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Rates April 8, 2026 7 min read

Average Auto Loan Rates Right Now (And How to Beat Them)

The "average" auto loan rate isn't one number — it's a range that depends entirely on credit, loan type, and term. Here's what the averages actually look like, and why most borrowers can do better.

Today's averages, by credit tier

The single biggest factor in your APR is your credit score. Industry data from the major bureaus and lenders shows roughly the following average APRs in the current rate environment:

FICOTierNew car APRUsed car APRRefinance APR
781+Super-prime5.5%–6.5%6.5%–7.2%5.7%–6.4%
661–780Prime6.5%–8.0%7.5%–9.0%6.8%–8.2%
601–660Near-prime8.5%–11.5%10.0%–13.0%9.2%–12.0%
501–600Sub-prime12.0%–17.0%15.0%–19.0%13.5%–17.0%
≤500Deep sub-prime17.0%–22.0%19.0%–24.0%

Two important caveats. First, these are averages — the lowest-priced lender at every tier beats these by 0.5–1.0 points. Second, ranges widen at lower tiers because lenders disagree more about how to price risky borrowers. Shopping around matters most if your credit isn't excellent.

Why "current" rates change

Auto loan APRs aren't set in isolation. They track three things, more or less in this order:

  1. The Federal Reserve's benchmark rate. When the Fed raises, lenders pay more for capital and pass it on. When the Fed cuts, the cycle reverses with a 1–3 month lag.
  2. Treasury yields and the asset-backed securities market. Most auto lenders fund loans by issuing bundled securities. Buyers of those securities want yield premiums over treasuries — that premium is part of your APR.
  3. Industry delinquency rates. Rising defaults make lenders cautious. They tighten underwriting and raise APRs across the board, even for prime borrowers.

None of these are things you can change. But understanding the cycle helps you decide whether to lock now or wait.

How to be below average for your tier

Five concrete moves, ranked by how much they actually shift your APR:

1. Get a credit-union pre-approval before stepping on a dealer's lot

Credit-union APRs run 0.25–1.00 points below bank APRs at every credit tier. PenFed (open membership), Navy Federal (military), and most local credit unions are worth checking. The pre-approval is also leverage at the dealership.

2. Shop at least three lenders

The variance across lenders for the same borrower is wider than people think. Within a 7-day window, multiple hard pulls count as a single inquiry on FICO scoring — so you can rate-shop without compounding the credit hit.

3. Improve your credit score before applying

If your score is sitting just below a tier boundary (e.g., 658 — five points from prime), waiting 30–60 days to push it across can save 1–2 points of APR. The fastest moves: pay down credit card balances below 30% utilization, and dispute any errors on your credit report.

4. Put more down (or use trade equity)

A larger down payment lowers your loan-to-value (LTV) ratio. Some lenders publish APR breaks at LTV thresholds — typically below 100% LTV gets one tier of pricing, below 80% gets another. Even if your lender doesn't break it out explicitly, a stronger LTV makes you a better risk.

5. Choose a shorter term

60-month and shorter terms typically get better APRs than 72- or 84-month terms — sometimes by 0.25–0.50 points. Lenders price for risk: longer terms = more time for things to go wrong. Worth it if you can stomach the higher monthly payment.

Where rates have been heading

Over the last 12 months, auto loan APRs have followed the broader rate cycle: a sustained climb during the Fed's tightening phase, a peak in late 2024, and a slow easing through 2025–2026 as inflation moderated. We're currently in the late-cycle easing phase — meaningful below the 2024 peak but not back to the pre-2022 lows.

For real-time tracking, see our rate history page. The 12-month sparkline tells the story.

What "average" doesn't tell you

Industry averages are the average of the loans that got booked — meaning, borrowers who applied and accepted an offer. They don't include:

  • Borrowers who got denied (their would-be APR was too high to publish)
  • Borrowers who shopped around and only accepted a below-average offer (the bottom of the actual offer distribution)
  • Promotional rates from manufacturer captives that come and go

The averages skew toward the middle of what borrowers accepted. The best deals are below the average; the worst deals are above. If you accept the first APR a dealer offers, you'll likely end up at or above the average for your tier.

Should you wait for rates to drop?

The answer depends on the gap between today's offer and where you think rates will be when you'd actually buy. Two practical rules:

  • If rates are mid-cycle (still rising or flat at a peak), waiting can pay off — but the wait can be 6–12+ months.
  • If rates are clearly easing, waiting 1–3 months for the next Fed meeting can capture another quarter point. Beyond that, the diminishing returns of waiting outweigh the savings.

If you need a vehicle now, waiting isn't really an option. Lock in today's rate, then refinance in 12–24 months if rates have meaningfully dropped. Refi APRs typically beat purchase APRs by 0.25–0.50 points at the same credit profile.

Frequently asked

What's a "good" auto loan rate today?

Anything below the average for your credit tier. For prime borrowers, that means under ~7.5% on new and under 8.5% on used. For super-prime, under 6% is achievable from the right credit union.

Why are used car rates higher than new?

Higher depreciation risk and broader condition variance. Lenders price the extra risk into the APR. Expect a 0.5–1.5 point premium on used vs. new from the same lender.

Are credit-union rates really that much better?

On average, yes — typically 0.25–1.00 points below bank rates at the same credit tier. The catch is membership eligibility, which is broad in some cases (PenFed) and narrow in others (Navy Federal, USAA).

Does the dealership see the same rates I see online?

The dealership sees the bank's "buy rate" — what the bank will fund at. The dealer marks that up. The rates published on lender websites are the direct-to-consumer rates, which sometimes match the buy rate and sometimes are slightly higher or lower depending on the lender's relationship with that dealer network.

See today's auto loan rates.

Compare APRs from top banks, credit unions, and online lenders — all in one place, updated daily.

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