Personal Loans Guide

Check Your Options

Get referred with lenders who may offer the loan you’re looking for. No obligation to accept.

Checking your options typically involves a soft credit inquiry. Final approval may require a hard inquiry from the lender.

Resources

Recommended Content

How to consolidate debt with bad credit: a step-by-step plan

How to consolidate debt with bad credit: a step-by-step plan

If you’ve decided that consolidation is probably the right move and your credit score is below 630, this guide walks you through the actual process, what to do first, what to gather, where to apply, and how to avoid the mistakes that turn a useful loan into a more expensive version of the debt you already had.

This isn’t about whether consolidation is a good idea for your situation; if you’re still working through that, the related articles in this cluster cover it. This piece assumes you’ve made the call and are ready to do the work. It’s a sequence, in order.

Key takeaways
Start by listing every debt with balance, APR, and minimum payment, you can’t compare offers without this baseline.
Pull your credit reports (free at AnnualCreditReport.com) and dispute errors before applying, fixes can take 30 days but may move your tier.
Use prequalification with soft credit pulls to compare 2–3 lenders without affecting your score.
Build a budget plan for after the loan funds, without it, balances often rebuild on the cleared cards.

Step 1: Inventory your debts

Open a notes app or spreadsheet and list, for every debt you’d want to consolidate:

  • The creditor name.
  • Current balance.
  • Current APR.
  • Minimum monthly payment.
  • Type of debt (credit card, store card, medical bill, personal loan, etc.).

This is the baseline for every comparison that comes next. You can’t tell whether a consolidation offer is good without knowing what you’re consolidating. Skipping this step is the most common reason people end up with a loan that doesn’t actually save them money.

Once you have the list, calculate your weighted average APR: multiply each balance by its APR, sum those numbers, and divide by the total balance. Write that number down. It’s the rate any consolidation offer needs to beat.

Step 2: Pull your credit reports and check for errors

U.S. consumers can pull their credit reports from each of the three major bureaus for free at AnnualCreditReport.com, the only website authorized by federal law for this. Pull all three (Equifax, Experian, TransUnion) because the same error can appear on one and not the others.

What you’re looking for:

  • Accounts you don’t recognize (potential identity theft).
  • Late payments reported on accounts that were paid on time.
  • Balances that are wrong or higher than what you actually owe.
  • Old debts that should have aged off (most negative items drop after 7 years).
  • Hard inquiries you didn’t authorize.

If you find an error, dispute it directly with the bureau reporting it. The Fair Credit Reporting Act requires the bureau to investigate, usually within 30 days. A successful correction can move your score noticeably, sometimes enough to push you into a better pricing tier.

Did you know?
Your credit score and your credit report aren’t the same thing. The report is the underlying record; the score is calculated from it. Bureaus must give you the report for free, but you sometimes have to pay to see your score from each. For a consolidation application, the score is what matters most, many credit cards and banking apps now show your score for free, which is enough to know your range.

Step 3: Decide which debts to include

You don’t have to consolidate everything. In some situations it makes sense to leave certain debts out:

Leave out: 0% promo balances that won’t expire before payoff

If a credit card balance is on a 0% intro APR with 10 months left and you can pay it off in that time, consolidating it into a 20%+ loan makes the debt more expensive, not less.

Leave out: small debts you can clear in 60–90 days

A $400 balance you’ll pay off in two months doesn’t need to be in a 3-year loan. Including it just adds to the loan principal and the interest you’ll pay over the term.

Include: high-APR cards you’ve been carrying for a while

These are the debts where consolidation pays off, the ones where the math test (your weighted APR vs. the consolidation offer’s APR) shows real savings.

Step 4: Prequalify with multiple lenders

Prequalification is the most important step in the process for bad credit borrowers. It gives you a real APR, term, and monthly payment based on a soft credit check, meaning your credit score is not affected. Hard pulls only happen if you formally apply after accepting an offer.

Apply to 2–3 lenders or use a comparison platform that prequalifies you across multiple lenders with one application. The goal is to see actual offers, not advertised “as low as” rates.

For each prequalified offer, capture:

  • APR (and confirm whether origination fee is included or separate).
  • Loan amount approved.
  • Term length.
  • Monthly payment.
  • Origination fee.
  • Total repayment over the full term.

Step 5: Run the math test on each offer

This is the moment of truth. For each offer, compare the all-in APR (the quoted APR plus the impact of any origination fee) against your weighted average APR from Step 1.

If the offer’s all-in APR is meaningfully lower than your weighted average, the loan saves you money. If it’s similar or higher, the loan is mostly buying you simplicity, fewer due dates, one payment, without real savings. That can still be worth it for some people, but you should know that’s what you’re paying for.

