Personal Loan for Debt Consolidation: Complete 2026 Guide
Debt consolidation with a personal loan means taking one new loan to pay off multiple existing debts β credit cards, medical bills, payday loans β then repaying everything through a single fixed monthly payment. Done right, it lowers your interest rate, simplifies your finances, and gives you a definite payoff date. Done wrong β when you consolidate into a higher rate, a longer term, or without changing the habits that created the debt β it makes your situation worse. This guide shows you the exact calculation to determine whether consolidation genuinely saves you money before you apply for a single dollar.
A debt consolidation personal loan makes financial sense when your new APR is lower than your current weighted average rate across all debts being consolidated. Calculate your current weighted average rate, then compare it to your pre-qualified personal loan APR on the same payoff timeline. If the personal loan APR is lower, you save money. If it's higher β or if a longer term reduces your rate but increases total interest β consolidation costs more than your current situation. The break-even calculation in Section 2 gives you the exact number before you commit. For the full pre-qualification process: How to Pre-Qualify for a Personal Loan Without Hurting Credit (Article 56).
How Debt Consolidation Actually Works
Debt consolidation is not a complicated concept, but the marketing around it sometimes makes it sound like a sophisticated financial manoeuvre. In reality, it is simple: you borrow one new amount, use it to pay off several existing debts, and then make one monthly payment on the new loan instead of many payments on the old ones.
The appeal is real on three dimensions. First, a lower interest rate means less total money leaves your pocket over the repayment period. Second, a fixed payoff date replaces the open-ended nature of revolving credit card balances, where minimum payments can trap you in debt for a decade. Third, one payment instead of five reduces the cognitive load and the risk of a missed payment damaging your credit.
The risk is also real. Consolidation does not reduce the debt β it restructures it. If the habits that created multiple high-balance credit cards don't change, those cards will be run back up after consolidation, leaving you with both the personal loan and new credit card balances. This is the debt consolidation trap β and it is the most common reason consolidation makes people's situations worse, not better.
The Federal Reserve's Q1 2026 data shows the average credit card interest rate at 21.47% APR, while the average personal loan APR sits at 11.65% β a 9.82 percentage-point gap. On $15,000 of debt over 36 months, that gap represents approximately $1,590 in interest savings. That's the potential value of debt consolidation when it works. When it doesn't work β when the personal loan rate exceeds the weighted average rate on existing debts, or when terms are extended to lower the payment β that savings evaporates or reverses.
The Break-Even Calculation β Does It Save You Money?
Before applying for a single debt consolidation loan, run this calculation. It takes 10 minutes and tells you definitively whether consolidation saves or costs you money.
When Consolidation Is the Right Move (and When It Isn't)
- Your personal loan APR is meaningfully lower than your weighted average debt rate β at least 3β5% lower to justify the effort
- You are consolidating high-rate revolving debt (credit cards at 20%+) β not zero-interest or low-rate debts
- You choose a loan term that is equal to or shorter than your current payoff timeline on existing debts
- You will stop using the credit cards after paying them off β or at least not run them back up
- Your credit score is strong enough to qualify for a rate that makes the math work (typically 680+ FICO for competitive consolidation rates)
- Your personal loan APR is higher than your current weighted average β you pay more, not less
- You extend the term to 60 months to lower the monthly payment, which increases total interest even at the same rate
- You include 0% interest or low-rate debts in the consolidation β putting them in a 12% personal loan is never beneficial
- You run the credit cards back up after paying them off β you now have the personal loan plus new card balances
- You have a credit score below 640 where consolidation loan rates (25%+) may exceed card rates
| Personal Loan APR | Monthly Payment | Total Interest | Interest Saved vs. Cards | Verdict |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 6.99% (LightStream 720+) | $463 | $1,668 | $3,898 saved | Excellent β do it |
| 9.99% (CU avg / Marcus) | $484 | $2,424 | $3,142 saved | Strong β do it |
| 12.99% (good credit) | $505 | $3,180 | $2,386 saved | Solid β do it |
| 15.99% (fair credit) | $527 | $3,972 | $1,594 saved | Worth it β check term |
| 19.99% (marginal) | $556 | $5,016 | $550 saved | Marginal β is it worth it? |
| 21.47% (same as cards) | $566 | $5,376 | Break-even | No benefit β don't consolidate |
| 24.99% (subprime) | $591 | $6,276 | β$710 worse | Costs more β avoid |
Lengthening your loan term reduces your monthly payment but increases total interest β even at the same APR. A $15,000 consolidation loan at 12.99% APR costs $3,180 in interest over 36 months. The same loan over 60 months costs $5,148 in interest β $1,968 more β despite the same rate. Lenders often present longer terms to make the monthly payment more appealing. Always run the total interest calculation at the term you're considering before deciding.
