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Bad-credit qualification guide

A practical reality check for borrowers with subprime credit. Real FICO ranges, what lenders actually pull versus what they claim, the APR you should expect at each tier, and the federal protections you have when you apply.

  • "Bad credit" range: FICO 300–579
  • "Fair credit" range: FICO 580–669
  • Mainstream loan minimum: Usually 580 – 600
  • No-credit-check products: Available, materially more expensive
  • Subprime APR range: 36% – 800%+
  • Score-build timeline: 6 – 12 months realistic
Shania Brenson
Written by

Last updated on

A practical reality check for borrowers with subprime credit. Real FICO ranges, what lenders actually pull versus what they claim, the APR you should expect at each tier, and the federal protections you have when you apply.

  • "Bad credit" range: FICO 300–579
  • "Fair credit" range: FICO 580–669
  • Mainstream loan minimum: Usually 580 – 600
  • No-credit-check products: Available, materially more expensive
  • Subprime APR range: 36% – 800%+
  • Score-build timeline: 6 – 12 months realistic
Shania Brenson
Written by

Last updated on

Reality check before you apply

Subprime borrowing is expensive because pricing reflects default risk. A credit-builder loan, a secured credit card, or two on-time utility payments can move a sub-580 score into the 580 to 620 zone within 6 to 12 months — opening access to mainstream personal loans at 36% APR or below.

If the cash need is real and immediate, the cheapest options are a Payday Alternative Loan from a federal credit union at 28% APR, or a cash advance app at $0 to $5. Both beat a payday loan by a factor of ten or more on the same emergency.

See the full options table →

What “bad credit” actually means

In the FICO scoring system used by most US lenders, a score below 580 is considered “poor” and 580 to 669 is “fair”. Borrowers in these ranges still qualify for credit — payday loans, tribal loans, secured credit cards, credit-builder loans, and some subprime personal loans. What changes is the APR and the documentation required, not whether borrowing is possible at all.

The five FICO tiers in plain English

The FICO 8 model — used by roughly 90 percent of top US lenders — divides credit scores into five tiers from 300 to 850. Below 580 is “poor” credit and 580 to 669 is “fair”. The score reflects payment history (35% weight), amounts owed (30%), length of credit history (15%), credit mix (10%), and new credit (10%). A score under 580 does not block you from credit, but it materially raises the price.[7]

Poor

300 – 579

Most mainstream lenders decline. Realistic options: payday, tribal, secured card, credit-builder loan. Subprime personal-loan APRs run 100 – 200%+ when available.

Fair

580 – 669

Subprime personal loans available at 36 – 160% APR. Some credit unions and fintech lenders (Upgrade, LendingPoint, OppLoans) start lending here.

Good

670 – 739

Mainstream personal loans 12 – 36% APR. Most major banks and credit unions will approve. Credit cards available at standard pricing.

Very good

740 – 799

Personal loans 8 – 18% APR. Best-rate credit cards. Auto loans near manufacturer-promoted rates.

Exceptional

800 – 850

The cheapest available pricing on every product. Personal loans below 10% APR. Best mortgage and auto rates.

Range numbers above are FICO 8 thresholds published by Fair Isaac Corporation and republished by the CFPB. VantageScore 3.0 uses similar but slightly different bands. Most US lenders pull FICO 8; some pull both. You can see your own FICO 8 score for free at most major credit card issuers and at MyFICO.com.[7]

What lenders actually pull when you apply

When you apply for a loan, the lender runs one or more checks to estimate default risk. The major bureaus — Equifax, Experian, TransUnion — are one source. Alternative-data bureaus (Clarity Services, Factor Trust, DataX), bank-transaction data through Plaid or Yodlee, payroll data, and rent-payment history are all increasingly common. “No credit check” usually means the lender skips the major bureaus and uses alternative data instead. The Fair Credit Reporting Act applies to all of these data sources, not just to FICO-scored bureaus.[1]

Check type What it pulls Affects your score? Used by
Hard inquiry Full credit report + FICO from one of the three major bureaus Yes — small short-term drop Bank personal loans, mortgages, auto loans, premium credit cards
Soft inquiry Full credit report from a major bureau, no impact on score No Pre-qualification, employer checks, your own self-checks
Alternative-data check Clarity Services, Factor Trust, DataX — payment history on subprime loans No (does not affect FICO) Most payday lenders, many tribal lenders, some installment lenders
Bank-transaction verification 60-day transaction history via Plaid or Yodlee No Cash advance apps, many online subprime lenders
Payroll verification Direct payroll data through The Work Number or similar No Earned-wage access apps, employer-partnered lenders
“No credit check” Almost always one of the four rows above — rarely zero underwriting Varies Payday loans, pawnshop loans, some tribal lenders

What you can actually qualify for, by score tier

If your FICO is below 580, your realistic borrowing options are payday loans, tribal loans, secured credit cards, credit-builder loans, cash advance apps, and Payday Alternative Loans from federal credit unions. If your FICO is 580 to 669, subprime personal loans from fintech lenders join that list at 36 to 160 percent APR. The cheapest credit always comes from the highest score — but the cheapest credit available at every score tier is almost always a federal credit union product.