Also compare total repayment to what you’d pay if you stayed on your current debts and aggressively paid them down. Stretching $8,000 in credit card debt across a 5-year loan can sometimes cost more in total interest than a 2-year focused payoff at higher monthly payments.

Step 6: Build the post-loan budget before you sign

This is the step almost everyone skips, and it’s the single biggest reason consolidation loans fail. Once your credit cards are paid off by the new loan, they’ll show $0 balances. Without a plan, those cards quietly fill back up, and now you’re paying both the loan and new card balances.

Before you sign anything, decide:

  • Will you close the cleared credit cards, leave them open with $0 balance, or freeze them? (Closing reduces available credit and can affect your score; freezing is often the better middle path.)
  • What spending categories are causing the debt to build, and what’s your plan to keep them in check?
  • How much margin do you have in your monthly budget after the new loan payment? If it’s tight, you’re one bad month from carrying a card balance again.

Tip: If your budget after the loan payment has zero room for unexpected expenses, the loan term may be too short or the loan amount too high. A loan that’s slightly less aggressive but actually fits your monthly cash flow is much more likely to succeed.

Step 7: Accept the offer and complete the application

Once you’ve identified the offer that passes the math test and fits your budget, you formally apply. At this point the lender does a hard credit pull, which can drop your score by a few points temporarily. Underwriting typically takes 1–3 business days.

If approved, funds are usually disbursed in 1–7 business days, depending on the lender and your bank’s processing time. Some lenders will pay your existing creditors directly; others deposit the funds in your account and you handle the payoffs yourself. Direct pay is generally the safer option if it’s available.

Step 8: Pay off the old debts immediately

If the lender does not pay your creditors directly, transfer the funds to each card or loan as soon as the consolidation loan disburses. The longer the cash sits in your checking account, the higher the chance some of it gets used for something else and a balance remains on the cards.

After payoff, request payoff confirmations from each creditor in writing. Verify in 30 days that each account shows $0 balance and is reporting correctly to the bureaus. Errors at this stage are not common, but they do happen, and catching them early is much easier.

Step 9: Maintain the plan

The first 6 months after consolidation are the most important. Set up autopay on the new loan so you never miss a payment, late payments at this stage do more damage than they would on most other debts. Stick to the post-loan budget you built in Step 6. Check your credit report at the 3-month and 6-month marks to confirm the consolidation is reporting correctly and your score is stabilizing or recovering.

CFPB research has noted that a meaningful share of debt consolidation borrowers accumulate new credit card balances within 12–18 months of the loan. The borrowers who avoid this aren’t lucky, they planned for it. Steps 6 and 9 are what separates a consolidation that works from one that just kicks the problem down the road.

If you can’t qualify (or the offers aren’t worth taking)

If prequalification doesn’t return any offer that passes the math test, you have options that don’t involve a new loan:

  • Call your credit card issuers directly and ask about hardship programs. The CFPB recommends this for borrowers struggling with payments, many issuers can lower your APR or pause fees temporarily.
  • Work with a nonprofit credit counseling agency on a debt management plan. They negotiate with creditors on your behalf and combine your payments without you taking out a new loan.
  • Use the avalanche method on your existing debts: pay minimums on everything, put every extra dollar toward the highest-APR balance until it’s gone, then move to the next. The math sometimes beats refinancing.

The bottom line

Consolidating debt with bad credit is a process, not a single decision. Done in order, inventory, credit reports, prequalification, math test, budget plan, application, payoff, maintenance, it can shorten your path to a $0 balance. Done out of order, or with steps skipped, it usually leaves you in the same place you started, just with a different lender on your statement.

The single most important takeaway: build the post-loan budget before you sign. The loan is the easier part. The behavior change is what makes it work.

Continue reading
What is debt consolidation? A plain-language guide
Debt consolidation loans for bad credit: what to expect
Best debt consolidation loans 2026: how to compare offers

Author

Alexandra Velandia

Alexandra Velandia is a digital marketing executive with over 20 years of experience specializing in financial services and personal loan lead generation. As Founder and CMO of Kickoff Advertising, she has designed and operated lead acquisition and routing platforms across personal loans, title loans, and subprime lending markets, with deep expertise in regulatory compliance (TCPA, TrustedForm, Jornaya, OLA). She holds a Master’s in Digital Marketing, a Postgraduate in Consumer Behavior, and is currently completing an MBA at Florida Atlantic University. Bilingual in English and Spanish.

Important Information

We want you informed, protected, and confident.

If you ever feel uncertain, take your time,  ask questions, compare options, and choose what’s best for you.

Redirecting...
You are being transferred to a third-party website where you may view loan offers.