A credit card loan — an unsecured loan used to pay off your credit card balances — can turn several compounding card payments into one fixed monthly payment with a real payoff date. The question most people have is simple: how do you actually get one, especially if your balance is high? Here's the step-by-step.
(New to the concept? Start with our overview, what is a credit card loan.)
Getting a credit card loan, step by step
- 1
Add up your credit card debt
Total your balances across every card. This is the amount your credit card loan would need to cover. If it's around $20,000 or more, you're squarely in the range these loans are designed for.
- 2
Check your rough credit standing
You don't need a perfect score, but knowing roughly where you stand helps set expectations. High card balances may have pushed your score down via credit utilization — that's common, and it doesn't rule you out.
- 3
Compare lenders — without applying to each one
Applying to one bank at a time is slow and can stack up hard inquiries. Instead, use a matching service that checks many lenders at once with a single soft pull, so you see real options without the credit hit.
- 4
Review the offer's real numbers
Look at the fixed rate, the monthly payment, and the payoff date, and compare them to what your cards cost you today. A good credit card loan should simplify your payments and give you a clear finish line.
- 5
Accept, and let the loan pay off your cards
If you move forward, the loan funds pay off your card balances. From there, you make one fixed monthly payment until the payoff date — with the balance dropping every single month.
What lenders look at
When you apply for a credit card loan, lenders generally weigh a few things: your income and its stability, your debt-to-income ratio (monthly debt payments versus income), your credit history, and your credit utilization. The goal is to gauge whether you can comfortably handle the new fixed payment.
This is also where high balances create friction — they push up utilization and debt-to-income, which is why a conservative bank may decline the very people who most need the loan. The key insight: different lenders draw those lines in very different places.
How to qualify with a high balance
If you're carrying $30,000, $40,000, or more and worried you won't qualify, a few things work in your favor:
- Some lenders specialize in high balances. A number don't just tolerate larger credit card debt — they focus on it. The trick is reaching those lenders instead of only your own bank.
- Steady income counts for a lot. If you can clearly afford one fixed monthly payment, that carries real weight even when your balances are large.
- Checking options across many lenders beats one application. A single soft-pull check can surface lenders a lone bank application never would.
For more on this exact situation, read why your bank said no — and where to look next.
Do it without hurting your credit
One of the biggest worries is that shopping for a loan will damage a score that's already under pressure. It doesn't have to. Checking your options through Loan Direct uses a soft pull, which does not affect your credit score. A hard inquiry only happens if you choose to proceed with a specific lender's full application. (More on the difference in soft pull vs. hard inquiry.)
Ready to get a credit card loan?
Check your options across a large lender network in about two minutes — soft pull only, no hard inquiry, no impact on your credit score.
This article is for general educational purposes and is not financial advice. Loan Direct USA is a loan matching service, not a lender; approval is not guaranteed, and rates and terms are set by the lender based on your individual circumstances.