Sara Routhier

Sr. Director of Content

Sara Routhier, Managing Editor and Outreach Director, has professional experience as an educator, SEO specialist, and content marketer. She has over five years of experience in the insurance industry. As a researcher, data nerd, writer, and editor she strives to curate educational, enlightening articles that provide you with the must-know facts and best-kept secrets within the overwhelming world o...

Sr. Director of Content

Joel Ohman

Founder, CFP®

Joel Ohman is the CEO of a private equity-backed digital media company. He is a CERTIFIED FINANCIAL PLANNER™, author, angel investor, and serial entrepreneur who loves creating new things, whether books or businesses. He has also previously served as the founder and resident CFP® of a national insurance agency, Real Time Health Quotes. He also has an MBA from the University of South Florida. ...

Founder, CFP®

UPDATED: Aug 3, 2012

Advertiser Disclosure

Advertiser Disclosure: We strive to help you make confident loan decisions. Comparison shopping should be easy. We are not affiliated with any one loan provider and cannot guarantee quotes from any single provider. Our partnerships don’t influence our content. Our opinions are our own. To compare quotes from many different companies please enter your ZIP code on this page to use the free quote tool. The more quotes you compare, the more chances to save.

Editorial Guidelines: We are a free online resource for anyone interested in learning more about loans. Our goal is to be an objective, third-party resource for everything loan related. We update our site regularly, and all content is reviewed by experts.

UPDATED: Aug 3, 2012

Advertiser Disclosure

Advertiser Disclosure: We strive to help you make confident loan decisions. Comparison shopping should be easy. We are not affiliated with any one loan provider and cannot guarantee quotes from any single provider. Our partnerships don’t influence our content. Our opinions are our own. To compare quotes from many different companies please enter your ZIP code on this page to use the free quote tool. The more quotes you compare, the more chances to save.

UPDATED: Aug 3, 2012Fact Checked

Small secured personal loans are simply loans that are secured by some sort of collateral. By being secured by collateral—which is anything of value—a loan can be lent out with less risk to the lender.

For example, imagine a borrower who wants to borrow $2,000. His lender is willing to loan that amount out but insists the borrower offer up collateral so that the lender’s money isn’t at such a huge risk. The borrower offers up money in his checking account by writing a post dated check for $2,000. The lender views this paycheck as acceptable collateral and originates the secured loan under the assumption that if the borrower defaults, his $2,000 check will be cashed to cover the cost of the loan.

While using collateral can be useful for some borrowers and lenders, not everybody is comfortable putting up valuable assets for a loan. Additionally, not everybody has assets of value that would match the loan they want to borrow. Fortunately for these two groups of people, there are alternatives to secured personal loans as well the option to compare their quotes before agreeing to any contract.

Some of those alternatives include:

  • unsecured personal loans
  • pawn loans
  • equity loans

The specific needs of a borrower also can determine what kind of loan they need. For example, a borrower wanting a loan for a car should get financing specific to automobiles, such as a common car loan.

Unsecured Personal Loans

Unsecured personal loans—as their name implies—are really the opposite of small secured personal loans. Whereas small secured personal loans involve collateral that minimizes the risk of the loaning process for the lender, unsecured loans lack collateral. Instead, lenders use other methods in order to limit their risks.

Since unsecured personal loans are typically risky for lenders, the interest rates on these types of loans are high. This high interest accrues sizable profits for the lender in order to offset the money lost from those who default.

Pawning

Pawn loans are similar to small secured personal loans but with a few differences. In pawning, collateral can be just about anything of value. Also, unlike small secured personal loans, collateral for a pawn loan is left at the premises of the pawnshop.

For example, a prospective borrower approaches a pawnshop with a valuable and rare baseball card. The pawnshop values the card at $400 and agrees to give the borrower a loan slightly less than that amount. The baseball card is left with the pawnshop until the agreed-upon time that the borrower is to return to repay the loan. Should the borrower fail to return to repay the loan then the pawnshop would own the baseball card and could sell it to recover their loss.

Home Equity

An equity loan is a loan which is secured by the equity of real estate property, most commonly in the form of houses. Home equity is far different than simply the appraised value of a home. Home equity is the difference between the value of the home—which has decreased across the board thanks to the housing collapse—versus the remaining debt on the property. Essentially, it is the amount homeowners will be left with after selling their house and repaying their mortgage.

Using home equity to land a personal loan can be tempting for borrowers, but it is very important to consider the ramifications of defaulting on a home equity loan.

By offering up home equity as collateral for a small secured personal loan, a borrower places their home at risk. If that borrower wishes to only borrow a small amount of money, then it is fairly unwise to borrow a small amount against such a highly valuable and necessary piece of collateral. The value of homes makes them far too valuable to be considered for small secured personal loans, particularly amid the unstable economic atmosphere created by the recession.

Other Loans

The needs of borrowers should determine what kind of loan to borrow. For example, borrowers interested in borrowing money for a car shouldn’t consider a secured personal loan since there are specific forms of financing available for such a purchase. A car loan would be excellent for this situation since the interest levels and fees would be appropriate for a car and no additional collateral would be required.

Similar arguments can be made for student loans, mortgages, business loans, and any other purchase that is common enough to warrant its own specific financing.

By selecting whatever appropriate loan is best for their situation, borrowers can make wise decisions for their financial present and future.

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Sara Routhier

Sr. Director of Content

Sara Routhier, Managing Editor and Outreach Director, has professional experience as an educator, SEO specialist, and content marketer. She has over five years of experience in the insurance industry. As a researcher, data nerd, writer, and editor she strives to curate educational, enlightening articles that provide you with the must-know facts and best-kept secrets within the overwhelming world o...

Sr. Director of Content

Joel Ohman

Founder, CFP®

Joel Ohman is the CEO of a private equity-backed digital media company. He is a CERTIFIED FINANCIAL PLANNER™, author, angel investor, and serial entrepreneur who loves creating new things, whether books or businesses. He has also previously served as the founder and resident CFP® of a national insurance agency, Real Time Health Quotes. He also has an MBA from the University of South Florida. ...

Founder, CFP®

Editorial Guidelines: We are a free online resource for anyone interested in learning more about loans. Our goal is to be an objective, third-party resource for everything loan related. We update our site regularly, and all content is reviewed by experts.