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

Debt consolidation loans for bad credit: what to actually expect

Debt consolidation loans for bad credit: what to actually expect

If your credit score is below 630, you’ve probably noticed that most articles about debt consolidation aren’t really written for you. The headline rates, single digits, advertised everywhere, are reserved for borrowers with strong credit. The question that actually matters when you have bad credit is different: can you qualify, what rate will you really get, and is the loan worth taking?

This guide answers those questions honestly. We cover the score ranges lenders typically work with, the APRs you should expect rather than hope for, the requirements that go beyond your credit score, and how to tell quickly whether a consolidation offer is going to help you or just reshuffle your debt at a similar cost.

Key takeaways
Borrowers with credit scores between 580 and 629 can usually qualify for a personal loan, but should expect APRs roughly in the 20%–35.99% range.
Some lenders consider applicants with scores in the 500s; income, employment, and debt-to-income ratio carry more weight at lower scores.
Consolidation only makes sense when the new APR, including fees, is meaningfully lower than the weighted average of what you’re paying now.
A soft credit pull during prequalification lets you see real offers without affecting your score.

1. Can you actually qualify with bad credit?

Yes, the subprime personal loan market exists specifically for borrowers in this range. The honest qualifier is that “qualifying” and “getting a rate that helps you” aren’t the same thing.

Here’s how lenders typically segment credit profiles in 2026:

FICO rangeTierWhat to expect
670+Prime / near-primeLowest APRs available; widest lender choice
630–669FairApproval likely; mid-range APRs
580–629Bad / fairApproval possible at most subprime lenders; APRs 20%–35.99%
Below 580PoorSome lenders will consider; income and DTI become decisive

CFPB data referenced in industry reporting from 2025 indicates borrowers in the 580–669 range received average personal loan APRs in the high teens to high twenties, meaningfully cheaper than the 20%–30%+ that most credit cards charge for the same profile, but a long way from the rates advertised on banner ads.

2. What lenders look at beyond your credit score

When your credit score isn’t strong, the rest of your financial picture does more of the work in the underwriting decision. Most subprime lenders evaluate four things:

Income and stability

A verifiable monthly income, usually $800 or more, depending on the lender, and a stable source for it. Employment, self-employment, retirement, and disability benefits all generally count.

Debt-to-income ratio (DTI)

Your monthly debt payments divided by your gross monthly income. Most lenders prefer DTI below 50% for subprime applicants. If yours is higher, paying down a small balance before applying can move you into a better tier.

Recent payment history

Recent late payments, charge-offs, or collections weigh more than older ones. Six clean months can shift an underwriting decision noticeably.

State of residence

State law caps how much a lender can charge in your state. A few states limit APR to 36% for personal loans; others allow higher rates. Where you live affects which lenders will offer you a loan and at what cost.

Did you know?
A soft credit pull during prequalification lets you see your real offer, actual APR, term, and monthly payment, without any impact on your credit score. The hard pull only happens if you accept the offer and complete the application. This is the safest way to comparison-shop with bad credit.

3. When a bad-credit consolidation loan actually helps

The math test is the same regardless of credit score, but it’s even more important here because subprime APRs are higher to begin with.

Run this quick check before applying:

  • Calculate your weighted average APR across the debts you want to consolidate (each balance × its APR, summed, divided by total balance).
  • Compare it to the APR on the consolidation offer, and add in any origination fee, which can range from 1% to 8% on subprime loans.
  • Confirm the monthly payment fits your budget without forcing you to skip essentials or fall back on credit cards.
  • Check the total repayment cost over the full term, not just the monthly amount.

If the consolidation loan is meaningfully cheaper than your current weighted average and the monthly payment is realistic, it’s likely the right call. If the rate is similar to what you’re already paying, the loan won’t fix the underlying problem.

4. When to be cautious

There are a few situations where a bad-credit consolidation loan is more likely to hurt than help. Watch for these signs:

The APR is at or near the legal cap

If the offered APR is 35.99%, the loan is at the upper limit and may not be cheaper than the credit card debt you’re consolidating. Compare carefully.

The term is dramatically longer than your current debt

Stretching a 2-year credit card paydown into a 7-year personal loan often costs more in total interest, even at a lower rate.

Origination fees are very high

A 6%–8% origination fee on a $10,000 loan means $600–$800 is taken before you ever receive the funds. That eats into the savings the lower APR was supposed to deliver.

You’re being asked to put up collateral for unsecured debt

If a lender pushes you toward a secured loan against your car or home for what was unsecured credit card debt, the FTC and CFPB both flag this as a meaningful risk. Falling behind on the secured loan puts the asset on the line.

5. Alternatives worth considering

If the consolidation offers you receive aren’t meaningfully better than your current rates, there are other options that don’t involve taking on new debt at all.

  • Calling your credit card issuers directly to ask about a hardship program or temporary lower APR. The CFPB recommends this as a first step for borrowers struggling with payments.
  • Working with a nonprofit credit counseling agency on a debt management plan, they can often negotiate lower interest with creditors and combine your payments without you taking out a new loan.
  • Using the avalanche method (paying minimums on everything, extra on the highest-rate balance) on your existing debt, sometimes the simple math beats refinancing.

Tip: If your best consolidation offer is roughly equal to your current weighted APR, the loan is mostly buying you simplicity, not savings. Decide whether the simpler payment is worth the application, the credit pull, and the longer term.

6. The bottom line

Bad credit doesn’t disqualify you from debt consolidation, but it does change the math. The key is honest comparison: your real weighted APR today, against a real prequalified offer with all fees included. If the new number is clearly lower and the payment fits your budget, consolidation can shorten your path out of debt. If it’s not, the loan is solving a different problem, and probably not the one you have.

Many lenders allow you to prequalify with a soft credit check before committing. That’s the cleanest first step: see your actual offer, then run the comparison.

Continue reading
What is debt consolidation? A plain-language guide
How to consolidate debt with bad credit (step-by-step)
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.