⚡ Quick Answer
A personal loan provides a fixed lump sum at a fixed interest rate, repaid in equal monthly instalments over a fixed term (typically 1-7 years). In mid-2026, best rates for £7,500-£25,000 loans over 3-5 years start around 5.9-7.5% APR for good-credit applicants. Personal loans make sense for: paying off high-APR credit card debt at a lower rate; funding a specific large purchase you’ll repay over time; debt consolidation. They don’t make sense for: ongoing spending; when you can save up in a reasonable timeframe instead; when you’re already financially stretched.
A personal loan is one of the most straightforward forms of borrowing: a fixed amount, at a fixed rate, with a fixed monthly payment and a clear end date. This predictability is its main appeal. The question is when this type of borrowing makes genuine financial sense versus when it creates unnecessary debt.
How Personal Loan Interest Works
Personal loans charge a fixed APR — your monthly payment is the same from the first month to the last. The “representative APR” advertised is the rate offered to at least 51% of approved applicants; if your credit profile is weaker, you may be offered a higher rate.
Interest is calculated on the reducing balance — as you repay principal, the interest portion of each payment falls. On a £10,000 loan at 7% over 4 years, total interest paid is approximately £1,480. The monthly payment is approximately £239.
When a Personal Loan Makes Financial Sense
Paying off high-interest credit card debt
Moving £5,000 of credit card debt at 25% APR to a personal loan at 7% APR saves approximately £900/year in interest. The personal loan has a defined end date; the credit card balance could roll indefinitely. This switch is financially rational if you don’t run the credit card back up after consolidating.
Funding a specific large purchase
A home improvement that adds genuine value and exceeds your current savings, a car needed for work, or another defined purchase with a clear benefit case. The loan has a clear payoff date and purpose.
Debt consolidation with a lower blended rate
Combining multiple debts (credit cards, store cards, overdraft) into a single lower-rate loan simplifies management and typically reduces total interest. The condition that makes this work: the consolidated debts stay consolidated — not run back up while the loan is being repaid.
When a Personal Loan Doesn’t Make Sense
- Funding regular day-to-day expenses — a sign of persistent overspending that borrowing makes worse
- When you could save up within 6-12 months — paying 7% for 3 years costs more than waiting
- When you’re already financially stretched — adding a fixed monthly commitment reduces flexibility
- For investments — borrowing to invest amplifies losses as well as gains
For understanding how personal loans compare with credit cards for different borrowing purposes, our article on how to pay off debt faster covers the comparison in detail.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I repay a personal loan early?
Usually yes, but some lenders charge an early repayment fee (typically 1-2 months’ additional interest). Check the terms before applying if you think you might want to repay early.
Does a personal loan affect my mortgage application?
Yes — it’s a liability that appears on your credit file and reduces your apparent affordability. If you’re planning to apply for a mortgage within the next 6-12 months, adding a personal loan could affect what you’re offered. Time large borrowing decisions around your planned mortgage application.
For current personal loan rates across amounts and terms, MoneySuperMarket’s loan comparison provides a broad market view.
