Best advertised APRs for buying a new vehicle, ranked low to high. New-car loans typically beat used-car APRs by 0.5–1.5 points — but only on franchised-dealer purchases.
| Lender | Type | Min credit | Term | APR (from) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
NA
Navy Federal
|
Credit Union | 640+ | 60 mo | 5.29% | View → |
|
CA
Capital One
|
Bank | 660+ | 60 mo | 5.39% | View → |
|
PE
PenFed
|
Credit Union | 650+ | 60 mo | 5.49% | View → |
|
US
USAA
|
Bank (Military) | 640+ | 60 mo | 5.49% | View → |
|
LI
LightStream
|
Bank (Online) | 670+ | 60 mo | 5.99% | View → |
|
AL
Ally
|
Bank (Online) | 620+ | 60 mo | 6.19% | View → |
|
U.
U.S. Bank
|
Bank | 660+ | 60 mo | 6.29% | View → |
|
BA
Bank of America
|
Bank | 660+ | 60 mo | 6.39% | View → |
|
CH
Chase
|
Bank | 660+ | 60 mo | 6.49% | View → |
|
WE
Wells Fargo
|
Bank | 660+ | 60 mo | 6.59% | View → |
Best advertised APRs as of May 1, 2026. Your actual rate depends on credit, term, and loan amount.
The single biggest mistake new car buyers make is walking onto a dealer's lot without a pre-approval. The dealer's finance manager makes a chunk of their commission from marking up the bank's "buy rate," so without a competing offer, you have no leverage to push back.
The order of operations that produces the best APR:
Manufacturer 0% APR promotions are real, but they're typically limited to:
Run the math: a $5,000 cash rebate plus a 6.5% APR for 60 months often beats 0% APR with no rebate over the same term. The "free money" headline doesn't always survive contact with the calculator.
Technically you can get a new car loan with a 500 FICO — but the APR will be brutal. Here's what each tier roughly means in 2026:
| FICO range | Tier | Typical new-car APR |
|---|---|---|
| 781+ | Super-prime | 5.5%–6.5% |
| 661–780 | Prime | 6.5%–8.0% |
| 601–660 | Near-prime | 8.5%–11.5% |
| 501–600 | Sub-prime | 12%–17% |
| 500 and below | Deep sub-prime | 17%–22% |
Plug in the price, your down payment, and an APR — see your monthly payment and total interest in real time.
Open calculator →