Average Personal Loan Rates
See where your offer stacks up against what other Canadian borrowers are actually paying, broken down by credit tier, lender type, and loan purpose.
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Where National Averages Sit Right Now
Heading into 2026, a borrower with good credit is typically quoted somewhere in the 9%-12% APR range across Canadian banks, credit unions, and online lenders. That's the baseline most comparison shopping starts from.
An average is just a starting point, though — your actual number depends heavily on your own profile and which lender you go with. Watching how rates shift over time can help you judge whether now is a reasonable moment to consolidate higher-cost debt or whether waiting makes more sense.
How Rates Break Down by Credit Score
Of everything a lender looks at, your credit score (300-900 on the Equifax/TransUnion scale) moves your rate the most.
| Credit Tier | Score Range | Average APR |
|---|---|---|
| Excellent | 760–900 | 6.5% – 9.5% |
| Good | 700–759 | 9.5% – 15.0% |
| Fair | 640–699 | 15.0% – 24.0% |
| Poor | 300–639 | 24.0% – 35.0% |
Rates by Type of Lender
Banks tend to offer the sharpest pricing but are also the pickiest about who qualifies. Credit unions sit in the middle, often giving members some flexibility a bank wouldn't. Online lenders cast the widest net, which is why their published range spans so much further.
| Lender Type | Typical APR Range | Best For |
|---|---|---|
| Major banks | 6% – 14% | Prime borrowers with existing accounts |
| Credit unions | 7% – 16% | Members with fair to good credit |
| Online lenders | 8% – 35% | All credit profiles, fast funding |
Does What You're Borrowing For Change the Rate?
Somewhat. Lenders sometimes price debt consolidation slightly better, on the theory that a borrower actively tackling debt is a lower-risk bet, and home improvement loans can get similar treatment. For things like a vacation, a wedding, or a medical bill, your credit profile — not the purpose — is really what sets the price.
Making the Averages Work for You
Line your quote up against the average for your tier, get pre-qualified with a few lenders (a soft check won't cost you anything), and ask directly what's pushing your number up. If you're more than 3-5 points above the average for your tier, it may be worth spending a few months improving your credit before you borrow.
Why Rates Move Over Time
Personal loan pricing tends to follow the Bank of Canada's overnight rate — when that goes up, borrowing costs generally follow. That said, competition between lenders, especially the growing online segment, has kept a lid on how far rates drift.
How to Land Below Average
- Get your credit into the "good" tier before you shop
- Collect quotes from 3-5 lenders across different institution types
- Ask specifically about autopay discounts
- Consider a shorter repayment term
- Bring in a co-signer if it strengthens your application
- Check whether your primary bank offers a relationship discount
Frequently Asked Questions
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