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الثلاثاء، 30 أبريل 2019

Wells Fargo Personal Loans Review

Wells Fargo was founded in 1852 during the gold rush era in the Western United States. While the bank’s first real branch opened for business in San Francisco, new offices began to pop up in small towns and mining camps within the next few years. In 1888, Wells Fargo became the country’s first nationwide express company, expanding into 2,500 communities in 25 different states.

Since those early days, Wells Fargo has grown to be one of the most prominent banks in the nation. These days, you can turn to Wells Fargo for nearly all your banking needs from mortgage loans to auto loans, checking and savings accounts, home equity loans, and credit cards.

Wells Fargo is also well known for their personal loans and lines of credit, both of which come with competitive interest rates and low or no fees. If you need to borrow money for nearly any reason and you’re considering a personal loan from Wells Fargo, keep reading to learn about their loan products, how they work, and how they stack up to competitors.

Wells Fargo Personal Loans: Key Takeaways

  • Borrow between $3,000 and $100,000.
  • Repay your loan over 12 to 60 months.
  • Personal loans come with a fixed interest rate and fixed monthly payments.
  • Personal loans come with no origination fee or annual fee, and lines of credit come with a $25 annual fee.
  • Receive your loan funds as soon as the next business day.
  • Autopay discounts are available for existing customers.

Wells Fargo Personal Loans: Affordable Loans for Borrowers with Good Credit

When it comes to personal loans, Wells Fargo loans have a lot going for them. Not only do they come with no origination fee and no annual fee, but you get a fixed interest rate and fixed monthly payment for the life of the loan. Beyond the predictability you get with a fixed rate, existing Wells Fargo customers can qualify for a small rate discount if they set up their loan payments on autopay.

While Wells Fargo doesn’t disclose their minimum credit score requirements, most of their personal loan customers have a credit score of at least 660. This means you may not be able to qualify for a Wells Fargo personal loan if your credit is on the poor side, but it also means the customers they do service tend to qualify for competitive interest rates.

Speaking of rates, Wells Fargo typically offers personal loans with fixed rates as low as 7.49% and as high as 24.99%. They do say they offer rates as low as 5.24% APR for some borrowers, but these low rates are typically only available to borrowers with excellent credit taking out small loan amounts.

Another huge upside of Wells Fargo is the fact they let consumers borrow up to $100,000 with a personal loan. That’s considerably higher than most personal lenders offer, although Wells Fargo doesn’t offer any specifics on the type of income you need to qualify for that amount.

Wells Fargo: What to Watch Out For

There are a few downsides to Wells Fargo personal loans, the most important of which is that they may not be available to everyone. Beyond their somewhat cryptic credit requirements, you must be an existing Wells Fargo customer to apply for one of their personal loans online or on the phone. If you’re not a customer already, you can only apply for a personal loan by visiting a branch in person.

And while Wells Fargo does offer competitive interest rates, the lowest rates they offer on the bulk of their personal loans aren’t competitive with the top lenders in the personal loan space. Borrowers with excellent credit may qualify for a personal loan with a much lower rate (even as low as 5.49% APR) with lenders like SoFi, Marcus by Goldman Sachs, and Eloan. This is one reason you should shop around among a few lenders before you settle on a personal loan. Even among borrowers with a similar credit rating and income, interest rates can vary widely.

Who Wells Fargo Personal Loans Are Best For:

  • Wells Fargo customers who can qualify for the best rates and a rate discount
  • Anyone who wants a personal loan with no origination fee or annual fee
  • People who need to borrow up to $100,000 without collateral

How We Rate Wells Fargo

At The Simple Dollar, we aim to provide a general overview of a lender’s products and services through a standard rating process. After a thorough research and discovery period, here’s how Wells Fargo stacks up:

Wells Fargo Personal Loans at a Glance
Overall Rating
🌕🌕🌕🌑🌑
Affordability (interest rates, fees, and terms) 🌕🌕🌕🌕🌑
Availability (credit requirements, geographic reach) 🌕🌕🌕🌑🌑
Ease of Use 🌕🌕🌑🌑🌑
Transparency 🌕🌕🌕🌑🌑

How to Apply for a Personal Loan from Wells Fargo

If you’re a Wells Fargo customer already, you can apply for a personal loan or line of credit online or on the phone. If you’re not a Wells Fargo customer, you’ll need to apply in person. Either way, plan on gathering the following information before you begin your application:

  • Social Security Number
  • Date of birth
  • Citizenship status
  • Marital status
  • Email address
  • Primary telephone number
  • Permanent address

Also plan on including your employment information, your income, and your monthly mortgage or rent payment.