Product Typical APR Loan range Minimum FICO
Cash advance app
Dave, EarnIn, MoneyLion
0% (tip or subscription) $25 – $500 None — payroll history
Payday Alternative Loan (PAL)[11]
Federal credit union
28% cap (NCUA) $200 – $2,000 None — credit-union member
Secured credit card
Discover it Secured, Capital One Platinum Secured
22 – 29% Up to deposit ($200+) None — refundable deposit
Credit-builder loan[10]
Self, Credit Strong, credit union
10 – 16% $300 – $1,000 None — score-build product
Subprime personal loan
OppLoans, Upgrade, LendingPoint
36 – 160% $500 – $5,000 Usually 580 – 600
Payday loan
CDDTL or state-equivalent
300 – 521% $100 – $1,000 None — income + checking account
Tribal loan
Sovereign tribal authority
400 – 800%+ $100 – $5,000 None — income + checking account

The cheapest credit available to a subprime borrower is almost always a Payday Alternative Loan from a federal credit union or a cash advance app. Both beat payday and tribal loans by a factor of ten or more on the same emergency.

Six things that raise your odds without raising your score

Six practical levers move approval probability without waiting for a score change: document your income upfront, keep one checking account active for at least 60 days, apply for the right tier of product, shop within a 14-day window, ensure your application matches your bureau-on-file information, and time the application to a higher account balance. These mechanics are not visible from the outside but they materially change your approval probability.

  1. Document income before you apply

    Two consecutive pay stubs, a 60-day bank statement, or a recent tax return. Lenders approve faster when income proof is attached, not requested after submission.

  2. Keep one checking account active 60+ days

    Subprime lenders verify your account through Plaid. A fresh account flags as risk. An account with 60+ days of payroll deposits and no overdrafts reads as stable.

  3. Match the product to your tier

    Applying for a 36% APR personal loan with a 540 FICO will almost always decline. Apply within the tier you are in. Each declined application is wasted effort.

  4. Shop within a 14-day window

    FICO bundles multiple personal-loan inquiries within 14 days as a single inquiry. Mortgage and auto loans get 45 days. Use the window — do not space applications out.

  5. Match application to bureau data

    Address, phone, and full legal name on your application must match what the credit bureaus already have on file. Mismatches trigger manual review and decline more often.

  6. Time the application to higher balance

    Apply when your checking balance is highest — usually within 2 to 5 days after payday. Bank-transaction underwriting weighs current balance, not just deposit history.

Your rights when you apply with bad credit

Federal consumer protection law applies the same way at every score tier. The Equal Credit Opportunity Act bars discrimination on protected grounds. The Fair Credit Reporting Act gives you the right to dispute errors in your report. The Truth in Lending Act requires the lender to disclose the APR and total cost before you sign. These protections do not change because your score is low.

  • No discrimination in credit

    ECOA · 15 U.S.C. § 1691[2]

    A lender cannot deny credit on the basis of race, color, religion, national origin, sex, marital status, age, or because you receive public assistance. Score-based denial is legal — discrimination on these grounds is not.

  • Adverse-action notice

    ECOA · 15 U.S.C. § 1691(d)[2]

    If you are denied credit, the lender must tell you the principal reasons in writing within 30 days. The notice must explain whether the decision used a credit report and how to get a free copy.

  • Free credit reports

    FCRA · 15 U.S.C. § 1681[1]

    You are entitled to a free credit report from each major bureau every week through annualcreditreport.com[6]. Review reports before applying for any major loan to catch and dispute errors.

  • Right to dispute errors

    FCRA · 15 U.S.C. § 1681i[1]

    If you find an error on your credit report, you have the right to dispute it with both the bureau and the furnisher. The bureau must investigate within 30 days. Roughly 25% of US credit reports contain a material error.

  • APR and cost disclosure

    TILA · 15 U.S.C. § 1601[3]

    Before you sign any loan, the lender must disclose the APR, finance charge, total of payments, and payment schedule in a standardized TILA box. If the disclosure is missing or wrong, you may have grounds to rescind.

