Personal Loan vs Debt Consolidation
A personal loan and debt consolidation aren't quite the same thing. Here's the distinction, and how to pick the right debt strategy.
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Two Different Ideas
A personal loan is a product — a lump sum you borrow and repay in installments. Debt consolidation is a strategy — folding multiple debts into a single payment. They overlap, but they're not synonyms.
A personal loan is one tool for consolidating debt. You can also get there through a balance transfer card, a home equity loan, a debt management plan, or other routes.
So the real question isn't "personal loan or consolidation" — it's "is a personal loan the right tool for my consolidation strategy?"
Comparing the Consolidation Routes
| Method | Typical Rate | Best For | Risk Level |
|---|---|---|---|
| Personal loan | 6% – 35% APR | Multiple debts, good credit | Low |
| Balance transfer card | 0% intro, then 19.99%+ | Smaller amounts, quick payoff | Moderate |
| Home equity loan/HELOC | 5% – 8% | Homeowners, large amounts | High (home is collateral) |
| Debt management plan | Negotiated lower rates | High debt, struggling borrowers | Low |
| Consumer proposal | N/A (fixed payments) | Cannot manage debts otherwise | Moderate (credit impact) |
When a Personal Loan Is the Right Call
- Your existing debts all carry higher rates than the personal loan offer
- You want a fixed schedule with a definite end date
- You don't own a home, so equity-based options aren't on the table
- Your debt is manageable and just needs structure, not crisis intervention
- You want the credit-building benefit of consistent installment payments
When Something Else Fits Better
- A small balance payable in 12-21 months — a 0% balance transfer card is likely cheaper
- A homeowner with significant debt — a home equity loan may beat the rate, at the cost of risk
- Genuinely overwhelmed — a debt management plan or credit counselling may be the better path
- Truly unmanageable debt — a consumer proposal through a Licensed Insolvency Trustee
- Credit too weak to qualify for a reasonable personal loan rate
Making It Actually Work
- Stop adding new debt — cut up or freeze cards if needed
- Build an emergency fund so surprises don't become new debt
- Automate payments on the consolidation loan or plan
- Track progress monthly to stay motivated
- Build and stick to a real budget
- Free credit counselling is worth a call if you're unsure where to start
Common Mistakes
- Consolidating, then running the cards back up
- Choosing a loan rate that's actually higher than your current average
- Stretching the term so long that total interest grows despite a lower rate
- Ignoring origination fees that eat into the savings
- No budget plan to prevent the debt from coming back
Frequently Asked Questions
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