms. experian.com
  • [6] NerdWallet β€” "Personal Loans With a Co-Signer: How to Find the Best Options" (2026). Lender-specific co-signer policies; release provision availability across major lenders. nerdwallet.com
  • [7] CFPB β€” "What Is a Debt-to-Income Ratio?" (2024). DTI calculation standards; how co-signed loan balances affect co-signer's own DTI. consumerfinance.gov
  • [8] LendingTree β€” "Personal Loan Statistics 2026." Co-signer usage rates; average APR reduction data by credit score tier; $276B total US personal loan balances Q4 2025. lendingtree.com