⭐ Article 01 · Pillar Page · Personal Loan Basics

Personal Loan: The Complete Guide 2026

This is the master resource for personal loans on Global Loan Advisor β€” a single pillar covering everything a borrower needs before applying in 2026. It covers what personal loans are, how they work, all loan types, current rates, who qualifies, pros and cons, and the step-by-step application process. Each section links directly into the specialist articles in our 20-article Basics series. Start here, then follow the internal links to go deeper on any topic.

πŸ“… Updated: April 2026
✍️ Author: Shahid Hassan Naik, Global Loan Advisor
⭐ Type: Pillar Page · Basics Series
⏱️ Read time: ~14 min
11.65%
Avg Personal Loan APR Β· Federal Reserve G.19 Β· Q1 2026
21.47%
Avg Credit Card APR Β· Federal Reserve G.19 Β· Q1 2026
$11,548
Avg Personal Loan Balance Β· Experian 2025 Data
22.7M
Americans With Active Personal Loan Β· 2025
⚑ Quick Answer

What is a personal loan? A personal loan is an unsecured installment loan providing a lump sum you repay in fixed monthly payments over 1 to 7 years. The average APR is 11.65% (Federal Reserve G.19, Q1 2026) β€” compared to 21.47% for credit cards, making personal loans significantly cheaper for consolidating credit card debt. Most lenders require a credit score of 600–640 and a debt-to-income ratio below 43%. Funds arrive in 1–5 business days. For the complete authoritative definition with CFPB and Federal Reserve citations, see: What Is a Personal Loan? Official Definition + 5 Key Facts (Article 02).

What Is a Personal Loan? The Official Definition

A personal loan is a fixed-amount, fixed-term installment loan extended by a bank, credit union, or online lender based on your creditworthiness and income β€” not on a specific asset pledged as collateral. Most personal loans are unsecured: no property is at risk, unlike a mortgage (secured by real estate) or an auto loan (secured by the vehicle).

The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) classifies personal loans as closed-end consumer credit with a scheduled repayment period of 12–84 months. You receive the full amount upfront as a lump sum, and repay it in equal monthly installments of principal and interest β€” the same payment every month β€” until the balance reaches zero at the end of the term. This closed-end, fixed-payment structure is what makes a personal loan different from a credit card or a line of credit. For the complete authoritative definition, see: What Is a Personal Loan? Official Definition + 5 Key Facts (Article 02).

The 6 Defining Characteristics of a Personal Loan

🏦
Unsecured (Usually)
No collateral required. Approval based on credit score, income, and DTI alone. For the secured variant and when it makes sense, see: Article 06.
πŸ“
Fixed Monthly Payment
Same amount due every month for the entire term β€” no payment surprises. For how payments differ across 1–7 year terms, see: Article 14.
πŸ’°
Lump Sum Disbursement
The full loan amount is deposited into your bank account in one transfer β€” typically within 1–5 business days of final approval.
πŸ“…
1–7 Year Terms
Repayment terms range from 12 to 84 months. Shorter terms mean higher monthly payments but significantly less total interest paid over the life of the loan.
πŸ“Š
Fixed APR (Usually)
The interest rate stays the same for the entire term. For the fixed vs. variable distinction and which to choose, see: Article 12.
🎯
General Purpose Funds
No restriction on use of funds for most legal purposes β€” debt consolidation, home improvement, medical bills, major purchases, or emergencies.
πŸ’‘ Three Terms You Must Know Before Comparing Offers

APR (Annual Percentage Rate) is the total annualised cost including both the interest rate and all required fees β€” always use APR, not the interest rate, to compare offers fairly. Origination fee is a one-time upfront charge (1%–8% of the loan) deducted from your proceeds or rolled into your balance at funding. Prepayment penalty is a fee some lenders charge if you pay off early. For all 40 key personal loan terms defined clearly, see: Personal Loan Glossary: 40 Key Terms Defined Simply (Article 09).

How Does a Personal Loan Work? Full Mechanics

Understanding the mechanics from application to final payment helps you borrow strategically and avoid surprises. Here is exactly how the full process works. For a full beginner-friendly walkthrough, see: How Does a Personal Loan Work? Step-by-Step for Beginners (Article 03).