  • CFPB complaint channel

    CFPA · 12 U.S.C. § 5481[5]

    If a lender violates any of the rights above, file a complaint at consumerfinance.gov/complaint[8]. The CFPB routes complaints to the company and tracks responses. Public complaint records can prompt enforcement.

Six red flags in subprime lending

The FTC, the CFPB, and state attorneys general have prosecuted subprime lending schemes for two decades. The patterns are stable. If any three of the six signals below appear in your lender’s application or marketing, treat it as a predatory operator and walk away. Legitimate subprime lenders disclose APR upfront, take no advance fees, give you time to read the contract, and do not promise guaranteed approval.

  1. Guaranteed approval claim

    No legitimate lender guarantees approval before reviewing your application. “Guaranteed approval” marketing is an FTC §5 deceptive-practice trigger and a sign of predatory operations.

  2. Advance fees

    A legitimate lender deducts fees from the loan proceeds at funding. Any lender asking for an upfront wire, gift card, or “processing fee” before approval is an advance-fee fraud.

  3. No APR disclosure

    TILA requires APR disclosure before signing. A lender who shows only the dollar fee, or hides the APR until the loan agreement, is violating federal law. Walk away.

  4. Pressure to sign immediately

    “This rate is only for the next hour” or “we have one slot left at this price”. Legitimate lenders give you time to read the contract. Pressure tactics indicate predatory pricing.

  5. No physical address or regulator

    A legitimate lender publishes its corporate address, state license number, and regulator. A lender with only a P.O. Box, no license, and no regulator listed is operating outside compliance.

  6. Threats of legal action before default

    Threats of immediate lawsuit, arrest, or wage garnishment during the application process are FDCPA violations and signs of a scam. Real lenders never threaten legal action before a loan exists.

If you have 6 to 12 months, build credit first

Subprime borrowing exists because mainstream credit is unavailable. The cheapest way to permanently change your borrowing options is to move your score above 580. Four mechanisms reliably do this within 6 to 12 months: a credit-builder loan, a secured credit card, becoming an authorized user on a family member’s account, and reporting your rent and utility payments through a third-party service. All four are cheaper than a single payday or tribal loan.

Credit-builder loan

  • Typical APR: 10 – 16%
  • Loan size: $300 – $1,000
  • Term: 12 – 24 months
  • Score impact: +40 to +100 points

The lender holds the loan amount in a savings account while you make monthly payments. Payments report to all three major bureaus. At the end of the term you receive the principal back. Self, Credit Strong, and most credit unions offer this product.[10]

Secured credit card

  • Typical APR: 22 – 29%
  • Required deposit: $200 – $2,000
  • Reports to bureaus: All three majors
  • Score impact: +30 to +80 points

You deposit cash as collateral and receive a credit line equal to the deposit. Use it for one or two recurring bills, pay in full each month, and let it report. Discover it Secured and Capital One Platinum Secured are the most-used products. Your deposit is refundable once your score qualifies for an unsecured card.

Authorized user on a family card

  • Typical APR: $0
  • Required: Family member’s consent
  • Reports to bureaus: Issuer-dependent
  • Score impact: +20 to +50 points

A family member adds you as authorized user on their existing credit card. The card’s payment history starts reporting on your credit file. You do not need to use the card. Most major issuers report authorized users to all three bureaus — Capital One, Chase, and Discover all do.

Rent and utility reporting

  • Cost: $0 – $10/month
  • Backreport available: Up to 24 months
  • Reports to bureaus: Varies by service
  • Score impact: +10 to +40 points

Services like Experian Boost, RentTrack, and Rental Kharma report on-time rent and utility payments to one or more bureaus. The effect is smaller than a credit-builder loan but takes minutes to set up and works even if you cannot afford a deposit.

You have worked through the options. You still need to borrow today.

NOT a lender. 15M Finance, Inc. is a Texas-registered Credit Services Organization. We route your request to lenders in our network. We do not lend, decide, or guarantee approval.

Before you submit, confirm three things

If you have answered yes to all three of these, our network can route a request to subprime lenders who will respond independently with offers.

  • You have checked annualcreditreport.com for errors that may be lowering your score.[6]
  • You have considered the cheaper alternatives — PAL, cash advance app, secured card, credit-builder loan.
  • You have read the federal protections in Section 05 and know what rights you have if a lender violates them.

After you submit, lenders in our network respond within minutes. Compare the APR, finance charge, and total of payments across offers before signing anything.

