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Personal loans by credit score: what changes as yours climbs

Last updated: July 12, 2026. Rates and terms change frequently — always check with the lender.

The short version

  • Your credit score doesn't just decide whether you get a loan — it decides what the loan costs, which lenders compete for you, and how much room you have to be picky.
  • Good credit (roughly the high 600s to low 700s): most mainstream lenders will quote you. Your job is to collect several soft-pull quotes and compare the APR (annual percentage rate — the yearly cost with fees included).
  • Excellent credit (mid 700s and up): lenders compete for you. Zero-fee loans and rate-matching offers exist at this tier — use that leverage.
  • Fair or rebuilding credit: different playbook entirely — start at loans for fair credit.
  • Score bands are rules of thumb, not laws. Lenders also weigh your income and existing debts — check your debt-to-income ratio.

First, what "good" and "excellent" mean

Most lenders use FICO scores, which run from 300 to 850. FICO publishes general bands — scores from about 670 to 739 rate as "good," 740 to 799 as "very good," and 800-plus as "exceptional." (FICO’s published ranges ↗) Every lender draws its own cutoffs, and none of them owe you the loan just because your number looks nice. But the bands are a fair map of how lenders see you.

Good credit: you qualify almost everywhere — so shop hard

At this tier, the mainstream lenders on our personal-loan page will generally give you a real quote. The mistake most people make is taking the first offer. Quotes at the same score can differ by a lot, and collecting them is nearly free:

Use soft-pull rate checks first. Several verified lenders — SoFi, Discover, Upstart, Best Egg, Upgrade, and Prosper among them — advertise a rate check that won't affect your score. Collect three or more before you commit to anything.
Watch the origination fee, not just the rate. A lower rate with a fee bolted on can cost more than a plain higher rate. The APR combines both — compare APRs.
Price a credit union too. PenFed, Alliant, and other broad-membership credit unions often price aggressively at this tier and are easy to join. They rarely appear in ads, which is exactly why we list them.

If your score sits at the bottom edge of "good," a co-borrower or a few months of credit cleanup can move you into better pricing. Sometimes the cheapest loan is the one you wait two months for.

Excellent credit: make lenders compete

Above roughly the mid-700s, you're the customer every lender wants, and the market behaves accordingly:

Zero-fee loans are the norm, not the exception. LightStream — which says plainly it's built for good-to-excellent credit — advertises no fees at all. SoFi's fee is optional. At this tier, paying an origination fee should be a deliberate choice, not a default.
Rate-matching exists. LightStream's Rate Beat program says it will beat a competing unsecured-loan offer by a tenth of a point (conditions apply). That only works if you have a competing offer — one more reason to collect quotes.
Mind the hard-pull lenders. LightStream doesn't do soft-pull prequalification; applying is a hard inquiry. With excellent credit, the smart order is: soft-pull quotes everywhere you can, then spend your hard inquiry on the finalist. See the full matchup: SoFi vs LightStream →
Ask whether you should borrow this way at all. With excellent credit and a home, a home equity product may price lower for large projects — with the serious trade-off that your house backs the loan. Compare home equity options →

What your score doesn't control

Lenders also look at your income, your existing debt payments (your DTI — debt-to-income ratio), and how steady your work history looks. A high score with a maxed-out budget still gets declined. Before applying anywhere, spend one minute on the DTI calculator — it's the same math the lender will run.

Questions people ask

Does checking my rate hurt my credit score?
A soft-pull rate check doesn't. A full application (hard inquiry) has a small, usually temporary effect. The lenders' own pages say which kind they use — and so do our comparisons.
Will many applications wreck my score?
Hard inquiries add up, so don't scatter full applications everywhere. Do your shopping with soft pulls, then apply once or twice. (Mortgage, auto, and student loans get special treatment: FICO’s own site says several inquiries inside a short shopping window — 14 to 45 days depending on the score version — count as one. Personal-loan inquiries generally count separately. FICO’s explanation ↗)
My score is below "good" — now what?
Read loans for fair credit. Different lenders, different tactics, and several alternatives (credit unions, CDFIs, employer loans) that beat what the ad-heavy lenders will offer you.
Reviewed by AI and James Mills, retired financial planner with Professional Designations (25-year career), former FL mortgage and real estate broker. Lenders named here are verified as real and currently operating; inclusion is not an endorsement. Rates and terms come from the lender — always check the source.

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