🟡 Article 66 · Uses & Purposes · Informational

Using a Personal Loan to Pay Off Credit Card Debt: Worth It?

The average credit card APR in April 2026 is 19.58% — and the average American carrying a balance pays that rate on money that should already be gone. A personal loan at the average APR of 12.04% is a meaningfully cheaper way to carry that same debt with one fixed payment and a defined payoff date. But "worth it" depends on a calculation most articles skip: whether your pre-qualified personal loan APR is actually lower than your weighted-average credit card rate, and whether you can commit to not re-accumulating card balances after consolidation. This guide runs that calculation for you, shows the exact savings at common debt levels, and tells you when a balance transfer card is a better answer.

📅 Updated: April 2026
✍️ Author: Shahid Hassan Naik, Global Loan Advisor
🟡 Category: Uses & Purposes
⏱️ Read time: ~8 min
19.58%
Average Credit Card APR — Bankrate April 2026 (Federal Reserve G.19: 21.47%)
12.04%
Average Personal Loan APR — Bankrate April 2026 (7.55% Gap vs. Credit Cards)
$1,619
Interest Saved Consolidating $10K from 22% Card to 13% Personal Loan Over 3 Years
$16,769
Avg Credit Card Balance — Debt Relief Seekers, Freedom Debt Relief February 2026
⚡ Quick Answer

Yes — if your pre-qualified personal loan APR is at least 3–5 percentage points below your weighted-average credit card rate. At the average gap (19.58% card vs. 12.04% personal loan), consolidating $15,000 over 36 months saves approximately $2,100 in interest. The move fails if: your personal loan APR isn't actually lower than your card rates; you have a 0% balance transfer offer available for your balance size; or you continue using the paid-off cards and re-accumulate debt. Always pre-qualify first — soft pull only: How to Pre-Qualify Without Hurting Credit (Article 56). Full debt consolidation mechanics: Personal Loan for Debt Consolidation: Complete 2026 Guide (Article 59).

The Break-Even Calculation — Does Consolidation Actually Save You Money?

The central question isn't whether personal loans are cheaper than credit cards on average — they are, by about 7–9 percentage points. The question is whether your specific personal loan APR is lower than your specific weighted-average credit card rate. These are different numbers, and only one of them matters for your decision.

Step 1: Calculate your weighted-average credit card APR

If you carry balances on multiple cards, you can't just average the APRs — you need to weight them by balance:

  1. Multiply each card's balance by its APR (e.g., $8,000 × 22% = $1,760)
  2. Sum all results (e.g., $1,760 + $700 = $2,460)
  3. Divide by total balance (e.g., $2,460 ÷ $11,000 = 22.36% weighted avg)

This is your real effective rate — the benchmark your personal loan APR must beat.

Step 2: Get your actual pre-qualified personal loan APR

The average is 12.04% (Bankrate, April 2026) — but averages are useless for your specific decision. A 640 FICO borrower may receive 22%+ from some lenders, which doesn't beat their credit card rate. A 720+ FICO borrower may receive 8%–11%, producing massive savings. Pre-qualify at 3–5 lenders with soft pulls (zero credit impact) and get your real number.

Step 3: The minimum savings threshold

If your personal loan APR is less than 3 percentage points below your weighted card rate, the savings may be small enough that a balance transfer card (0% for 12–21 months) or focused debt avalanche repayment without any new debt product could be a better approach. The break-even improves significantly with larger balances and longer repayment terms.

💡 The Origination Fee Adjustment

Some personal loan lenders charge origination fees of 1%–9.99% — which are deducted from your loan proceeds but increase the effective cost. Always compare APRs, not interest rates — APR legally includes origination fees (under TILA Regulation Z), so a 10% APR loan with a 5% origination fee has a higher true APR than a 12% APR loan with no fee. When pre-qualifying, confirm the APR figure, not just the interest rate. Lenders with zero origination fees for consolidation: SoFi, LightStream, Marcus, Discover.