Best Lenders for Debt Consolidation in 2026
| Lender | APR Range | Min. FICO | Direct Payoff? | Why It Stands Out for Consolidation |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| LightStream | 6.99%β25.99% | 720+ | No (funds to you) | Lowest rate floor in market. Zero fees. Rate Beat Program. Best for 720+ borrowers with strong profiles |
| Discover | 7.99%β24.99% | 720+ | β Yes β direct payoff | Pays creditors directly β eliminates the risk of spending the funds before paying off cards. Zero origination fee |
| LendingClub | 9.57%β35.99% | 600+ | β Yes β direct payoff | Direct creditor payoff available. Accessible at 600+ FICO. Best for borrowers who want funds sent directly to card issuers |
| Achieve | 8.99%β35.99% | 620+ | β Yes β direct payoff | Explicit debt consolidation focus. Direct payoff available. Rate discount for direct payoff at application |
| Marcus | 9.99%β28.99% | 660+ | No (funds to you) | Zero fees. No prepayment penalty. On-time payment reward (skip one payment after 12 consecutive on-time payments) |
| Federal Credit Union | 7%β18% (cap) | 580+ (flexible) | Varies by CU | 18% NCUA APR cap is critical protection. Human underwriting. Best for below-720 borrowers where bank/online rates are uncompetitive |
| Avant | 9.95%β35.99% | 580+ | No (funds to you) | Most accessible for 580β640 FICO. Check the actual APR offer carefully β high end of range may not improve your situation |
Some lenders (Discover, LendingClub, Achieve) pay your creditors directly rather than depositing funds in your bank account. For most consolidation borrowers, direct payoff is the better option. It eliminates the temptation to spend the lump sum on something else, it closes or reduces card balances immediately (positive for your credit utilisation), and it starts the consolidation process the moment funds are disbursed. If you trust yourself completely to immediately pay off the cards with the deposited funds, the distinction doesn't matter. But if there's any doubt, choose a lender with direct payoff capability.
Step-by-Step: How to Consolidate Your Debt
The Credit Score Impact of Debt Consolidation
Debt consolidation affects your credit score in several ways β some temporarily negative, some durably positive. Understanding both sides helps you time the consolidation correctly and set accurate expectations.
Small Drop
Recovery
Net Positive
The credit utilisation effect is the most immediate and most powerful. Credit card utilisation accounts for a significant portion of your FICO score. If you have $15,000 of credit card debt across $20,000 of total credit card limits, your utilisation is 75% β severely damaging your score. After consolidating into a personal loan and paying off those cards, your utilisation drops to near 0% β potentially adding 30β60 points within one billing cycle. For the complete credit score impact analysis: How Personal Loans Affect Your Credit Score: Full Guide (Article 124).
Most financial advisers say no β and the reason is utilisation. Closing a paid-off credit card reduces your total available credit, which increases utilisation on remaining cards and can hurt your score. Keep the cards open with zero balances (or a tiny recurring charge paid monthly) to maximise available credit. The exception: if having an open card increases your spending temptation so much that you'll run it back up, the psychological benefit of closing it may outweigh the small score cost.
Frequently Asked Questions
- [1] Federal Reserve β G.19 Consumer Credit Statistical Release, Q1 2026. National avg personal loan APR 11.65%; national avg credit card APR 21.47%. federalreserve.gov
- [2] NCUA β Q4 2025 Credit Union Data Summary. Average federal CU personal loan rate ~9.8%; 18% APR cap; direct payoff programme availability. ncua.gov
- [3] Consumer Financial Protection Bureau β "What Is Debt Consolidation?" Consumer definition; debt consolidation loan mechanics; comparison with debt settlement. consumerfinance.gov
- [4] myFICO / FICO β "Credit Utilisation and Your FICO Score." Credit utilisation impact on score; effect of paying card balances; authorised user considerations. myfico.com
- [5] LightStream β Personal Loan Rates, April 2026. 6.99% APR floor; zero origination fee; Rate Beat Programme; debt consolidation eligibility. lightstream.com
- [6] Discover β Personal Loans, April 2026. 7.99%β24.99% APR range; direct payoff to creditors option; zero origination fee. discover.com
- [7] LendingClub β Personal Loan Rates, April 2026. 9.57%β35.99% APR; direct creditor payoff available; 600+ FICO minimum. lendingclub.com
- [8] IRS β Publication 4681 (Cancelled Debts, Foreclosures, Repossessions). IRS Form 1099-C; taxable income from forgiven debt in settlement context. irs.gov
- [9] Bankrate β "Debt Consolidation Loans: Best Options April 2026." Lender comparison; break-even methodology; direct payoff availability survey. bankrate.com
- [10] NerdWallet β "Best Debt Consolidation Loans, April 2026." Independent lender review; APR and fee comparisons; credit score thresholds verified. nerdwallet.com