Overview
Some 26.4 million U.S. borrowers held $275 billion in personal-loan debt last year. Personal loans are commonly used to consolidate high-interest credit-card balances into a single, fixed-rate installment loan. That move can cut total interest paid and create disciplined repayment, but it can also enable new spending that raises overall indebtedness.
How personal loans save money
Personal loans convert revolving, variable-rate balances into a fixed monthly payment with a stated annual percentage rate (APR). Fixed payments remove uncertainty and force amortization of principal, which typically lowers total interest versus carrying high-rate credit-card debt.
Example calculation (representative):
- Original balances: $38,000 on credit cards carrying 22%–26% APR. For a representative comparison, use the midpoint 24% APR.
- Consolidation: $38,000 moved into a 3-year personal loan at 9.5% APR.
Using standard fixed-rate amortization:
- Monthly payment at 24% APR (36 months): approximately $1,492; total paid ≈ $53,712; total interest ≈ $15,712.
- Monthly payment at 9.5% APR (36 months): approximately $1,216; total paid ≈ $43,776; total interest ≈ $5,776.
Net interest savings in this representative scenario: roughly $9,900 over three years. The example illustrates a clear, quantifiable outcome: when APR spreads are large, converting to a lower fixed APR can save thousands and shorten repayment timelines.
When personal loans increase your debt
A personal loan reduces interest on existing balances but does not change borrower behavior. If consolidation frees up revolving credit and the borrower continues to charge at high APRs, total outstanding debt can increase. Common pathways to higher debt:
- Reusing paid-off credit limits and accumulating new card balances at 20%+ APR.
- Taking a longer-term personal loan with a lower monthly payment but paying more interest over time if the loan term extends far beyond the payoff horizon the borrower can sustain.
- Incurring origination fees or prepayment penalties that offset savings from a lower APR.
In short: lower APRs reduce the cost of existing balances; only disciplined repayment prevents net indebtedness from rising.
Decision checklist for institutional and professional readers
- APR comparison: Compare the weighted average APR on existing revolving balances to the offered personal loan APR (annual percentage rate, APR). Large spreads favor consolidation.
- Loan term and amortization: Shorter terms increase monthly payments but reduce total interest. Model 24- and 36-month amortizations to see trade-offs.
- Fees and penalties: Include origination fees, prepayment penalties, and any late fees in the total-cost analysis.
- Behavioral risk: Estimate the probability of resumed revolving usage after consolidation; factor in expected additional balances and incremental interest costs.
- Cash-flow impact: Evaluate monthly payment differences and their effect on liquidity and default risk.
Modeling implications for credit risk and portfolio analysis
For credit analysts and traders assessing consumer-credit portfolios, personal-loan uptake signals both credit demand and potential credit quality improvement through amortization. Key modeling inputs:
- Market size and growth: $275 billion in outstanding personal-loan balances and 26.4 million borrowers indicate sizable unsecured credit exposure.
- APR spread distributions: Larger spreads between card APRs and personal-loan APRs typically drive refinance activity; track spread compression as a potential margin pressure for lenders.
- Behavioral offsets: Assume a portion of borrowers will re-lever after consolidation. Stress scenarios should include incremental revolving balances equal to a percentage of consolidated amounts.
Practical recommendations
- Run a net present value (NPV) or total-cost calculation that includes fees and realistic repayment terms before refinancing.
- Favor consolidation when the personal-loan APR is materially lower than the weighted average card APR and the borrower can commit to a disciplined repayment schedule.
- Avoid refinancing into longer terms solely to lower monthly payments unless the borrower’s cash flow requires it; longer terms can increase cumulative interest.
- Monitor credit utilization post-consolidation. Continued high utilization signals behavioral risk and potential backsliding into higher-cost debt.
Key takeaways
- "When the APR spread is large and borrower behavior is disciplined, personal loans can save thousands in interest and shorten payoff timelines."
- "If consolidation frees spending capacity and behavior doesn’t change, total debt can increase and erase interest savings."
Quick reference (for models and memos)
- Market scale: 26.4 million borrowers, $275 billion outstanding in personal-loan balances.
- Representative case: $38,000 consolidated from 24% APR credit-card balances to a 9.5% APR, 36-month personal loan can save ~ $9,900 in interest over three years (rounded figure from amortization comparison).
- Watch: APR spreads, loan term, fees, and behavioral re-levering when assessing borrower outcomes.
This analysis is intended to be used as a framework for evaluation and modeling of personal-loan trade-offs in credit portfolios, balance-sheet analysis, and borrower-level decision-making.