Once your application is reviewed, Wells Fargo has the right to ask for additional information to complete your application. Documentation you may need to supply includes:

  • Recent pay stubs, W2s, or tax returns
  • Utility bills
  • Copy of driver’s license or Social Security card
  • Information to payoff current accounts
  • IRS Form 4506T (Request for Transcript of Tax Return)

If you’re approved for a personal loan from Wells Fargo, you may be able to receive your loan funds as soon as the next business day.

The Bottom Line

Personal loans can be a smart option if you need to borrow money to consolidate debt or make a large purchase. They tend to come with much lower interest rates than credit cards, and the fact you get a fixed monthly payment and fixed repayment schedule makes them more predictable.

However, you shouldn’t go with the first lender you come across. Because rates are highly variable and some lenders consider different criteria when approving you for a loan, it always makes sense to shop around and compare loan quotes before you move forward.

Wells Fargo is a prominent bank that’s been in business for over a century, but they may or may not offer the lowest rates and fees for the personal loan you want. The only way to find out is to shop around and compare.

Related Articles: 

The post Wells Fargo Personal Loans Review appeared first on The Simple Dollar.



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Conversion Optimization

Conversion optimization gives you more customers with the traffic and marketing budget you already have.

Even better, once you find these conversion wins, you get to benefit from those wins day in and day out.

These are permanent increases to your business.

Start with our Beginners Guide to Conversion Optimization which breaks all this down in detail.

To simplify everything, we put together an extremely detailed guide on How To Double Your Conversions in 30 Days. It’s a step-by-step process for making an immediate improvement to your conversion rates.

Before jumping into all the conversion tactics, we recommend getting a strong foundation with how conversion optimization works. By knowing how customer personas and conversion funnels work, you’ll know which conversion tricks to use for your business:

Website Optimizations

The first step of any conversion optimization program is to optimize your website. There’s tons of improvements that you can ship today. There’s no need for intense A/B testing programs or complex tactics, we always start with the basics.

A thorough polish of your website can easily boost conversion rates 30-50%. That’s a permanent lift from a one-time project.

One of the pitfalls that I’ve fallen into the past: holding back on obvious improvements until I had an A/B testing program that could verify everything. I wish that I had launched improvements a lot earlier instead of waiting. These days, I pursue good-enough instead of perfect.

To help guide you through all the best practices that are worth shipping right away, we put together these guides:

Tips and Tactics

Regardless of what you’re optimizing, there’s an endless number of tips and tactics for getting an extra boost in your conversion rates. When you’re ready to start going after the smaller wins to squeeze every last bit out of your traffic, these guides will give you plenty of ideas to use:

Landing Pages

The right landing page can make or break a funnel.

I’ve seen landing pages improve conversion by over 400% with the right offer and design. That’s right, I’ve quadrupled lead and signup flow by finding a stronger offer for my landing page. Think of it this way: if you were previously paying $10 for a lead, that kind of win would reduce your lead cost to $2.50. Getting 4X the lead volume with the same marketing budget would catapult your business to the next level.

I’m not going to lie, there’s a bit of luck in finding these kinds of wins. But there’s always a lot of things you can do in order to stack the odds in your favor.

We’ve put together all our best practices for landing pages:

A/B Testing

I personally love A/B testing. There’s something about getting hard data on what truly works that I’ve always found to be addictive.

A quick warning: only start A/B testing once you have a ton of data to work with. Even though I’ve built A/B testing teams for multiple businesses, I rarely A/B test these days. There’s just too many other major wins to pursue first. I’m more focused on getting the core funnel to a healthy place before running any A/B tests.

Once traffic is flooding your site and you’re scaling nicely, consider an A/B testing program for that little extra boost. These guides show you how:

Traffic Optimization

While most of our conversion optimization work happens on our site, there are also optimization wins to help with our traffic. Whether it’s SEO or paid traffic, you’ll want to optimize your entire funnel. Use these guides to get started:



Source Quick Sprout http://bit.ly/2GWmJde

East Stroudsburg weighs parking changes

EAST STROUDSBURG — The Borough of East Stroudsburg is considering some changes to its municipal parking lots. Borough Council will host a public meeting on May 7 at 7 p.m. to discuss the proposal.“We’re hoping that people will show up to provide input,” Borough Manager Brian Bond said on Tuesday. “We’ll be discussing what the proposed changes are and why and how we believe they will help by providing closer spaces for the customers of our [...]