Application and the Hard Inquiry

You submit an application β€” online, by phone, or in-branch. The lender pulls your credit report (a hard inquiry, which temporarily reduces your score by 5–10 points), reviews your income documents, and calculates your debt-to-income ratio. If approved, they present a loan offer specifying the amount, APR, term, monthly payment, and fees. You review, accept, sign β€” and funds arrive in your account within 1–5 business days.

A critical protection: FICO's rate-shopping rules count multiple personal loan inquiries within a 14–45 day window as a single inquiry for scoring purposes. You can and should get quotes from multiple lenders before committing β€” without significant score impact. For the complete application timeline from pre-qualification to funded account, see: How Long Does a Personal Loan Take? Full Timeline 2026 (Article 08).

How Your Monthly Payment Is Calculated

Personal loans use standard amortization: your fixed monthly payment is calculated so the loan is exactly paid off on the last scheduled payment date. Early payments are weighted toward interest; later payments toward principal. Extra payments made early in the loan save the most interest. For what happens once you've made that final payment and the account closes, see: What Happens When You Pay Off a Personal Loan? (Article 10).

Monthly Payment by Loan Amount and Term β€” 11.65% APR
Source: Federal Reserve G.19 Q1 2026 average APR. Use these as benchmarks when evaluating real lender offers.

APR vs. Interest Rate β€” Why the Difference Matters

A 9.5% interest rate with a 5% origination fee can produce a higher total cost than a 10% interest rate with no fee, depending on the term. The APR converts the interest rate plus all required fees into a single annualised figure that makes every offer genuinely comparable. Always compare APRs β€” never bare interest rates. For the full explanation of how APR is calculated and what it includes, see: Personal Loan APR Explained: What It Really Means (Article 13).

⚠️ Origination Fees Reduce Your Actual Proceeds

If you borrow $10,000 and the lender charges a 5% origination fee, you receive $9,500 in your account β€” but you repay the full $10,000 plus interest. If you need exactly $10,000, request ~$10,526 to receive $10,000 after the deduction. Always confirm whether the origination fee is deducted from proceeds (most common) or added to the balance. For every fee type with real-number examples and avoidance strategies, see: Personal Loan Fees Explained: Origination, Prepayment & More (Article 11).

All 8 Types of Personal Loans Explained

"Personal loan" is an umbrella term covering eight distinct product types. Knowing which one fits your situation determines both your approval odds and the cost of borrowing. For the complete guide with eligibility details and lender recommendations for each type, see: Types of Personal Loans: All 8 Types Explained Simply (Article 04).

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1. Unsecured Personal Loan
Most common type. No collateral required. Approved on credit score, income, and DTI alone. Available from banks, credit unions, and online lenders. APR range: 6%–36%. Best for borrowers with a 680+ credit score seeking the broadest lender choice.
πŸ”’
2. Secured Personal Loan
Backed by collateral β€” savings account, CD, or vehicle. Lower APRs (2%–15%). Available to borrowers with poor or no credit history. Risk: losing collateral on default. For the full secured vs. unsecured comparison, see: Article 06.
πŸ’³
3. Debt Consolidation Loan
Same structure as an unsecured loan, marketed specifically for combining multiple high-rate debts into one payment. The Federal Reserve G.19 gap β€” 11.65% personal loan APR vs. 21.47% credit card APR β€” is the entire financial case for this use. For when a personal loan beats a credit card, see: Article 05.
🀝
4. Co-Signed Personal Loan
A creditworthy co-signer shares repayment responsibility, enabling approval for borrowers who can't qualify alone. The co-signer's credit is affected by your payment behaviour. For the difference between pre-qualification and pre-approval with a co-signer, see: Article 20.
πŸ‘₯
5. Joint Personal Loan
Both applicants are co-primary borrowers β€” not co-signer and primary. Combined income and credit are evaluated. Both are equally liable and both see the account on their credit reports. Common for couples where combined income strengthens the application.
🌱
6. Credit-Builder Loan
Designed to build credit, not provide immediate funds. You make payments into a locked account; the lender reports them to credit bureaus. You receive the accumulated balance at term end. Primarily offered by credit unions. Best for thin-file borrowers who need to establish a credit history before qualifying for a standard loan.
πŸ‘”
7. Self-Employed Personal Loan
Same structure as a standard unsecured loan but with different documentation: 2 years of tax returns, 1099 forms, and business bank statements rather than pay stubs. Some lenders specialise in non-W2 income verification. For the full qualification guide, see: Personal Loan for Self-Employed (Article 19).
⚑
8. Emergency / Same-Day Loan
Same-day or next-business-day funding from online lenders. Identical legal structure to a standard personal loan. Carries higher APRs (15%–36%) in exchange for speed. Use only when timing urgency is genuine and the cost premium is justified by the need.

