Types of Personal Loans: All 8 Types Explained Simply
Not all personal loans are the same product. The term "personal loan" covers eight distinct loan types β each with different eligibility requirements, cost structures, approval criteria, and ideal use cases. Choosing the wrong type for your situation costs you money or results in unnecessary rejection. This guide explains all eight types in plain language, with the specific criteria, APR ranges, and borrower profiles that match each one.
What are the types of personal loans? The eight types are: (1) unsecured β no collateral, most common; (2) secured β backed by collateral, lower rates; (3) debt consolidation β unsecured loan used to pay off multiple debts; (4) co-signed β a creditworthy co-signer backs the application; (5) joint β two co-primary borrowers; (6) credit-builder β builds credit history, funds released at end; (7) self-employed β same structure, alternative income documentation; (8) emergency/fast funding β same-day or next-day disbursement. Each type has distinct eligibility requirements and APR ranges. For the complete guide on how all personal loans work mechanically, see: How Does a Personal Loan Work? Step-by-Step for Beginners (Article 03).
Quick Comparison: All 8 Types at a Glance
Use this table to quickly locate the loan type that matches your credit profile, income situation, and borrowing goal. The full explanation for each type follows below.
| # | Type | Min. Credit Score | Typical APR Range | Collateral? | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Unsecured | 580β670+ | 6.99%β36% | None | Most borrowers with 680+ score |
| 2 | Secured | Any score | 2%β15% | Yes (savings/CD) | Poor/no credit needing lower rate |
| 3 | Debt Consolidation | 580β670+ | 6.99%β36% | None | Paying off high-rate credit cards |
| 4 | Co-Signed | 580+ (primary) | 6.99%β29% | None | Borderline applicants with trusted co-signer |
| 5 | Joint | 580+ (both) | 6.99%β28% | None | Couples with combined income advantage |
| 6 | Credit-Builder | None required | 6%β16% | Funds held in escrow | Thin-file borrowers building from zero |
| 7 | Self-Employed | 580β660+ | 7.99%β36% | None | 1099, gig, freelance, business owners |
| 8 | Emergency / Fast | 580β640+ | 15%β36% | None | Urgent needs requiring same/next-day funding |
Type 1: Unsecured Personal Loan
The unsecured personal loan is the standard product when most people say "personal loan." No collateral is required β approval is based entirely on your credit score, income, and debt-to-income ratio. The lender takes on more risk than with a secured product, which is why rates are higher β but most borrowers with scores above 640 can access this product.
Unsecured personal loans are available from all three lender categories: banks, credit unions, and online lenders. Online lenders dominate the market for speed and accessibility, approving scores as low as 580β600 at higher APRs. Banks typically require 670+ but offer relationship discounts. Credit unions are federally capped at 18% APR and are often the cheapest option for borrowers who qualify for membership.
Type 2: Secured Personal Loan
A secured personal loan requires the borrower to pledge an asset as collateral β typically a savings account, certificate of deposit (CD), vehicle, or investment account. The pledged asset reduces the lender's risk, which produces two outcomes: significantly lower APRs (often 2%β15%) and access for borrowers who can't qualify unsecured due to poor or thin credit.
The most common form is the savings-secured loan (also called a "share-secured loan" at credit unions): you pledge funds already in a savings account, the lender holds them as collateral, and you borrow against that balance. You continue earning interest on the pledged savings while repaying the loan. If you default, the lender seizes the pledged funds β but your other assets remain protected.
If you default on a secured personal loan, the lender can seize the pledged asset to recover the debt β without a court judgment. For savings-secured loans, this means losing your savings. For vehicle-secured loans, this means repossession. Only pledge collateral you can afford to lose. For the full secured vs. unsecured comparison including when each is the right choice, see: Secured vs. Unsecured Personal Loan: Key Differences (Article 06).
Type 3: Debt Consolidation Loan
A debt consolidation loan is structurally identical to an unsecured personal loan β same mechanics, same eligibility criteria, same lender types. The distinction is purely in purpose and framing: these loans are specifically used to pay off multiple existing high-rate debts (usually credit cards) and replace them with a single lower-rate installment loan.