Source Business - poconorecord.com http://bit.ly/2VDkFyI

New Account Credit Card Fraud Up 24% In 2018: The Top Frauds of 2018

After a three-year decline, credit card fraud reports shot up to 1.427 million in 2018. Learn how to avoid becoming a fraud victim in 2019.

Source CBNNews.com http://bit.ly/2ZVpmDw

40 Million Americans Will Miss At Least One Credit Card Payment In 2019

Almost 16% of WalletHub survey respondents expect to miss at least one credit card payment in 2019. Learn how to avoid late credit card payments. Almost 16% of WalletHub survey respondents expect to miss at least one credit card payment in 2019. Learn how to avoid late credit card payments.

Source CBNNews.com http://bit.ly/2JdUQin

Chase Bank accused of 'poor shaming' after Twitter misfire

The nation's largest bank was accused of "poor shaming" after a tweet that was meant to be motivational spectacularly backfired Monday.Chase Bank's social media team sent out a tweet encouraging customers to cut expenses in order to save money, Chicago TV station WLS reported.The tweet suggested customers make coffee at home, eat food that's already in the [...]

Source Business - poconorecord.com http://bit.ly/2ULy43f

This Father of 5 Needs More Space. Here’s How He’s Fixing His Bad Credit

Good Things, Ruts, and Transitions

I recently came across a wonderful essay by Michael Barrish entitled System. In it, he describes a model for life made up of three stages:

In 1988 Laura and I created a three-stage model of what we called “living process.” We called the three stages Good Thing, Rut, and Transition. As we saw it, Good Thing becomes Rut, Rut becomes Transition, and Transition becomes Good Thing. It’s a continuous circuit.

A Good Thing never leads directly to a Transition, in large part because it has no reason to. A Good Thing wants to remain a Good Thing, and this is precisely why it becomes a Rut. Ruts, on the other hand, want desperately to change into something else.

This pattern immediately made sense to me. In most aspects of my life, I follow this cycle, except that the three stages are never anywhere near equal in length.

If you were to look at the long scale of one of these cycles in my life, it would go something like Good Thing, Rut, Rut, Rut, Rut, Rut, Rut, Transition, Transition, Good Thing, and so on, in an endless cycle.

The “Good Thing” is what I’m always striving for. It’s as close as I can get to something like an ideal life in that aspect of my life.

However, over time, things change. I hold onto some aspects of the “Good Thing” in the habits I’ve created or the automatic things I’ve put into my life or the permanent alterations done during the earlier Transition. Some aspects fall away, though – the more difficult habits in terms of time and effort often fall away, as do things that fall away due to the hustle and bustle of everyday life. I don’t think this is quite a Rut, but a maturing of a Good Thing.

Sometimes, however, I fall into a Rut. This Rut is usually better in some ways than earlier Ruts, as it encompasses more of what I value right now and more knowledge and understanding of the world, but it’s still a Rut. It’s an area of my life where I’m not actively thinking about changing anything and just going through the motions.

What ends a Rut? There are usually two agents of change. One, I notice something in my life that I’m unhappy with. It’s usually a tiny pebble, but if I don’t do anything about it, it ends up being like a pebble in my shoe, a constant irritant. It eventually nudges me to make some changes due to constant irritation with that aspect of my life. I usually pick up on this when I’m thinking about my life, which is something I do regularly and will discuss below.

The other agent of change is an unexpected event in my life. Perhaps it’s a medical crisis, or maybe it’s an addition to my family. In either case, that unexpected event either causes major disruption to my routines or forces me to really consider aspects of my life that hadn’t been on my mind prior to that.

During a Transition, I’m usually deeply focused on making changes to my life. Sometimes this is fun, like when I notice something I want to change in my life and I choose to make those changes. Sometimes this isn’t fun, like when an unexpected event drops on my lap.

Good Things, Ruts, and Transitions in My Own Financial Life

My own personal finance history is a good example of this pattern.

When I first graduated from college and moved into a full time career, the huge increase in salary was a Good Thing. It enabled me to do a lot of things that I just couldn’t do during college and I dabbled in a lot of consumer behavior. I bought a new vehicle. I started hanging out with a heavy spending group of young professionals. I bought lots of expensive meals and rounds during happy hour. Sarah and I adjusted our standard of living upwards.

After a while, this turned into a Rut. We kept up a lot of expensive routines, but they gradually became just that – routine. After a while, I even recognized that I was in a Rut.