Personal Loan Rates in 2026: What to Expect

The rate you receive is the lender's pricing of your specific default risk. Understanding what drives APR lets you take deliberate steps to lower it before applying. Federal Reserve G.19 data for Q1 2026 shows the average personal loan APR at 11.65% vs. the average credit card APR of 21.47%. That nearly 10-percentage-point gap is the core financial case for personal loan debt consolidation.

Average Personal Loan APR by Credit Score Tier β€” 2026
Credit Score Range Credit Tier Typical APR Range Best Lender Types
760–850Excellent6.99% – 12.99%Banks, credit unions, top online lenders
720–759Very Good10.99% – 15.99%Banks, credit unions, online lenders
680–719Good14.99% – 20.99%Credit unions, online lenders
640–679Fair19.99% – 27.99%Online lenders, flexible credit unions
600–639Below Average24.99% – 32.99%Fintech lenders, CDFIs, credit unions
Below 600Poor29.99% – 36.00%Secured loans or credit-builder loans only
Personal Loan APR by Credit Score vs. Average Credit Card APR β€” 2026
Source: Federal Reserve G.19 Q1 2026. Even at a fair-credit APR, personal loans are cheaper than the average credit card.

The Five Factors That Determine Your Rate

Credit score has the single highest impact β€” a 100-point improvement typically lowers your APR by 4–8 percentage points. Debt-to-income ratio is the second factor: DTI below 20% earns meaningfully better pricing than 35%–40%. Loan term affects rate because longer exposure to default risk raises cost β€” a 2-year term typically carries a lower APR than a 7-year term for the same borrower and amount. Loan amount matters because very small ($1,000–$3,000) and very large ($50,000+) loans are priced differently from the mainstream $5,000–$25,000 range. Lender type is significant: credit unions are federally capped at 18% APR and typically price 2–4 percentage points below banks for equivalent profiles.

βœ… The Fastest Rate Improvement Before Applying

Reduce your credit card utilization below 30% β€” ideally below 10% β€” before submitting any application. Utilization carries 30% weight in your FICO score and updates every billing cycle. A borrower who pays down balances and waits 30–45 days for the change to report can improve their score by 20–40 points and receive a meaningfully lower APR offer. For the fixed vs. variable rate decision and which term structure saves more, see: Fixed vs. Variable Rate Personal Loan: Which to Choose? (Article 12).

Eligibility: Who Qualifies for a Personal Loan?

Personal loan eligibility is evaluated across five dimensions. Knowing where you stand before applying lets you target the right lender and avoid wasting hard inquiries on applications you're unlikely to win.

Personal Loan Eligibility Requirements β€” 2026 by Lender Type
Eligibility Factor Bank (Traditional) Online Lender Credit Union
Min. Credit Score (FICO)670+580–640+580–620+
Max. DTI RatioBelow 36%Below 43–50%Below 40–45%
Min. Annual Income$25,000–$30,000$20,000–$25,000$18,000–$24,000
Income TypesW-2 preferredW-2, 1099, self-employedFlexible income types
Min. Credit History2+ years preferred1+ year minimum6+ months minimum

How DTI Is Calculated β€” The Formula You Need

Debt-to-income ratio = total monthly debt payments Γ· gross monthly income Γ— 100. Monthly debt includes all loan minimums, credit card minimums, rent or mortgage, and the proposed new personal loan payment. A borrower earning $5,000/month gross with $1,500 in existing monthly obligations has a DTI of 30%. Adding a $400/month personal loan raises that to 38% β€” still within range at most lenders. Exceeding 43%–50% disqualifies borrowers at most mainstream lenders.

