Hitachi slashes rate for smaller personal loans


Updated on 03 December 2013 | 0 Comments

Hitachi has jumped up the best buy tables with a new low rate for those looking to borrow smaller amounts.

Hitachi has lowered the interest rate to 6.2% on loans of between £5,000 and £7,999.

Taking out £5,000, for example, would cost you £5,803.80 in total if paid back over five years with a monthly payment of £96.73.

[SPOTLIGHT]Best-buy personal loan

The personal loan market has been extremely competitive this year, but most of the action has been focused on larger loans of between £7,500 and £15,000.

Hitachi's new rate is only beaten by the peer-to-peer lender Zopa, which is offering a rate of 5.7%.

Peer-to-peer lenders work in a slightly different way by cutting out the middleman – the bank – to make rates cheaper for borrowers and lenders. For more read What is peer-to-peer (P2P) lending?

The next best rate is 6.4% and is offered by Clydesdale Bank, Yorkshire Bank, Sainsbury's Bank and Tesco Bank as you can see from the table below.

Lender

Representative APR

Total amount repayable

Zopa

5.7%

£5,738.40

Hitachi Personal Finance Loan

6.2%

£5,803.80

Sainsbury's Bank Standard Loan

6.4%

£5,830.80

Tesco Bank Personal Loan

6.4%

£5,830.80

Clydesdale Bank Online Personal Loan

6.4%

£5,830.80

Yorkshire Bank Online Personal Loan

6.4%

£5,830.80

Interest rates

When applying for a personal loan the headline rate may not be the one you’re offered. This is because lenders are only required to offer this rate to 51% of successful applicants. It’s all dependent on your own financial situation.

One way to suss out the likelihood of getting accepted for a loan is to check your credit score before applying. Thanks to lovemoney.com you can benefit from a 30-day free trial with CreditExpert which will give you an idea of how likely it is that you'll get the loan at the advertised rate.

Compare personal loans with lovemoney.com

More on loans:

The cheapest personal loans

How to build an excellent credit history

Why the high street banks are the worst place for your money

New law to cap payday loan costs

Best credit cards if you have a bad credit history

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