So, what moved me out of a Rut and into a Transition? There were two things, really, that happened pretty close to each other on the calendar. The first was the birth of my oldest child, which brought about a lot of changes in many areas of our life. The second, and perhaps even more influential, was a day when I realized that our credit cards were maxed out and we didn’t have enough money to pay the bills.

Those two events brought Sarah and I into a Transition period, where we rebooted our entire financial picture. We radically altered our spending habits, chopped off a lot of debt very quickly, and put ourselves on a much healthier financial path. That was clearly a Good Thing.

Since then, I think we’ve largely stuck with the Good Thing. We have a lot of good spending habits that we stick with – we’re not perfect, but pretty good. We’re making great financial progress toward our goals year in and year out. Most of that is due to two things: we’ve automated savings for most of our big goals and we hammered some good sensible spending habits into our heads. Our life doesn’t feel like a repetitive and endless cycle that we’re unhappy with, which is what a Rut can feel like.

We’ve certainly broken out of Ruts in more narrow aspects of personal finance over the last several years. For example, we decided to cut the cord and get rid of our cable package, completely changing our family’s entertainment routines. That was a Rut jolted into a Transition. In terms of our overall financial picture, though, we’ve mostly been in a positive Rut, one that we’re happy with not changing in any radical way.

Looking at my life through these principles reveals some valuable truths that apply well to personal finance and to life.

Good Things Turn Into Ruts When You Don’t Think About Them

The aspects of my life that go from being a Good Thing into being a Rut are aspects where I’m not giving them the time and attention that they deserve. I start taking them for granted. I stop asking myself what I need to do to keep this Good Thing going.

Personal finance has stayed in the Good Thing category for so long because I give it a lot of attention as part of the process of writing articles for this site. I’m forced to think about my finances in great detail.

What about the other areas, though?

For me, the best way to keep Good Things going in my life is through regular time spent reflecting on my life. I consciously put aside time in my life to think about the major areas of my life and whether I’m happy with their direction in general or with specific aspects. This takes place in four distinct ways.

One, I spend a bit of time each morning reviewing the day ahead of me. How am I going to spend my time today? How can I spend it in ways that are most valuable to me? What do I most need to get done?

Two, I spend about 45 minutes journaling each day. I use a technique called “morning pages,” which basically means you open up a notebook and just start writing whatever comes to mind for the next 45 minutes. I find that my mind often goes down a rabbit hole of some aspect of my life and I end up working out what makes me happy or unhappy about that aspect and what I should change.

Three, I review the things I want to change about my life once a day in the evening. I have a list of things I’m working on that I want to improve about myself and I ask myself if I did my best today to improve in those areas. I actually give myself a 1-10 score on each of those things. I wrote about this in detail in the article Did I Do My Best Today? and in my review of the book Triggers.

Four, I do a weekly review where I consciously walk through each of the nine major areas of my life and make sure I’m doing something positive in each of those areas. The nine major areas are physical, mental, spiritual, social, parental, marital, vocational, avocational, and financial. For each of those, I just ask myself what I did in that area that was positive and meaningful, whether I’m happy with my life in that area, and what I might want to do in the coming week in that area.

Finally, I do a big review every three months. I usually block off a work day to sit down and give each of those nine areas a really in depth review. Are there any “unclosed loops” in those areas? What would I like to do in those areas for the next 90 days? Am I happy with this particular aspect of my life? If not, what can I change about it to bring me closer to happiness?

I’ve found out that these processes do a really good job of figuring out which parts of my life are Good Things and which ones are falling into Ruts, at which point I try to inject some kind of Transition into it. What’s a better way to do this? How can I get there?

The Difference Between a Good Thing and a Rut

The difference between a Good Thing and a Rut is whether or not you actually feel positive about the results of your efforts. If you have a Good Thing going, then you feel good about the effort you’re putting in and the results you’re getting in that area of your life.

On the other hand, when you start to feel like your effort is falling behind or you’re no longer happy with the results you’re getting or you’re finding that this particular area of your life isn’t bringing you real joy any more, then you’ve fallen into a Rut.

The trick is that this shift often happens subtly and quietly. You often don’t even notice it. It just happens. Because of that, you can be in a Rut for a very long time because you’re still thinking of it as a Good Thing because you’re not really looking very close at it. You’re just going through the motions.

A Rut Isn’t Always Bad, Particularly When It’s Not Your Focus Right Now

One might think that I’m saying that having an aspect of your life in a Rut is always a bad thing. It isn’t. Being in a Rut has an advantage – it frees up your attention and focus to be spent on other areas of your life.