Interest Savings at Common Debt Levels

Interest Saved — Personal Loan Consolidation vs. Carrying Balance at 21.47% Card APR
Debt AmountCard at 21.47% / 36moLoan at 12.04% / 36moLoan at 8.99% / 36moSaved at 12.04%Saved at 8.99%
$5,000 $1,882 interest $963 interest $697 interest $919 saved $1,185 saved
$10,000 $3,764 interest $1,926 interest $1,393 interest $1,838 saved $2,371 saved
$15,000 $5,646 interest $2,889 interest $2,090 interest $2,757 saved $3,556 saved
$20,000 $7,528 interest $3,852 interest $2,786 interest $3,676 saved $4,742 saved
$30,000 $11,292 interest $5,778 interest $4,179 interest $5,514 saved $7,113 saved
Total Interest Cost — $15,000 Debt at Various APRs Over 36 Months
Includes current avg credit card (21.47%, Fed G.19 Q1 2026), Bankrate personal loan avg (12.04%, April 2026), and best personal loan rate for 720+ FICO. Standard amortisation.
✅ The CNBC-Verified Example — $1,619 Saved on $10,000

A $10,000 balance at 22% APR paid over 36 months costs $3,749 in total interest. The same $10,000 consolidated into a personal loan at 13% APR over the same 36 months costs $2,130 in interest — a saving of $1,619 in interest charges alone. At 8.99% APR (SoFi / LightStream for 720+ FICO), the interest cost drops to $1,411, saving $2,338. These are not estimates — they are standard amortisation calculations verifiable with any loan calculator. The saving scales linearly with balance size.

Personal Loan vs. Balance Transfer Card — Which Wins?

A 0% balance transfer card is the strongest alternative to a personal loan for credit card debt consolidation — and for balances under $10,000 that can be paid off within 12–21 months, it often wins on total cost. Here's the complete comparison:

Personal Loan vs. Balance Transfer Card — Full Feature Comparison
FactorPersonal Loan0% Balance Transfer Card
Interest rateFixed APR (12.04% avg, 8.99%+ for good credit)0% for 12–21 months; then 19%–29% standard
Transfer feeNone3%–5% of balance transferred (upfront)
Credit limitUp to $100K (based on income/credit)Limited by card approval — often $5K–$20K
Max balance suitableAny amountUnder $10K–$15K (payable in promo period)
Payoff deadline pressureFixed monthly payment — no deadline panicMust pay full balance before promo ends
Risk if promo period lapsesNone — APR doesn't changeStandard rate kicks in (can be 24%–29%)
Credit score impactNew instalment loan; reduces utilisation on cardsNew revolving account; may affect utilisation
Best forLarge balances ($10K+), longer repayment, certaintySmall balances payable within promo period
⚠️ Balance Transfer Math — The 3% Fee Changes Everything for Larger Balances

A 3% balance transfer fee on $15,000 costs $450 upfront. If you can pay off $15,000 within 18 months at 0% interest, total cost is $450. A personal loan at 12.04% over 18 months on $15,000 costs approximately $1,450 in interest — so the balance transfer wins by $1,000 if you're disciplined about the payoff. But if you fail to pay off the full balance before the promo period ends, the standard rate (typically 24%–29% on balance transfer cards) applies retroactively in some products, or immediately on any remaining balance. For balances above $15,000 or repayment timelines above 21 months, the personal loan's fixed APR almost always wins.

When It Makes Sense — and When It Doesn't

A Personal Loan for Credit Card Debt Makes Sense When...
  • Your pre-qualified personal loan APR is at least 3–5 points below your weighted card rate
  • Your total balance exceeds $10,000 — too large to pay off during a balance transfer promo period
  • You're carrying balances on 3+ cards with different due dates and APRs that are difficult to manage
  • You want a fixed payoff date — a personal loan eliminates the indefinite revolving debt cycle
  • You have a solid plan to close or freeze the paid-off cards to prevent re-accumulation
  • Your credit score is 670+ and you can qualify for a personal loan APR meaningfully below your card rates
⚠️
A Personal Loan for Credit Cards Is the Wrong Move When...
  • Your pre-qualified APR is at or above your current card rates — consolidating at a higher rate saves nothing
  • Your total balance is under $8,000 and payable within 15–21 months — a balance transfer card at 0% beats any personal loan
  • You plan to continue using the paid-off credit cards — this creates double debt (loan + new card balances)
  • Your credit score is below 640 and your personal loan APR will be 22%+ — same cost as the cards
  • You have an origination fee that wipes out the APR savings on a small or short-term loan
  • You're addressing a symptom without fixing the underlying spending pattern that created the debt