πŸ’‘ Six Documents to Prepare Before Any Application

Having these ready eliminates conditional-approval delays: (1) government-issued photo ID, (2) Social Security Number or ITIN, (3) two most recent pay stubs β€” or last two years of tax returns if self-employed (see: Article 19), (4) most recent W-2 or 1099, (5) past 2–3 months of bank statements, (6) proof of address. For the complete document checklist by income type, see: What Documents Do You Need for a Personal Loan in 2026? (Article 18). For whether two active personal loans simultaneously is possible, see: Can You Have Two Personal Loans at the Same Time? (Article 15).

Personal Loan Pros and Cons: The Honest Picture

A personal loan is not the right financial tool for every situation. Understanding the genuine advantages and real limitations helps you decide whether a personal loan β€” versus a credit card, HELOC, 401(k) loan, or other option β€” is the correct choice for your specific need. For the full analysis with real-number scenarios, see: Personal Loan Pros and Cons: Complete Honest Guide 2026 (Article 17).

βœ“ Advantages
  • APR averages 11.65% vs. 21.47% for credit cards (Fed Reserve G.19, Q1 2026)
  • Fixed monthly payment β€” fully predictable, no payment surprises
  • No collateral required for unsecured loans
  • No restriction on use of funds for most legal purposes
  • Adds installment account to credit mix β€” can improve credit profile
  • Positive payment history reported to bureaus for up to 10 years
  • Consolidates multiple high-rate debts into one lower-rate payment
  • Funds available in as little as 1 business day at online lenders
βœ— Disadvantages
  • Higher APR than secured products (HELOC, auto loan) for same borrower
  • Origination fees of 1%–8% reduce actual funds received
  • Hard inquiry on application temporarily reduces score by 5–10 pts
  • Raises DTI β€” impacts future credit application approval odds
  • Prepayment penalties at some lenders eliminate early-payoff interest savings
  • Not available unsecured for scores below 580–600
  • Fixed payment cannot be reduced during a financial hardship month
  • Increases total debt load if used for non-essential discretionary spending

When a Personal Loan Is the Right Choice

Three scenarios make a personal loan the financially sound choice. Debt consolidation: carrying $15,000 at 22% credit card APR and qualifying for a personal loan at 13% APR produces meaningful interest savings over 3 years β€” and the fixed payoff date prevents the indefinite minimum-payment cycle that revolving credit enables. A large necessary expense (medical bills, urgent home repair, major vehicle repair) where the alternative is high-interest credit card debt or depleting an emergency fund. Home improvement where either insufficient equity rules out a HELOC, or you prefer not to pledge your home as collateral.

When a Personal Loan Is the Wrong Choice

A personal loan is the wrong tool for discretionary consumption β€” vacations, entertainment, non-essential purchases β€” because it creates lasting debt for spending that produces no financial value. It is also wrong when your credit score is below 600: APRs at that tier (29.99%–36%) barely better high-rate credit cards while significantly worsening your DTI for all future borrowing.

How to Apply: The 6-Step Process

A well-prepared application moves through underwriting faster, produces better rate offers, and avoids conditional approval delays. For the complete step-by-step application guide, see: How to Apply for a Personal Loan: Step-by-Step Guide (Article 16).