It’s really okay to let some aspects of your life fall into a Rut sometimes. In fact, that’s probably normal and healthy.

However, it means that you should approach Transitions knowing that you have a good chance of eventually falling into a Rut. You want to set things up so that even if you realize you’re in a Rut eventually, it’s not that bad. You’re not digging yourself out of a disaster.

For me, the best way to do this is through automation and routine. I try to make as many things as I can happen automatically in my life, like paying bills and contributing to savings goals and adding to retirement accounts. I try to come up with really good routines that I know work well and have good outcomes and just stick to those routines, often using an actual checklist for them (like my morning routines and my evening routines and my exercise).

Obviously, a big motivation of these kinds of moves during a Transition is to set up a Good Thing in life, but it also ensures that when a Good Thing becomes a Rut, it keeps chugging along in at least a somewhat positive direction.

Transitions Are About Thinking, Good Things Are About Refining and Doing, Ruts Are About Continuing

A big part of the value that this model can add to your life is that it can make your Ruts a whole lot better. Obviously, Transitions and Good Things are wonderful parts of life, but the reality is that parts of our life will be in a Rut sometimes. The question is what you can do to make that Rut as good as you can.

For me, I think the best approach is to look at a Transition as being mostly about thinking and a bit of experimentation. You see a problem and you’re trying to learn how to solve it. Ideally, you’re trying to solve it in a way that really fits in your life and makes sticking with these changes as easy as possible while still achieving the goals. That takes thought.

The Good Thing happens when you have a good plan in place and you’re executing it and you feel that forward momentum and it’s good. You might refine your plan a little, but the forward momentum is there. What you’re really trying to do is to make sure everything you’re doing is part of an automatic or nearly automatic routine in your life.

The Rut happens when you’re less focused on that area of your life and you need to rely on automation and routine to make sure that area doesn’t just fall apart when you’re not focused on it. This is where things like automatic contributions to a Roth IRA or automatic weekly transfers to a savings account can make a real difference. You’re in a Rut, but the wheels aren’t falling off the bus.

That way, the only reason to come out of a Rut is when your personal goals change or an unexpected event happens. Ideally, you should never exit a Rut due to a hole dug by your bad behaviors.

Final Thoughts

So, how does this apply to money?

Automate your savings. Start an aggressive automatic contribution to your retirement savings. Set up a weekly automatic transfer to your savings account for an emergency fund. Turn on automatic contributions to your child’s 529 college savings plan. Those should be Transition moves.

Make a lot of big moves when your focus is on that area of your life. If you’re thinking about your finances, now’s the time to do things like change your auto insurance package or homeowners insurance package. Now’s the time to think about moving to a different area with a lower total cost of living. Those big moves that aren’t easy to undo are powerful ones to do when you’re in Transition.

Build better spending habits. “Better spending habits” doesn’t mean “cutting all spending on everything fun.” Rather, it should mean “cutting spending on things you don’t care about that much so you can afford the things that really matter to you.” Figure that out and refine it over time so that you’re comfortable with some new spending rules for yourself. For example, try buying store brand household products and food staples instead of name brand items. Try establishing a routine at home where you make coffee before you leave rather than buying it on the way to work. Push yourself toward these kinds of behavioral changes with 30 day and 90 day challenges.

Adopt some sort of daily reflection habit. This is the best thing you can do to ensure that each aspect of your life is either a Good Thing or in a Rut that isn’t going in a bad direction. Some time spent just thinking meaningfully about each area of your life each day, even if it’s just a few minutes, can help you see what’s coming and help you avoid disasters from bad Ruts.

Good luck!

The post Good Things, Ruts, and Transitions appeared first on The Simple Dollar.



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Tax Deductions: Get The Nitty-Gritty on Which Ones You Can Claim

USAA Personal Loans Review

USAA Bank has been providing banking services for military members and their families since its founding in 1922. Individuals who are currently serving in the U.S. Air Force, Army, Coast Guard, Marines, Navy, National Guard and Reserves, plus retired military members and family members, have the opportunity to join USAA Bank and take advantage of its services and perks.

Currently, USAA Bank offers members a wide range of financial products ranging from auto insurance and renter’s insurance to checking accounts, savings accounts, and mortgages. USAA also offers personal loans with competitive interest rates and a quick application process that can help you access your funds in no time.