The financial case is driven by the Federal Reserve G.19 rate gap: average credit card APR of 21.47% vs. average personal loan APR of 11.65% (Q1 2026). A borrower with $15,000 across three credit cards at 22% APR who consolidates into a 3-year personal loan at 13% APR saves approximately $3,200 in interest and has a defined payoff date β vs. minimum payments that could keep the debt alive for 10+ years.
The most common debt consolidation mistake: paying off credit cards with a personal loan, then running those credit card balances back up. This leaves you with both personal loan payments and new credit card debt β worse than before. Before consolidating, address the spending patterns that created the debt. Cut or freeze credit cards during the consolidation repayment period if necessary. For the full personal loan vs. credit card analysis, see: Personal Loan vs Credit Card: Which Is Better in 2026? (Article 05).
Type 4: Co-Signed Personal Loan
A co-signed personal loan adds a second person β the co-signer β to the loan application. The co-signer agrees to be equally responsible for repayment if the primary borrower defaults. Their credit profile, income, and assets are evaluated alongside the primary borrower's, reducing the lender's risk and enabling approval or a lower rate that the primary borrower could not achieve alone.
Critically, a co-signer is not a guarantor β they are an equal co-obligor from day one, not a fallback. The loan appears on the co-signer's credit report, impacts their DTI for future borrowing, and any missed payment by the primary borrower damages the co-signer's credit score. This is why asking someone to co-sign is a significant request that carries real financial risk for them.
Type 5: Joint Personal Loan
A joint personal loan is structurally different from a co-signed loan in one key way: both applicants are co-primary borrowers with equal ownership of the loan, equal access to the funds, and equal legal liability. Neither party is a "primary" or "secondary" borrower β both are evaluated as full applicants simultaneously.
The underwriting model evaluates both credit profiles, both incomes, and combined DTI. If one applicant has excellent credit and the other has poor credit, the lender typically uses the lower score for the rate determination β though the combined income can still improve the DTI calculation and loan approval odds significantly. This makes joint loans most beneficial when both borrowers have reasonably good credit and their combined income materially strengthens the application.
Type 6: Credit-Builder Loan
A credit-builder loan is a uniquely structured product that works in reverse from a standard loan: you do not receive the funds when the loan is approved. Instead, the lender deposits the loan amount into a locked savings account or CD held in escrow. You make monthly payments β which are reported to all three credit bureaus β and receive the accumulated balance only when the loan is fully paid off.
The purpose is not to provide immediate borrowing capacity β it is to build a verified, lender-reported payment history for people who have none. A FICO score requires at least 6 months of credit history on at least one account. A credit-builder loan delivers exactly that, at low cost, with no credit score required to begin. Credit unions offer the majority of credit-builder loans; some fintech lenders (Self, MoneyLion) offer them online.
According to CFPB research, borrowers who completed a credit-builder loan improved their credit scores by an average of 60 points over the loan term. For borrowers starting with no credit file, the loan typically generates a scoreable FICO within 6 months and a 620β680 range score within 12 months of consistent on-time payments. This is one of the most reliable and low-risk credit improvement tools available.
Type 7: Personal Loan for Self-Employed Borrowers
A self-employed personal loan is not a different product β it is a standard unsecured personal loan with a different income verification process. Traditional lenders require W-2 pay stubs as income proof, which self-employed borrowers cannot provide. Lenders who accept self-employed applicants use alternative documentation: two years of tax returns (Schedule C), 1099 forms, year-to-date profit-and-loss statements, and 3β6 months of business bank statements.
The key challenge for self-employed borrowers is that taxable income after deductions β not gross revenue β is what lenders evaluate. A freelancer who earned $90,000 but deducted $40,000 in business expenses has a lender-visible income of $50,000. This makes DTI calculations more conservative and may require a larger down-payment of financial documentation. Online lenders like LightStream, SoFi, and Upstart are the most accommodating of self-employed applicants. For the complete guide with documentation strategy, see: Personal Loan for Self-Employed: How to Qualify in 2026 (Article 19).