01
Check Your Credit Report and Score
Pull your free credit reports from all three bureaus at AnnualCreditReport.com and review for errors. The CFPB estimates 1 in 5 reports contains errors significant enough to affect credit decisions. File disputes immediately on any inaccuracies β€” bureau investigations take 30 days. Confirm your current FICO score range to target the right lender tier.
02
Calculate the Exact Amount You Need
Borrow only what you need β€” not the maximum you're offered. If your lender charges an origination fee, factor it into your request amount (e.g., if you need $10,000 and the fee is 5%, request ~$10,526 to receive exactly $10,000 after deduction). Calculate monthly payments across multiple term lengths. For a full comparison of how term length changes both your monthly payment and total interest cost, see: Personal Loan Repayment Terms: 1 to 7 Years Explained (Article 14).
03
Pre-Qualify at 3–5 Lenders via Soft Pull β€” Zero Credit Impact
This is the most important step most borrowers skip. Every major online lender offers free pre-qualification showing your likely rate and terms using only a soft inquiry β€” no impact to your credit score. Pre-qualify at 3–5 lenders simultaneously. It costs nothing, takes 15 minutes, and reveals your real offer landscape before any hard inquiry. For the exact difference between pre-qualification and pre-approval and what each result means, see: Personal Loan Prequalification vs Pre-Approval: Difference? (Article 20).
04
Compare All Offers on APR, Fees, Term, and Prepayment Terms
Rank pre-qualified offers in this priority order: (1) APR β€” the total annualised cost including all fees; (2) origination fee β€” confirm it is included in the APR you're comparing; (3) prepayment penalty β€” confirm there is none if you plan to pay off early; (4) term options β€” confirm the lender offers your preferred term length. Do not be influenced by brand recognition. For how to decode APR in a loan offer, see: Personal Loan APR Explained: What It Really Means (Article 13).
05
Submit a Formal Application to Your Top Choice Only
Once you have identified the best offer from pre-qualification, submit the formal application to that single lender. This triggers the hard inquiry. Upload all required documents in one submission to avoid conditional-approval delays β€” missing income documentation is the most common cause of stalled approvals. Online lenders typically return a decision within 1–3 business days; banks and credit unions within 3–7 business days.
06
Review the Full Loan Agreement Before Signing
Read the complete loan agreement β€” not just the summary. Confirm the APR matches your pre-qualified offer. Verify the origination fee amount. Confirm no prepayment penalty. Check the first payment due date. Activate any available autopay discount (typically 0.25% APR reduction at no cost). Sign, and funds arrive in your account within 1–3 business days. For the complete documents required checklist, see: What Documents Do You Need for a Personal Loan in 2026? (Article 18).

The 4 Costliest Borrower Mistakes

Most expensive personal loan errors happen before the loan is funded β€” in the comparison and application phase. These four mistakes collectively cost borrowers billions in unnecessary interest and fees every year.

🚫 Mistake 1: Accepting the First Offer Without Comparing

The most common and most expensive mistake. Borrowers who accept the first approval offer without using soft-pull pre-qualification at competing lenders consistently pay 2–5 percentage points more APR than necessary. On a $15,000 loan over 4 years, a 3% APR difference costs approximately $900 in additional interest. Pre-qualification is free, takes 15 minutes, and has zero credit impact. There is no financial justification for skipping it.

🚫 Mistake 2: Submitting Multiple Formal Applications Without Soft-Pull First

Formal applications to several lenders simultaneously generate multiple hard inquiries, each reducing your score 5–10 points. Soft-pull pre-qualification eliminates this entirely β€” you see real rate offers from multiple lenders with zero score impact, then apply formally to only your best match. For how pre-qualification and pre-approval differ and which to use at which stage, see: Personal Loan Prequalification vs Pre-Approval: Difference? (Article 20).

🚫 Mistake 3: Borrowing More Than You Actually Need

Lenders often approve amounts significantly higher than your request. Accepting the full approved amount "since it's available" is expensive: you pay interest on every dollar from day one, and origination fees apply to the full amount. The difference between borrowing $15,000 and $20,000 at 14% APR over 5 years is ~$280/month extra and nearly $1,700 more in total interest. For every fee type that scales with loan size, see: Personal Loan Fees Explained: Origination, Prepayment & More (Article 11).

🚫 Mistake 4: Choosing the Longest Term to Minimise the Monthly Payment

A 7-year term produces the lowest monthly payment but the highest total interest cost β€” often 2–3Γ— more interest than a 3-year term for the same loan at the same rate. Choose the shortest term whose monthly payment you can genuinely sustain without financial strain. For the complete term-by-term cost comparison with real dollar figures, see: Personal Loan Repayment Terms: 1 to 7 Years Explained (Article 14).