If you’re a military member, a veteran, or a military family member who banks with USAA and needs to borrow money, you may want to consider their personal loan products. Keep reading to learn how they work, how USAA personal loans compare to competitors, and how to get started.

USAA Personal Loans: Key Takeaways

  • Borrow between $2,500 and $50,000 and pay it off over 12 months to 84 months.
  • Receive an interest-rate discount when you sign up for autopay.
  • Apply online and have your loan funds deposited in your bank account as soon as the same business day.
  • Interest rates on USAA personal loans range between 9.49% and 17.65%.
  • Pay no application fee, no origination fee, and no hidden fees.

USAA Bank Personal Loans: Fast Financing for Military Members

While USAA Bank offers attractive personal loans with a quick and easy application process, they aren’t available for everyone. To qualify for a personal loan from USAA, you must first become a member.

You can become a member if you serve in a branch of the military or are a military veteran who was discharged honorably. Others who qualify include “widows, widowers and un-remarried former spouses of USAA members who had USAA auto or property insurance while married and individuals whose parents have or had USAA auto or property insurance,” notes the bank. You may also be able to qualify for USAA membership if you’re a cadet or a midshipmen “at U.S. service academies, in advanced ROTC or on ROTC scholarship, plus officer candidates within 24 months of commissioning.”

If you meet the criteria to qualify for USAA membership, their personal loans may be a fit for your borrowing needs. USAA states that their loans are perfect for debt consolidation, home remodeling projects, or even adding a pool in your backyard.

One big benefit of USAA personal loans is the fact that you can complete the entire application process online and have the funds deposited in your USAA bank account as soon as the same business day. That makes these loans ideal for military members or veterans who already bank with USAA and need money fast.

USAA also states that you’ll get a 0.25% rate discount for setting up automatic payments, which provides a solid incentive to sign up for this program. The biggest plus of these loans, however, is that they come with no application fees, no origination fee, and no hidden fees.

Here’s an example of a USAA personal loan for a consumer with excellent credit:

USAA Personal Loans: What to Watch Out For

It’s true that USAA offers personal loans with fast and easy funding, but their rates aren’t as low as many competing banks. This is especially true for consumers with excellent credit who may qualify for rates as low as 5.99% APR with lenders like Earnest or Marcus by Goldman Sachs. These lenders also offer loans with no origination fee, application fees, or hidden fees, so they could save you considerable sums of interest over time if you qualified for their lowest rates.

Another downside of USAA’s personal loan offerings is the fact they’re only available to military members. This means regular consumers can’t even apply. You also need to join USAA and become a member before you can even apply for a personal loan. This is an added step some consumers may not want to take, military affiliation or not.

Who USAA Personal Loans are Best For:

  • Military members with less than perfect credit who may pay a higher interest rate with other lenders.
  • USAA members who need funding the same day.
  • Members who want a personal loan with no origination fees or hidden fees.

How We Rate USAA Personal Loans


At The Simple Dollar, we aim to provide a general overview of a lender’s products and services through a standard rating process. After a thorough research and discovery period, here’s how USAA stacks up:

USAA Personal Loans at a Glance
Overall Rating
🌕🌕🌕🌗🌑
Affordability (interest rates, fees, and terms) 🌕🌕🌕🌕🌑
Availability (credit requirements, geographic reach) 🌕🌕🌑🌑🌑
Ease of Use 🌕🌕🌕🌕🌑
Transparency 🌕🌕🌕🌕🌑

How to Apply for a Personal Loan through USAA

To begin the application process for a personal loan through this bank, you’ll first need to become a USAA member. To become a member, you’ll need to create an account online by providing your date of birth, your contact information, a Social Security number, and details about the military service that deems you eligible.

From there, you can apply for your personal loan online and through USAA’s secure website. USAA doesn’t allow you to get “pre-qualified” for a loan without a hard inquiry on your credit report, but they will show you the rate you qualify for right away if you’re approved. If you decide to move forward, you may be able to have your loan funds deposited in your bank account as soon as the same business day.

The Bottom Line

There are many reasons to consider a personal loan for your borrowing needs. This type of loan comes with a fixed interest rate for starters, but you also get a fixed repayment period and a fixed monthly payment that will never change. Rates for personal loans are also considerably lower than what you’ll get with credit cards, making personal loans are more affordable option any time you need to borrow money for the long haul.

USAA personal loans are a good option for some military members, but consumers with excellent credit would likely save money if they went with a different lender. No matter where you stand, it always make sense to shop around and compare loan terms and rates with at least three lenders before you decide.

Related Articles: 

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