Minimum Credit Score for a Personal Loan in 2026
Every personal loan lender sets a minimum credit score threshold β but there is no single universal number. The minimum varies dramatically by lender type: a score that earns automatic rejection at a major bank may qualify easily at a credit union or fintech lender. This research-based guide gives you the exact score thresholds at every major lender category, what rate to expect at each tier, and the fastest strategies to move from one tier to the next.
What is the minimum credit score for a personal loan in 2026? There is no universal minimum β it depends on the lender type. Traditional banks typically require 660β700. Credit unions often approve at 580β620. Fintech lenders (Upstart, Avant, LendingPoint) work with scores as low as 300β580. CDFIs like Oportun have no stated minimum and use income-based underwriting. The score floor matters less than you think β what changes with your score is not just approval odds but the interest rate you'll pay, which can vary by $1,500β$3,000+ in total interest on the same $10,000 loan. For the complete qualification framework, see: How to Qualify for a Personal Loan (Article 39).
The FICO Score Scale: What Every Range Means for Lenders
FICO Scores range from 300 to 850. Every lender translates your score into a risk tier that determines both approval likelihood and rate pricing. Understanding where your score sits on this scale β and what each tier unlocks β is the starting point of every personal loan strategy.
The Federal Reserve G.19 average personal loan APR for a 24-month bank loan stood at 11.65% as of November 2025 β the benchmark against which all individual rate offers should be measured. For the full 10-year rate history, see: Personal Loan Rate History: 10-Year Federal Reserve Data (Article 30). For what a "good" rate looks like at your specific score tier, see: What Is a Good Interest Rate on a Personal Loan? (Article 29).
Minimum Credit Score by Lender Type (2026)
The lender type you apply to is as important as your credit score. The same 620 FICO borrower will be rejected at a major bank but likely approved at a credit union β sometimes at a competitive rate. Understanding which lender tier matches your current score prevents wasted hard inquiries on applications destined to fail.
- Chase, Bank of America, Wells Fargo: 660β680 typical minimum
- Citibank, US Bank: 660β700
- Existing customer relationships can lower effective threshold by 20β40 pts
- Stricter underwriting β rule-based, less human discretion
- Best APR for 720+: 8%β14%
- Not suitable for fair-credit borrowers
- Navy Federal CU: 580+ (members with account history)
- PenFed, Alliant: 580β620
- Local/regional CUs: often more flexible with members
- Human underwriting β context and relationship count
- 18 pp higher approval rate than banks for thin-file applicants (NCUA 2025)
- Best option for 580β680 borrowers
- Upstart: No stated minimum (AI model; education/employment data)
- Avant: 550 minimum
- LendingPoint: 580 minimum
- SoFi: 650+ (income and employment emphasized)
- LightStream: 660+ (needs good credit history)
- LendingClub: 600 minimum
- Oportun: No minimum; income-based underwriting
- Self: Credit-builder loans; no minimum
- Local CDFIs: Variable, often income-primary
- APR capped at 36% by federal standards
- Best for credit-invisible and sub-580 borrowers
- See: Art.45 β No Credit History Guide
- Marcus by Goldman Sachs: 660+
- Discover Personal Loans: 660+
- Ally Bank: 640β660
- American Express Personal Loans: 660+ (AmEx cardholders)
- Better rates than traditional banks for same scores
- Fast online decisions (same day to 1 business day)
- Secured by savings account or CD β most credit unions offer
- Score requirement is minimal or none β collateral is the security
- APR: 2β5% above your savings account interest rate
- Builds credit history while borrowing
- Perfect for score-below-minimum borrowers who have savings
- See: Art.45 β Secured Loan Strategies
Specific Lender Score Requirements: The Full Lookup Table
Use this table to identify which lenders are realistic targets for your current credit score before submitting any formal applications. Always use soft-pull pre-qualification to confirm before triggering a hard inquiry.
