Woman comparing monthly statements, considering refinancing.

Personal Loans

Can you refinance a personal loan?

Updated Oct 06, 2024

Rebecca-Lake.jpg

Written by

James-Heflin.jpg

Reviewed by

Key takeaways:

  • Refinancing a personal loan means replacing an existing loan with a new one.

  • Personal loan refinancing could make sense if you're able to lower your interest rate or reduce monthly payments.

  • Getting multiple rate quotes can help you compare your refinancing options.

A personal loan could help you pay for emergencies, finance a large purchase, or consolidate debt. At some point, you might think about refinancing a personal loan if you want to try to lower your interest rate or get different terms. 

Refinancing can be a smart way to manage your debt if it helps you manage your payments or helps you save on interest. If you're ready to trade an existing personal loan for a new one, we'll walk you through when it makes the most sense. 

Reasons to refinance a personal loan

Personal loans let you borrow a lump sum of money and pay it back with interest. Their flexibility makes them a popular way to borrow. 

Can you refinance a personal loan? Sure, as long as you're able to qualify for a new loan. The better question is when to do it. 

Here are some of the most common reasons to consider refinancing a personal loan. 

1. Your credit score has improved

Credit scores tell lenders how you've managed credit accounts in the past. A higher score could put you in a better position to get approved for personal loans and qualify for lower interest rates. 

Why? Because lenders use credit scores as a guide. A higher score means a higher likelihood that you'll pay back what you borrowed. 

If your credit score has improved since you took out a personal loan, that could be a great reason to consider refinancing. You might be able to get a lower interest rate on the loan, which could lower your payments and reduce the total amount you repay. 

2. You need a lower payment

When you take out a personal loan, one big question to consider is what the payment will be. The goal is to make sure your payments fit your budget. 

Refinancing might be a good option if your financial situation has changed and you need a lower payment. 

For example, maybe your partner is going to be taking six months off work to stay home with your newborn. Refinancing a personal loan could free up some room in your budget while you're temporarily relying on one income. 

Or maybe you're changing jobs to pursue a career path you're excited about, only your new job's starting salary is less than you're making now. You might refinance a personal loan to make it more affordable until your income increases. 

3. You want to pay the loan off faster

Refinancing a personal loan could lower your payments, but it could also increase them if you're switching to a shorter loan term.

Moving to a shorter term could help you pay the loan off in less time. And it could save you on interest charges if your debt is paid off in less time. 

Of course, you don't have to refinance a personal loan to pay it off faster. You could try other repayment strategies, like paying biweekly or making lump-sum payments when extra cash comes your way. 

Those methods could help you chip away at the balance without getting a brand-new loan. 

4. You want to switch rate types

Personal loans can have fixed or variable interest rates

Fixed-rate loans have an interest rate that doesn't change over the life of the loan. You know exactly what your payment will be each month. You can also easily calculate how much the loan will cost in interest. 

Variable-rate loans have an interest rate that can change. If your rate changes, the amount of your payment could also change. 

If you have a variable-rate loan and you're worried about your payments increasing, you might refinance to a fixed-rate loan so you have predictability. 

5. You want a different lender

Personal loan lenders aren't all the same, and some offer better benefits than others. 

If you're unhappy with your current lender's customer service or want access to features you're not getting now, like a rate discount for showing proof of retirement savings, then it might be worth shopping around for a new loan. 

Here's a tip: Get rate quotes from lenders that use a soft credit pull. That way, you can get an idea of what you might pay without impacting your credit standing.

When NOT to refinance a personal loan

Refinancing a personal loan doesn't always make sense. You might think twice about it if any of the following are true:

  • You've almost paid off the loan balance (that means you’ve already paid most of the interest).

  • Your new loan would carry a higher interest rate and/or more fees than your current one.

  • The difference in rates with a refinance loan is negligible.

  • The lender’s fee would negate most or all of any interest savings you might get.

  • Your current lender would charge you a prepayment penalty for paying the loan off early.

  • Refinancing would put you into a longer loan term than you're comfortable with. 

