*7 min read · Last updated June 22, 2026*
In this article
– Why approvals loosened in 2026 and what actually changed – What your rate looks like by credit score band – Why the lender you pick matters as much as your score – The one move that shifts your offer before you apply – FAQ
In June 2026, Marcus went shopping for a $24,000 used SUV with a 620 credit score and a payment ceiling in his head. The dealer’s finance office came back at 14.9 percent. His credit union, on the same application two days later, pre-approved him at 9.4 percent. Same buyer, same car, same week. The 5.5-point gap was worth about $4,100 over a 60-month loan, and it had almost nothing to do with his credit score.
Why approvals loosened in 2026 and what actually changed
New-vehicle auto loan rates dropped about 97 basis points in June 2026, according to Auto Finance News reporting on Cox Automotive’s Big Wheels data. A basis point is one-hundredth of a percentage point, so 97 of them is just under a full point off the average rate. That followed the Federal Reserve’s June 17 meeting and a broader spring loosening in auto credit.
Here is what “loosening” means in plain terms. Lenders approved more applicants, accepted slightly lower scores, and required smaller down payments than they had in 2024 and early 2025. It does not mean rates are low across the board. It means the door opened wider, especially for buyers in the middle and lower credit bands who were getting declined a year ago.
That distinction matters for how you read your own offer. If you have a thin file or a score in the 600s, your approval odds genuinely improved. Your rate, though, is still priced off your credit tier. Easier approval and a low rate are two different things, and a dealer is happy to let you confuse them.
What your rate looks like by credit score band
Most auto lenders price your loan off your FICO score, the credit score the major bureaus generate and lenders pull most often. They sort you into tiers, and each tier carries a typical rate range. The figures below are averages from Experian’s State of the Automotive Finance Market tracking. Your real offer moves with the lender, the loan term, your down payment, and the car itself.
| Credit score | Lender tier | Typical new-car APR | Typical used-car APR | What it means for approval |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 720 and up | Prime to superprime | ~5.0 to 6.5% | ~7 to 9% | Approved almost anywhere; rate is your only real variable |
| 660 to 719 | Prime | ~6.5 to 8% | ~9 to 11% | Strong approval odds; shop hard for the rate |
| 620 to 659 | Nonprime | ~9 to 11% | ~13 to 15% | Approved by most, but lender choice swings the rate most here |
| 580 to 619 | Subprime | ~12 to 14% | ~17 to 19% | Approved with conditions; expect a down-payment requirement |
| Below 580 | Deep subprime | ~15 to 16%+ | ~21%+ | Approval improved in 2026 but still needs a cosigner or larger down payment |
Notice the used-car column. A used loan costs more at every tier, because older cars are riskier collateral and lose value faster. A 660 score that earns roughly 7 percent on a new car can be priced near 10 percent on a used one. If you are weighing new against used, the rate gap is part of the real cost, not a side note.
Why the lender you pick matters as much as your score
When you finance through the dealership, you are usually not borrowing from the dealer. The dealer sends your application to lenders, gets back a wholesale rate called the buy rate, and is allowed to mark it up before they quote you. That markup is legal and common, and it is why Marcus saw 14.9 percent at the desk and 9.4 percent at his own credit union.
The markup hurts most in the nonprime and subprime bands, where there is more room to pad the rate without the number looking absurd. That is exactly where a credit union or a direct bank pre-approval pays off the most. We walk through how dealer-arranged loans get padded in our look at the verifications that protect your loan contract before you sign.
Above a 720 score, the gap narrows. Prime borrowers see dealer and credit union rates converge, and a manufacturer rebate or a promotional rate from the automaker’s own finance arm can occasionally beat your bank. The rule of thumb: the lower your score, the more a pre-approval from your own lender is worth. The higher your score, the more you can let offers compete.
The one move that shifts your offer before you apply

Before you apply anywhere, do one thing first.
You can get your reports free at AnnualCreditReport.com, the federally authorized site. Read each one for accounts that are not yours, late payments you actually made on time, or balances reported higher than they are. These errors are common, and each one can push you from, say, a 645 to a 615, moving you out of nonprime pricing and into subprime. Disputing an error is free and the bureaus must investigate within 30 days.
While you are at it, two fast moves can lift your score before you shop. Pay down credit card balances so you are using less of your available limit, and avoid opening new accounts in the months before you apply. Then get pre-approved at your own bank or credit union so you walk in with a real rate. Timing your applications inside a short window keeps the credit checks from stacking up against you, which our guide to the 14-day rate-shop window explains in detail.
Once you have your number, you can shop the car the way you should, by setting the payment first. Our breakdown of how much auto loan you can actually afford shows how to back into a price from your budget instead of the lender’s ceiling.
Ready to compare your options? See current auto loan rates from top lenders and find the best fit for your budget.
FAQ
What credit score do I need to get a good auto loan rate in 2026? A score of 720 or higher gets you the best pricing, typically around 5 to 6.5 percent on a new car. You can still get approved well below that, but rates climb fast. Under 600, expect 13 percent or more unless you bring a large down payment or a cosigner.
Did auto loan approvals really get easier in 2026? Yes. New-vehicle rates fell about 97 basis points in June 2026 per Cox Automotive data reported by Auto Finance News, and lenders approved more applicants with lower scores and smaller down payments. Easier approval is not the same as a low rate, though, which still tracks your credit tier.
Why is the dealer’s rate higher than my credit union’s for the same car? Dealers receive a wholesale buy rate from lenders and are allowed to mark it up before quoting you. That markup is largest in the nonprime and subprime bands. A pre-approval from your own bank or credit union gives you a baseline the dealer has to beat.
Will checking my own credit or rate-shopping hurt my score? Checking your own reports does not affect your score at all. Multiple lender inquiries for an auto loan inside a short shopping window, usually 14 days, are scored as a single inquiry, so comparing offers does not stack penalties against you.
How much can fixing a credit report error actually save me? A single corrected error can move you up a full tier. On a $24,000 loan over 60 months, the difference between a nonprime rate near 10 percent and a subprime rate near 14 percent is roughly $3,000 to $4,000 in total interest.