Type 8: Emergency / Fast-Funding Personal Loan
An emergency personal loan is identical in legal structure to a standard unsecured personal loan. The distinction is the lender's emphasis on speed: applications processed within hours, underwriting decisions in minutes, and funds deposited within hours to one business day of approval. Lenders that specialise in fast funding β including LightStream, LendingClub, and Upgrade β use automated underwriting that requires no human review for straightforward applications.
The cost of speed is a higher APR premium. Emergency loan APRs typically start at 15%β20% for borrowers with good credit β above what those same borrowers would pay if they had more time to comparison-shop. The premium is justified only when the cost of delay β a medical emergency, critical repair, or time-sensitive opportunity β genuinely exceeds the additional interest cost of the faster product.
Payday loans are not personal loans. They are short-term balloon-payment products with effective APRs of 300%β600% β capable of trapping borrowers in perpetual debt cycles. An emergency personal loan at 35% APR is expensive but manageable over 1β3 years. A payday loan at 400% effective APR due in two weeks is not. The CFPB categorises them under entirely separate regulatory frameworks. If you need emergency funds, a personal loan β even at the highest APR tier β is almost always the superior option.
Which Type Is Right for You? Decision Guide
Use the questions below to identify the personal loan type that best matches your situation. Start with your credit score, then refine by your specific circumstances.
| Your Situation | Recommended Type | Backup Option |
|---|---|---|
| Good/excellent credit (680+), general purpose | Type 1: Unsecured | Type 3: Consolidation (if debt payoff) |
| Credit cards at 18%+ APR to consolidate | Type 3: Debt Consolidation | Type 1: Unsecured at lowest available APR |
| Poor credit (below 580), have savings | Type 2: Secured | Type 4: Co-Signed (if co-signer available) |
| No credit history at all | Type 6: Credit-Builder | Type 2: Secured (savings-backed) |
| Borderline credit (580β640), trusted contact | Type 4: Co-Signed | Type 2: Secured |
| Couple applying together | Type 5: Joint | Type 1: Unsecured (stronger applicant solo) |
| Self-employed / freelance / 1099 income | Type 7: Self-Employed | Type 1: Unsecured at lender accepting 1099 |
| Genuine emergency, need funds today | Type 8: Emergency | Type 1: Unsecured (if 3β5 days acceptable) |
Frequently Asked Questions
- [1] Federal Reserve β G.19 Consumer Credit Statistical Release, Q1 2026. Average personal loan APR 11.65%; average credit card APR 21.47%; consumer credit outstanding by product type. federalreserve.gov/releases/g19/
- [2] Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) β "Consumer Credit Trends: Personal Loans" (2025). Loan type distribution; secured vs. unsecured origination volume; co-signer prevalence; credit-builder loan data. consumerfinance.gov
- [3] CFPB β "Credit-Builder Loans: What the Research Says." Average 60-point score improvement; FICO generation timeline; completion rates and payment history impact. consumerfinance.gov
- [4] National Credit Union Administration (NCUA) β Q4 2025 Credit Union Data Summary. Federal CU personal loan rate cap (18% APR); savings-secured loan rate structure (2%β3% above savings rate); credit-builder loan availability. ncua.gov
- [5] Experian β "Consumer Credit Review 2025." 22.7 million active personal loans; unsecured loan market share; average balance and term by loan type. experian.com
- [6] myFICO β "What's in Your Credit Score?" 6-month minimum account history for FICO score generation; credit mix component (10%); payment history weight (35%). myfico.com
- [7] Federal Trade Commission (FTC) β "Co-signing a Loan." Co-signer legal obligations; equal obligor status; credit report impact on co-signer; disclosure requirements. consumer.ftc.gov
- [8] CFPB β "Payday Loans and Deposit Advance Products." APR comparisons (payday 300%β600%); regulatory distinction from personal loans; CFPB payday rule framework. consumerfinance.gov
- [9] Bankrate β "Personal Loan Rates Weekly Survey, April 2026." APR ranges by loan type; secured vs. unsecured rate differential; fast-funding premium data. bankrate.com
- [10] LendingTree β "Personal Loan Market Trends Report, Q1 2026." Self-employed borrower approval rates; joint loan prevalence; lender-by-lender underwriting flexibility data. lendingtree.com