| Lender | Type | Min. Credit Score | Min. Income | Typical APR Range | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Upstart | Fintech | 300 (no min.) | $12,000+ | 7.4%β35.99% | Thin file, young borrowers, recent grads |
| Avant | Fintech | 550 | $20,000+ | 9.95%β35.99% | 580β650 FICO, fair-credit borrowers |
| Oportun | CDFI | None | Verifiable | Up to 35.99% | Credit-invisible, immigrant borrowers |
| LendingPoint | Fintech | 580 | $20,000+ | 7.99%β35.99% | 580β660 FICO, income-focused |
| OneMain Financial | Fintech | Not disclosed | Flexible | 18%β35.99% | Poor-fair credit, secured or unsecured |
| LendingClub | Fintech | 600 | $24,000+ | 8.98%β35.99% | 600β700 FICO, debt consolidation |
| Credit Unions (avg.) | CU | 580β620 | $18,000+ | 8%β18% | 580β720 FICO, member history helps |
| Navy Federal CU | CU | ~580 | Flexible | 8.99%β18% | Military/veterans; member-first approach |
| SoFi | Online | 650+ | Varies | 8.99%β29.49% | 650β750 FICO, high-income borrowers |
| Discover | Online Bank | 660+ | $25,000+ | 7.99%β24.99% | 660β740 FICO, established borrowers |
| Marcus (Goldman Sachs) | Online Bank | 660+ | $30,000+ | 6.99%β24.99% | 670β800 FICO, strong income |
| LightStream | Online Bank | 660+ | $40,000+ | 7.49%β21.49% | 700+ FICO, excellent credit history |
| Chase | Bank | Existing customers preferred | $25,000+ | 6.99%β23.99% | 720+ FICO, Chase account holders |
A lender's stated minimum score is the floor below which they will not lend. But meeting the floor does not guarantee approval β your DTI, income, employment history, and credit report details also matter. A 580 FICO borrower with a clean report, stable income, and low DTI will often qualify at a credit union; a 580 FICO borrower with recent late payments and high DTI may be declined even at lenders with no stated minimum. See: How to Qualify for a Personal Loan (Article 39) for the complete multi-factor qualification framework.
How Your Credit Score Determines Your Interest Rate
Your credit score doesn't just determine whether you're approved β it determines the APR tier you're placed in, which directly determines the total cost of your loan. This is the most financially significant aspect of credit scores that most borrowers underestimate.
| Score Tier | APR | Monthly Payment | Total Interest | vs. Best Rate |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 800+ (Exceptional) | 8% | $313 | $268 | Baseline |
| 740β799 (Very Good) | 11% | $327 | $572 | +$304 |
| 670β739 (Good) | 15% | $347 | $1,047 | +$779 |
| 620β669 (Fair-Low) | 22% | $380 | $2,490 | +$2,222 |
| 580β619 (Fair) | 28% | $407 | $3,625 | +$3,357 |
| 300β579 (Poor) | 35% | $449 | $5,157 | +$4,889 |
The table above illustrates a critical point: the difference between a 580 FICO and an 800+ FICO on a $10,000 loan is $4,889 in additional interest β nearly half the loan's principal. Every tier improvement is worth thousands of dollars over the life of the loan. For dedicated rate guides at each score tier, see: 600 FICO rates (Art.32), 700 FICO rates (Art.33), and 750+ FICO rates (Art.34).
What Lenders Look at Beyond the Score Number
Your FICO score is the single most influential factor β but it is not the only one. Lenders use the score as an initial screening tool, then examine the underlying credit report and financial profile in more detail. Here is what matters beyond the number.
Payment History β The Score's Biggest Component
Payment history accounts for 35% of your FICO score and is the factor lenders examine most carefully. A borrower with a 680 FICO and zero late payments in the past three years is a materially different risk than a borrower with the same 680 FICO but three 30-day late payments in the past 18 months. Lenders can see the full payment history detail on your credit report, not just the aggregate score. Recency matters enormously β a late payment from five years ago has negligible impact; one from six months ago can trigger rejection or significantly elevated pricing.
Credit Utilization β The Fastest-Moving Variable
Credit utilization (30% of FICO score) is the fastest variable you can change. It is recalculated every billing cycle when your card issuer reports your current balance. A borrower with a 660 FICO driven partly by 75% utilization can potentially reach 690β700 FICO within 30β45 days of paying down those balances β without anything else changing. This is the highest-ROI credit improvement action available to most borrowers. See: How to Improve Your Approval Chances (Article 46, Step 2) for the full utilization strategy.
Derogatory Marks β Recency Is Everything
Collections, charge-offs, bankruptcies, and judgments are the most damaging items on a credit report. Their impact is heavily weighted by recency. A collection account from six months ago may cause rejection at lenders who would otherwise approve a 640 FICO borrower. The same collection account from four years ago has diminishing impact. The FTC estimates 1 in 5 credit reports contains a material error β meaning derogatory marks that shouldn't be there. Disputing and removing inaccurate items is one of the highest-impact credit improvement strategies with no cost and a 30β45 day timeline.
Length of Credit History β The Slow-Build Factor
Credit history length (15% of FICO score) rewards older, well-managed accounts. This factor cannot be rapidly improved β it builds over time. The actionable implication: never close old credit card accounts, even if you don't use them. An old account with zero balance and perfect payment history adds length to your credit file and improves your score. Closing it removes that history and can lower your score meaningfully.