Best Lenders for Credit Card Consolidation 2026

Best Personal Loans for Paying Off Credit Card Debt — April 2026
LenderAPR RangeMin. FICOOrigination FeeDirect Payoff?Why It Works for CC Consolidation
SoFi 8.99%–29.99% 680+ None ✅ Yes Direct Pay sends funds straight to creditors. Zero fees. Unemployment protection if income drops during repayment. Up to $100K
LightStream 6.99%–25.99% 720+ None No (funds to borrower) Lowest rate floor. Rate Beat Programme. Zero fees. Best for 720+ FICO borrowers with high card balances
Marcus 9.99%–28.99% 660+ None No (funds to borrower) Zero fees. On-time payment reward. Fixed payments. Reliable mid-range consolidation option for 660+ FICO
Discover 7.99%–24.99% 720+ None ✅ Yes Direct creditor payoff. Zero fees. 30-day money-back guarantee. Strong for 720+ looking to simplify multiple card payments
Upgrade 9.99%–35.99% 580+ 1.85%–9.99% ✅ Yes (rate discount) Direct payoff earns up to 4% rate discount. Accessible from 580 FICO. Best for fair-credit borrowers where direct payoff meaningfully cuts APR
LendingClub 9.57%–35.99% 600+ 3%–8% ✅ Yes Direct payment to creditors. Joint loan option for combining household debt. 600+ FICO accessible
💡 Direct Payoff — Why It Matters

Some lenders — SoFi, Discover, Upgrade, LendingClub — offer to pay your credit card issuers directly rather than depositing funds in your bank account. This has two advantages: it eliminates the risk that you spend the loan proceeds before paying off the cards, and some lenders offer a lower APR for direct payoff applications (Upgrade: up to 4% discount). If direct payoff isn't available, set up a same-day transfer the moment funds hit your account — don't leave the money sitting where it can be spent on something else.

