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Fundamentals April 1, 2026 8 min read

Types of Auto Loans: Direct, Indirect, Refi, Lease Buyout & More

Not all auto loans work the same way. The differences between direct and indirect lending, prime and subprime, refi and purchase, are the differences between a good rate and an expensive one.

The two big distinctions

Every auto loan can be classified along two axes:

  • Source: who originates it (direct lender vs. indirect through a dealer)
  • Purpose: what it finances (new car, used car, refinance, lease buyout, private party)

A loan can be any combination of those: a direct refinance from a credit union; an indirect new-car loan through a dealership; a direct private-party purchase from an online lender. Each combination has typical APR characteristics.

By source: direct vs. indirect

Direct lending

You apply to the lender — bank, credit union, online lender — get pre-approved, then bring that approval to whoever's selling the car. The lender pays the seller and you owe the lender directly.

Best for: people who want the lowest APR, are willing to do one extra step before shopping for a car, and have time before the purchase.

Pros: typically the best APRs (no markup), known rate before you negotiate the car, leverage at the dealership.

Cons: requires advance planning, application takes 24–72 hours, lender may have vehicle restrictions you'll need to clear.

Indirect lending

You apply for financing through the dealership's finance manager. They submit your application to multiple banks at once. The "best" offer comes back; the dealer marks it up; you sign for the marked-up rate. Convenient — but the markup costs you money.

Best for: people in a hurry, or with credit profiles where the dealer has access to subprime banks that direct shopping wouldn't reach.

Pros: one-stop shopping, sometimes the only access to manufacturer captive financing (Toyota Financial, Honda Financial, etc.), can sometimes match or beat direct.

Cons: dealer markup typically 0.5–2.5 points above the bank's buy rate, finance manager has incentive to push add-ons, harder to compare offers in the moment.

By purpose

New car loans

Financing for a vehicle still on its original title — never registered to a private owner. New cars depreciate fastest in their first year but are uniform in condition, making them lower-risk collateral. APRs are the lowest of the loan-purpose categories.

Manufacturer captives (Toyota Financial, Ford Credit, GM Financial) compete aggressively here, often with promotional 0% APR offers tied to specific models or excellent credit.

Used car loans

Financing for a previously-owned vehicle. APRs run 0.5–1.5 points above new-car rates from the same lender. Most lenders cap age at 8–10 model years and mileage at 100,000–125,000 by loan payoff.

Certified pre-owned (CPO) loans

A subset of used-car loans for vehicles that carry a manufacturer-backed inspection and warranty extension. Some manufacturer captives offer CPO-specific promotional APRs that beat regular used rates by 1–2 points.

Private-party loans

Financing a vehicle you're buying from a private seller (not a dealership). The lender list is narrower — Navy Federal, PenFed, LightStream, USAA, and most credit unions allow it; Chase, Wells Fargo, and a few others don't. APRs run 0.5–1.0 point above dealer used-car rates.

Refinance loans

A new loan that pays off your existing auto loan, ideally at a lower APR. Useful when your credit has improved, you took a high dealer rate without competing offers, or market rates have eased.

Refi APRs typically beat purchase APRs by 0.25–0.50 points at the same credit profile, because the lender can see you've made on-time payments on the existing loan.

Cash-out refinance

A refi that lets you borrow more than your current balance and take the difference as cash, secured against the vehicle's equity. APRs run 1–3 points above standard refi rates. Almost always worse than a HELOC, personal loan, or 0% balance transfer card — but cheaper than payday lending.

Lease buyout loans

Financing the residual value of a leased vehicle so you can buy it instead of returning it. Treated as used-car financing by most lenders, with APRs slightly above purchase rates. Specialty product — only some lenders offer it.

By credit tier

Prime auto loans

Loans to borrowers with FICO 661+. Originated by mainstream banks, credit unions, and online lenders. Standard underwriting, transparent pricing, no surprises.

Subprime auto loans

Loans to borrowers with FICO 600 or below. APRs typically 12–22%. Originated by specialty subprime lenders (Santander Consumer, Westlake, Credit Acceptance) and some traditional banks' subprime divisions.

Subprime loans are more likely to use precomputed interest, have prepayment penalties, and require GPS or starter-interrupt devices. Read the contract carefully.

Buy Here Pay Here (BHPH)

Loans originated directly by used-car dealerships rather than third-party lenders. Common at the deep sub-prime end. APRs are at the legal state maximum (often 18–28%) and the dealer also profits on the car. Almost always the most expensive way to finance a vehicle. Avoid if you have any other option.

By rate structure

Fixed-rate auto loans

The standard. APR is locked at signing and doesn't change for the life of the loan. Predictable monthly payment.

Variable-rate auto loans

Rare in auto lending, more common in some HELOCs and credit cards. APR adjusts periodically based on an index (typically prime rate). If the index rises, your payment rises too. A few subprime lenders use these.

Specialty categories

Manufacturer captive loans

Loans originated by the financing arm of an automaker (Toyota Financial Services, Ford Credit, GM Financial, etc.). They have an incentive to move inventory, so they'll sometimes offer below-market APRs on specific models — particularly slow sellers and end-of-cycle clearance.

EV-specific loans

Some lenders (LightStream, several credit unions) publish EV-specific APRs, sometimes a quarter to half-point below their standard new-car rate. Worth asking about if you're financing an electric vehicle.

Title loans

Not really an auto loan — a short-term loan secured by your already-paid-off vehicle's title. APRs frequently exceed 100% on an annualized basis. Predatory product. Listed here only so the term is defined.

Which type fits which situation

SituationBest loan type
Buying a new car, prime creditDirect from credit union, then dealer for promo rates
Buying a used car at a dealerDirect pre-approval, then dealer for matching
Buying from a private sellerDirect from credit union or LightStream
Have an existing high-rate loanRefinance — credit union or refi marketplace
Lease ending, want to keep the carLease buyout loan from PenFed, Navy Federal, or LightStream
Sub-prime credit (below 620)Direct application to subprime-friendly online lender (AutoPay)
Need cash from car equityHELOC or personal loan first; cash-out auto refi as fallback

Frequently asked

Is dealer financing always more expensive?

Not always — but usually. Manufacturer-subsidized 0% APR offers can beat anything you'd get direct. The fix is to always get a competing pre-approval first, then let the dealer try to beat it.

Can I have multiple types of auto loans at once?

Yes — if you have multiple vehicles. Each loan is independent. Lenders may consider total auto debt in your debt-to-income calculation.

What's the difference between an auto loan and a personal loan for a car?

An auto loan is secured by the vehicle (lower APR, vehicle as collateral). A personal loan is unsecured (higher APR, no lien on the car). Personal loans are useful when the vehicle doesn't qualify for auto financing — too old, too high mileage, salvage title — or for private-party deals where you want flexibility.

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