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a personal loan and how is it different from a credit card? +
A personal loan is a closed-end installment product β€” a fixed amount disbursed upfront, repaid in equal monthly payments over a fixed term of 1–7 years. A credit card is revolving credit with a variable balance, no fixed payoff date, and a minimum payment that can keep you in debt indefinitely. Personal loans are better for large defined expenses where you want a set payoff date and predictable payment. Credit cards are better for ongoing variable spending you pay in full monthly. For the detailed 12-criteria comparison, see: Personal Loan vs Credit Card: Which Is Better in 2026? (Article 05).
What credit score do you need to get a personal loan in 2026? +
Traditional banks typically require a FICO score of 670+. Online lenders consider scores as low as 580–600, with APRs in that range reaching 28%–36%. Credit unions are most flexible, with some approving borrowers at 580–620 at their federally capped 18% maximum APR. For borrowers below 580, unsecured personal loans are generally unavailable at mainstream lenders β€” secured loans or credit-builder loans are the realistic paths. For the full definition of what a personal loan is and who it's designed for, start with: What Is a Personal Loan? (Article 02).
How long does it take to get a personal loan from application to funding? +
Online lenders are fastest β€” many offer instant decisions and same-day or next-business-day funding. Average: 1–3 business days from completed application. Banks: 4–7 business days total. Credit unions: 5–10 business days. The biggest delay at every lender type is incomplete documentation β€” missing pay stubs, bank statements, or identity verification. Having everything ready before starting eliminates this. For the complete timing breakdown by lender type, stage, and what can slow each phase down, see: How Long Does a Personal Loan Take? Full Timeline 2026 (Article 08).
Does applying for a personal loan hurt your credit score? +
A formal application creates a hard inquiry that temporarily reduces your FICO score by 5–10 points, recovering within 6–12 months. However, soft-pull pre-qualification (available free at all major online lenders) lets you compare real rate offers from multiple lenders with zero credit impact. If you submit formal applications to multiple lenders within a 14–45 day window, FICO counts all those inquiries as a single event β€” protecting borrowers who comparison-shop. The modest temporary score reduction from a single inquiry should not deter any borrower whose personal loan use is financially sound. For how the mechanics of application and approval work in full, see: How Does a Personal Loan Work? Step-by-Step for Beginners (Article 03).
Can you pay off a personal loan early without penalty? +
Most personal loans from major online lenders have no prepayment penalty β€” you can pay off the full balance at any time and your only cost is interest accrued to that date. Some banks and certain older loan products charge 1%–5% of the remaining balance or a flat fee for early payoff. Always confirm the prepayment policy before signing the loan agreement. If a lender charges a prepayment penalty and you intend to pay off early, use it as a reason to choose a no-penalty competitor. For every fee type β€” origination, prepayment, late payment, and returned payment β€” fully explained with avoidance strategies, see: Personal Loan Fees Explained: Origination, Prepayment & More (Article 11).
References & Data Sources
  • [1] Federal Reserve β€” G.19 Consumer Credit Statistical Release, Q1 2026. Personal loan average APR 11.65%; credit card average APR 21.47%; consumer credit outstanding balances by product type. federalreserve.gov/releases/g19/
  • [2] Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) β€” "What Is a Personal Loan?" Closed-end consumer credit product definition; 12–84 month standard terms; TILA disclosure requirements. consumerfinance.gov
  • [3] Experian β€” "Personal Loan Statistics 2025." Average personal loan balance $11,548; 22.7 million Americans with active personal loans; term and rate distribution data. experian.com
  • [4] myFICO β€” "Credit Checks and Credit Inquiries." Hard inquiry score impact (5–10 points); rate-shopping de-duplication window (14–45 days); inquiry aging timeline in FICO scoring model. myfico.com
  • [5] National Credit Union Administration (NCUA) β€” Q4 2025 Credit Union Data Summary. Federal credit union personal loan rate cap (18% APR); approval rates vs. banks; thin-file borrower access data. ncua.gov
  • [6] CFPB β€” "Consumer Credit Trends: Personal Loans" (2025). Market size; origination fee prevalence by lender type; average loan term distribution; denial rate and reason data. consumerfinance.gov
  • [7] Federal Trade Commission (FTC) β€” "Personal Loans." TILA lender disclosure obligations; prepayment penalty rules; consumer rights on credit report errors; free dispute rights under FCRA. consumer.ftc.gov
  • [8] Bankrate β€” "Personal Loan Rates Weekly Survey, April 2026." Current APR ranges by credit tier; best available rates at top lenders for excellent, good, and fair credit tiers. bankrate.com
  • [9] LendingTree β€” "Personal Loan Market Trends Report, Q1 2026." APR range by credit score tier; origination fee rates; pre-qualification adoption; average time-to-funding data. lendingtree.com
  • [10] CFPB β€” "Free Credit Reports and Credit Repair." 1-in-5 reports contains errors affecting decisions; dispute process timelines; free annual report rights under FCRA. consumerfinance.gov