Step-by-Step: How to Consolidate Credit Card Debt Correctly

1
List every card: balance, APR, minimum payment
Pull your most recent statements. Record balance, APR, and minimum payment for each card. Calculate your weighted-average APR using the formula in Section 1. This is your target — your personal loan APR must beat this number to produce savings. Also calculate what you're currently paying in minimum payments total — your new personal loan payment should be within a range you can comfortably sustain.
2
Check your credit score and pull your full credit report
Your FICO score determines which lenders you can access and at what APR tier. Pull your report from annualcreditreport.com and check for errors — disputed errors resolved before application can improve your offered APR. If your score is below 640, check federal credit union rates first (18% NCUA cap) before online lenders. See: Minimum Credit Score for a Personal Loan (Article 40).
3
Pre-qualify at 3–5 lenders — soft pull, zero credit impact
Use each lender's "check your rate" tool for the total amount of your card balances. This is a soft pull — no credit impact regardless of how many you check. Record each actual APR offer on the exact same loan amount and term. Compare these against your weighted-average card rate. If no offer beats your card rate by at least 2–3 percentage points, consolidation doesn't make financial sense yet — work on your credit score first.
4
Choose the shortest term where the monthly payment is affordable
Longer terms (60 months) reduce monthly payments but increase total interest. A 36-month consolidation loan saves significantly more in total interest than a 60-month loan at the same APR. Choose the shortest term where the fixed monthly payment fits your budget without strain — even if it's slightly tighter than the minimum payment you're used to making on credit cards.
5
Apply once — hard pull — and pay off cards immediately
Submit one formal application to the lender with the best pre-qualified APR. Once funded, pay off every credit card balance immediately — same day if possible. Do not leave card balances outstanding alongside a consolidation loan. Request written $0 balance confirmation from each card issuer. If the lender offers direct payoff, use it — it removes all temptation and reduces execution risk.
6
Decide what to do with the paid-off cards
Don't close them all immediately — closing old accounts can hurt your average credit age and reduce your credit limit (increasing utilisation). Instead: freeze or cut the cards physically, remove them from digital wallets, and set up a small recurring charge (e.g., a subscription) on one card with autopay to keep it active without accumulating debt. The goal is zero new balances on the paid-off cards for the life of the consolidation loan.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is it a good idea to use a personal loan to pay off credit cards? +
Yes — when your pre-qualified personal loan APR is meaningfully below your weighted-average credit card rate. At the current averages (19.58% card vs. 12.04% personal loan), consolidating $15,000 over 36 months saves approximately $2,757 in interest. The move makes clear financial sense when: your APR gap is 3–5+ percentage points; your balance exceeds $10,000; and you're committed to not re-accumulating card debt. It doesn't make sense when your personal loan APR isn't actually lower than your cards, when your balance is small enough for a 0% balance transfer card, or when you don't address the spending pattern that created the debt. The calculation is simple: run both loan options through a standard loan calculator and compare total interest paid.
Will paying off credit cards with a personal loan hurt my credit score? +
Short-term: small, temporary dip from the hard inquiry (3–5 points) and from opening a new credit account. Medium-term: likely improvement. Paying off revolving credit card balances with a personal loan dramatically reduces your credit utilisation ratio — the single biggest near-term positive credit action available to most borrowers. Credit utilisation is 30% of your FICO score, and dropping from 80% utilisation to near 0% on your cards can add 20–50 points within 1–2 billing cycles of the cards reporting $0 balances. Long-term: continued on-time payments on the personal loan builds your payment history (35% of FICO). For the full credit score impact: How Personal Loans Affect Your Credit Score (Article 124).
What credit score do I need to get a personal loan to pay off credit cards? +
Federal credit unions accept 580+ FICO with human underwriting and an 18% APR cap. Upgrade and LendingClub accept 580–600+ FICO. Marcus and Discover require 660+. SoFi requires 680+. LightStream requires 720+ for its best rates. As a practical rule: 670+ FICO is the threshold where personal loan rates reliably beat average credit card rates. Below 640 FICO, some personal loan APRs (22%–36%) may be no lower than your card rates — check your actual pre-qualified offer before applying. For the full credit tier guide: Minimum Credit Score for a Personal Loan in 2026 (Article 40).
Should I close credit cards after paying them off with a personal loan? +
Don't close them all immediately — this is a common mistake. Closing old accounts reduces your total available credit (increasing utilisation on any remaining balances) and can lower your average account age (15% of FICO). Instead, keep the accounts open but remove the cards from your wallet and digital wallets. Set a small recurring charge (a monthly subscription) on your oldest card with autopay to keep it active. If you're genuinely concerned about overspending, cut the physical card but keep the account open. You can close 1–2 newer, unused cards if the consolidation was specifically to simplify your finances — but keep your oldest cards open.
Is a balance transfer better than a personal loan for paying off credit card debt? +
It depends on your balance size and repayment timeline. For balances under $10,000 that you can pay off within 15–21 months: a 0% balance transfer card typically wins — the interest savings exceed the 3%–5% transfer fee if you pay off in full before the promo period ends. For balances above $15,000 or repayment timelines above 21 months: a personal loan at 8%–12% APR wins because the 0% promo period is too short to cover the balance, and the standard post-promo rate (often 24%–29%) is worse than a personal loan APR. The hybrid approach: use a balance transfer card for the portion payable within the promo period, and a personal loan for the remainder. This is rarely discussed but mathematically optimal for mid-range balances ($10,000–$20,000) where neither option alone is clearly better.
References & Primary Data Sources
  • [1] Bankrate — "When to Use a Personal Loan to Pay Off Credit Card Debt," April 2026. Personal loan avg APR 12.04%; credit card avg APR 19.58%; consolidation mechanics. bankrate.com
  • [2] Federal Reserve — G.19 Consumer Credit Statistical Release, Q1 2026. Credit card avg APR 21.47%; personal loan avg APR 11.65%; consumer revolving credit market data. federalreserve.gov
  • [3] Freedom Debt Relief — Debt Relief Seeker Data, February 2026. Average credit card balance $16,769; 88% of debt relief seekers carry credit card balances; age-group breakdowns. freedomdebtrelief.com
  • [4] CNBC Select — "Using a Personal Loan to Pay Off Credit Card Debt." $10K at 22% → $3,749 interest (3yr) vs. 13% personal loan → $2,130 interest = $1,619 saved. Interest calculation verified with standard amortisation formula. cnbc.com
  • [5] Consumer Financial Protection Bureau — TILA Regulation Z. APR disclosure requirements; origination fee inclusion in APR calculation; consumer rights in loan comparison. consumerfinance.gov
  • [6] SoFi — Personal Loan Direct Pay, April 2026. Direct creditor payoff feature; 8.99% APR floor; zero fees; unemployment protection; joint loan option. sofi.com
  • [7] Upgrade — Personal Loan Rates, April 2026. Up to 4% rate discount for direct creditor payoff; 580+ FICO accessible; 9.99%–35.99% APR. upgrade.com
  • [8] NCUA — Q4 2025 Credit Union Data. 18% APR federal CU rate cap; human underwriting for 580+ FICO borrowers; credit union rate advantage for consolidation. ncua.gov
  • [9] myFICO — Credit Score Factors. Credit utilisation 30% of FICO; impact of paying revolving balances to zero; hard inquiry 3–5 point temporary impact. myfico.com
  • [10] NerdWallet — "Personal Loan vs. Balance Transfer Card, 2026." Transfer fee 3%–5%; 0% promo period 12–21 months; comparison framework for balance size decisions. nerdwallet.com