There are two major credit scoring models: FICO and VantageScore. Most lenders use FICO for formal credit decisions (FICO 8 or FICO 9 are most common). VantageScore is used by many free credit monitoring services (Credit Karma uses VantageScore). The two models use the same 300β850 scale but calculate scores differently. Your VantageScore and FICO score for the same report can differ by 20β40 points. Always ask which scoring model the lender uses β the score shown in your free monitoring app may not match what the lender sees. When in doubt, request your FICO score directly from myFICO.com.
How to Improve Your Credit Score Before Applying
If your current score falls below the threshold for the lender or rate tier you're targeting, these are the specific, evidence-based actions ranked by impact-per-effort. For the complete 10-step improvement guide, see: How to Improve Your Personal Loan Approval Chances (Article 46).
What to Do If Your Score Is Below the Minimum
If your credit score falls below the minimum for the loan type and amount you need, you have four strategic options. Each is appropriate for different situations β choose based on your urgency, the degree of the gap, and your willingness to involve other people.
Option 1: Wait and Improve (Best Long-Term Outcome)
If your denial reason is solvable within 30β90 days β typically high utilization or credit report errors β the financially optimal strategy is to fix the issue and reapply. A 30β70 point improvement within 60β90 days is achievable for most fair-credit borrowers. The interest savings from moving to a better rate tier typically far outweigh the inconvenience of waiting. See: How Long to Wait After a Personal Loan Rejection (Article 50) for exact waiting periods by denial reason.
Option 2: Add a Co-Signer (Best Immediate Outcome)
A co-signer with a 700+ FICO score can unlock approval and lower rates at lenders who would otherwise decline you. This is the most powerful short-term bridge strategy for borrowers who cannot wait. The co-signer takes on equal legal liability β so this option should only be used with someone who fully understands and accepts the risk. After 12β18 months of on-time payments, refinance in your own name to release the co-signer. See: Personal Loan With a Co-Signer (Article 47) for the full guide.
Option 3: Apply to a Lender Without a Score Minimum
CDFIs (Oportun, local community development lenders) and some fintech lenders (Upstart) use alternative data models that don't rely primarily on FICO scores. If your income is stable and verifiable, these lenders may approve you regardless of your score. APR is typically higher (up to 36%), but the loan is accessible and every on-time payment builds your credit history. See: Personal Loan With No Credit History (Article 45) for a complete guide to these lender options.
Option 4: Secured Personal Loan (No Score Minimum)
A secured personal loan β backed by your savings account, a CD, or another asset β removes the credit score threshold entirely because the collateral protects the lender's risk. Most credit unions offer share-secured or CD-secured personal loans at rates 2β5% above your savings account interest rate. These loans build your credit record while you borrow and are the fastest path from below-minimum to a strong credit profile for future unsecured borrowing.
The most financially efficient approach for below-minimum borrowers: (1) get approved now via a co-signer, secured loan, or CDFI lender; (2) use the loan itself as a credit-building tool β every on-time payment improves your score; (3) after 12β18 months, refinance independently at the better rate your improved credit now earns. You borrow when you need to, you pay a premium temporarily, and you eliminate that premium as soon as your credit supports it. This sequence costs significantly less in total than staying in a high-rate product indefinitely.
Frequently Asked Questions
- [1] myFICO / FICO β "FICO Score Ranges" and credit score factor weights. Payment history 35%, utilization 30%, length 15%, mix 10%, new credit 10%. FICO 8 as most widely used lender model. myfico.com
- [2] Federal Reserve G.19 Consumer Credit Release (FRED: TERMCBPER24NS) β 24-month personal loan average APR: 11.65% (Nov 2025); peak 12.5% (Feb 2024). Cited in Article 30: Rate History. fred.stlouisfed.org
- [3] Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) β "Consumer Credit Trends: Personal Loans" (2025). 36% annual denial rate; credit score as primary denial factor; DTI and income thresholds. consumerfinance.gov
- [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 thin-file applicants; average APR data. ncua.gov
- [5] Federal Trade Commission (FTC) β "Facing Facts: What We Know About Credit Reporting" (2023). 1 in 5 credit reports contains a material error; dispute process and outcomes. ftc.gov
- [6] Experian β "What Credit Score Do You Need for a Personal Loan?" (2026). Lender minimum score requirements by type; APR ranges by credit score tier; FICO vs. VantageScore usage. experian.com
- [7] NerdWallet β "Best Personal Loans of 2026: Rates and Reviews." Lender-specific minimum credit score requirements; APR ranges; origination fee policies. nerdwallet.com
- [8] LendingTree β "Personal Loan Statistics 2026" and lender comparison data. Credit score distribution among personal loan borrowers; denial rate by score tier. lendingtree.com