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Questions we get asked the most

Can I get a loan with a FICO score under 580?

Yes, but your realistic options are payday loans, tribal loans, cash advance apps, secured credit cards, and credit-builder loans. Mainstream personal loans typically require 580 to 600 minimum FICO. The cost of a sub-580 loan is materially higher than the cost of building credit for 6 to 12 months first — a credit-builder loan or secured credit card will usually move you above 580 within that window.

What does "no credit check" actually mean?

It usually means the lender does not pull from Equifax, Experian, or TransUnion. Most lenders still verify income through bank transaction data (Plaid, Yodlee), payroll, or alternative-data bureaus like Clarity Services and Factor Trust. “No credit check” is rarely “no underwriting at all” — and the alternative-data bureaus are still covered by the Fair Credit Reporting Act.

How can I improve my approval odds without raising my score?

Document income with two consecutive pay stubs or 60 days of bank statements, keep a checking account active for at least 60 days, apply for one product at a time within a 14-day window, ensure the address and phone number on your application match what the credit bureaus already have on file, and apply early in the month when your balance is higher. These six mechanics raise approval probability without waiting for a score change.

Do multiple loan applications hurt my credit score?

For most personal loans, the FICO model treats multiple hard inquiries within a 14-day shopping window as a single inquiry. Mortgage and auto inquiries get a 45-day window. Payday and tribal lenders typically use soft pulls or alternative data, neither of which affects your FICO score. Subprime fintech lenders increasingly do pre-qualification with soft pulls before any hard inquiry.

Can a lender deny me because of my credit score?

Yes, credit score is a legal underwriting factor. However the Equal Credit Opportunity Act prohibits denial on the basis of race, color, religion, national origin, sex, marital status, age, or because you receive public assistance. If you are denied for credit, the lender must tell you the principal reasons in writing within 30 days through an adverse-action notice. The notice must explain whether the decision used a credit report and how to obtain a free copy.

What is the cheapest way to borrow with bad credit?

A Payday Alternative Loan from a federal credit union, capped at 28% APR by NCUA rule, is usually the cheapest credit option for subprime borrowers. A cash advance app charges $0 to $5. A credit-builder loan from a credit union or fintech builds your score while you repay. All three beat a payday loan on cost by a factor of ten or more. The cheapest credit at every score tier is almost always a federal credit union product.

Shania Brenson Verified Expert

Consumer Finance Writer – Primary Author

Shania has covered consumer lending, short-term credit, and state-level financial regulation for nine years. Her work on California payday loan legislation has been cited in the California Financial Review and the National Consumer Law Center blog. She independently reviewed the CDDTA statutory text and DFPI enforcement data used in this article.

9 yrs consumer finance

CDDTA specialist

CFPB regulation research

Government & legal references — primary sources cited on this page

  1. [1]
    Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA)

    15 U.S.C. § 1681 — accuracy, dispute rights, and consumer reporting agency rules.

  2. [2]
    Equal Credit Opportunity Act (ECOA)

    15 U.S.C. § 1691 — prohibits credit discrimination and requires adverse-action notices.

  3. [3]
    Truth in Lending Act (TILA)

    15 U.S.C. § 1601 et seq. — APR, finance charge, and cost disclosure requirements.

  4. [4]
    Fair Debt Collection Practices Act (FDCPA)

    15 U.S.C. § 1692 — federal limits on debt collection conduct.

  5. [5]
    Consumer Financial Protection Act (CFPA)

    12 U.S.C. § 5481 — establishes CFPB authority over consumer financial products and services.

  6. [6]
    AnnualCreditReport.com

    The federally authorized source for free weekly credit reports from Equifax, Experian, and TransUnion.

  7. [7]
    CFPB · Credit reports and scores

    Consumer Financial Protection Bureau resources on FICO and VantageScore models, dispute mechanics, and score factors.

  8. [8]
    CFPB Consumer Complaint Portal

    File a complaint against any lender, debt collector, or credit bureau.

  9. [9]
    FTC · Consumer credit and loans

    Federal Trade Commission resources on credit, debt collection, and lending fraud.

  10. [10]
    CFPB · Credit-builder loans

    Consumer guide to credit-builder loan products and how they affect FICO scores.

  11. [11]
    NCUA · Payday Alternative Loans (PALs)

    National Credit Union Administration program with 28% APR cap, $200 to $2,000 amounts.

  12. [12]
    MyFICO · Official FICO score ranges

    Fair Isaac Corporation’s published FICO 8 score bands and category definitions.