Look at your budget, compare rates, and assess your goals to decide if the time is right for personal loan refinancing. 

Find the right personal loan lender

Whether you're ready to refinance a personal loan or you're borrowing for the first time, your choice of lender matters. The best personal loan is one that offers affordable payments with minimal fees and a low interest rate, based on your credit profile. Getting rate quotes is a good place to start when you're ready to explore your borrowing options.

Author Information

Rebecca-Lake.jpg

Written by

Rebecca is a senior contributing writer and debt expert. She's a Certified Educator in Personal Finance and a banking expert for Forbes Advisor. In addition to writing for online publications, Rebecca owns a personal finance website dedicated to teaching women how to take control of their money.

James-Heflin.jpg

Reviewed by

James is a financial editor for Achieve. He has been an editor for The Ascent (The Motley Fool) and was the arts editor at The Valley Advocate newspaper in Western Massachusetts for many years. He holds an MFA from the University of Massachusetts Amherst and an MA from Hollins University. His book Krakatoa Picnic came out in 2017.

Related Articles

Personal Loans

Use a personal unsecured loan from Achieve, with no collateral, to consolidate high-interest rate debt, make home improvements, or fund a large purchase. Apply now.

personal-loan-for-credit-card-debt.jpg

Personal Loans

Obliterate your high interest credit card debt with a low interest personal loan and get out of debt faster. Our expert tells you how.

Jackie Lam

Author

pros-cons-personal-loan-co-signer.jpg

Personal Loans

There are minor differences between a co-signer and a co-applicant and co-borrower. Both can help save money. Learn the pros and cons of using a co-signer on...

Achieve Logomark

Achieve is the leader in digital personal finance, built to help everyday people move forward on the path to a better financial future.

Footer Trust Pilot Marker

TrustScore 4.8/5

Footer BBB Marker

.

Achieve.com (NMLS ID #138464) operates as a marketing lead generator for affiliates and non-affiliates, and as a broker for loans and debt resolution services offered by its affiliates. We also offer certain mobile applications that allow consumers to view and analyze their finances. We may take applications for our affiliates, but we do not make credit decisions, originate loans, process consumer loan or bill payments, or provide any other financial services. We do not collect any fees or other compensation from consumers.

Any financial solutions for which you may be evaluated for are offered by Service Providers with which we are affiliated and/or compensated by who participate on our website. Terms and conditions apply to each, and not all are available in every state.

Personal loans are available through our affiliate Achieve Personal Loans (NMLS ID #227977), originated by Cross River Bank, a New Jersey State Chartered Commercial Bank and may not be available in all states. All loan and rate terms are subject to eligibility restrictions, application review, credit score, loan amount, loan term, lender approval, credit usage and history. Loans are not available to residents of all states. Minimum loan amounts vary due to state specific legal restrictions. Loan amounts generally range from $5,000 to $50,000, vary by state and are offered based on meeting underwriting conditions and loan purpose. APRs range from 8.99 to 35.99% and include applicable origination fees that vary from 1.99% to 6.99%. The origination fee is deducted from the loan proceeds. Repayment periods range from 24 to 60 months. Example loan: four-year $20,000 loan with an origination fee of 6.99%, a rate of 15.49% and corresponding APR of 19.54%, would have an estimated monthly payment of $561.60 and a total cost of $26,956.80. To qualify for a 8.99% APR loan, a borrower will need excellent credit, a loan amount less than $12,000.00, and a term of 24 months. Adding a co-borrower with sufficient income; using at least eighty-five percent (85%) of the loan proceeds to pay off qualifying existing debt directly; or showing proof of sufficient retirement savings, could help you also qualify for lower rates. Funding time periods are estimates and can vary for each loan request. Same day decisions assume a completed application with all required supporting documentation submitted early enough on a day that our offices are open. Achieve Personal Loans hours are Monday-Friday 6am-8pm MST, and Saturday-Sunday 7am-4pm MST.

© 2024 Achieve.com. All rights reserved. NMLS #138464