Cheapest loan of 4.9% launched by Zopa

The personal loan battle continues with a new market-leading rate from Zopa.

Personal loan rates have fallen again, with the cheapest on offer for loans between £7,500 and £15,000 now coming from Zopa at 4.9%.

A market-leading rate from Zopa

If you borrowed £10,000 from Zopa over 60 months you would pay back a total of £11,268.60.

The lender also uses the ‘soft search’ facility which allows a borrower to get an indication of whether they are likely to be accepted for the loan. If they’re rejected this won’t leave a mark on their credit score, as is the case with most lenders. For more read The lenders who won't damage your credit score.

Derbyshire Building Society and M&S Bank are in joint second place with 5% interest on loans of the same amount.

Although the headline rate is 4.9%, as with any loan, only 51% of borrowers have to be offered this rate. Therefore it’s worth shopping around to check what other rates are on offer if you’re not eligible for a Zopa loan.

Our comparison tools show the full view of the market but here I’ve listed the five in this sphere.

Loan

Representative APR

Total amount repayable (TAR)

Monthly repayment

Zopa Personal Loan 4.9% £11,268.60 £187.81

Derbyshire BS Personal Loan

5.0%

£11,292.00

£188.20

M&S Personal Loan - cardholder

5.0%

£11,292.00

£188.20

Clydesdale Bank Online Personal Loan

5.1%

£11,318.40

£188.64

Tesco Bank Personal Loan

5.1%

£11,318.40

£188.64

Peer-to-peer lending

In the past year this kind of lending has really taken off as borrowers and lenders look for alternatives to the high street banks.

Each website works in a different way, but the basic principle is people lending and borrowing from each other and cutting out the middle man – the bank. This makes the entire process cheaper and more competitive. You can read more about it in our article What is peer-to-peer (P2P) lending?

More about loans:

The cheapest personal loans

Three ways to get an interest-free loan

Bridging loans: pros and cons

Government scheme fails to boost business loans

Payday loan companies are out of control, says Citizens Advice

Amigo Loans and the dangers of being a guarantor

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