Personal Loans and Borrowing UK 2026 — Compare Options and APR

Peer-to-Peer Loans vs Bank Loans UK — What's the Difference?

Peer-to-peer lending lets you borrow from individual investors, not banks. Here's how P2P borrowing compares to bank loans in the UK in 2026 — rates, risks, and who it suits.

If you're struggling with debt, free confidential help is available from StepChange (0800 138 1111), National Debtline (0808 808 4000), and Citizens Advice.

Peer-to-peer (P2P) lending once looked set to transform consumer borrowing. The reality has been more complicated — several major UK P2P platforms have closed since 2020. But regulated P2P borrowing still exists and can, in the right circumstances, offer competitive rates. Here is an honest comparison with bank loans.

The Core Difference

Feature Bank Loan P2P Loan
Who lends to you The bank (using depositor funds) Individual investors via a platform
FCA regulated Yes Yes (for authorised platforms)
FSCS protection Deposits protected; loans are obligations Not applicable to borrowers
Rate determination Bank’s internal pricing Platform’s algorithm + investor demand
Application Bank’s own process Platform’s online process
Decision speed Minutes to days Minutes to days (similar)
Repayment obligation Unchanged if bank changes ownership Unchanged if platform fails

Rates — How Do P2P and Bank Loans Compare?

In 2026, the rate difference between P2P and bank loans is smaller than it was in 2015–2019. Most mainstream banks now offer personal loan rates starting at 6–8% APR for good-credit borrowers. P2P platforms offer similar rates for borrowers with strong credit — and higher rates for riskier borrowers.

Borrower profile Bank (typical) P2P (typical) Advantage
Excellent credit, £10,000+ 6–8% APR 5–9% APR Similar; P2P may edge it
Good credit, £5,000–£10,000 8–12% APR 8–15% APR Bank often cheaper
Fair/poor credit 15–30% APR 15–35% APR Credit union often best

Key point: P2P rates are not automatically better. Always compare actual quotes from both sources using soft searches before committing.

What Happens if a P2P Platform Fails?

Several UK P2P lenders closed between 2019 and 2022, including some major players. When this happened:

  • As a borrower: Your loan continued under the original terms or was transferred to a third-party servicer. You were still legally obliged to repay.
  • Platform closure does not cancel your debt.
  • FCA rules require all P2P platforms to maintain wind-down plans (sometimes called resolution plans) to manage loan books if the platform ceases trading.

Before using any P2P platform, verify it holds full FCA authorisation (not just interim permission) at register.fca.org.uk.

Worked Example

Scenario: Daniel wants to borrow £7,500 over 3 years.

Option APR Monthly payment Total interest
High street bank 8.9% £239 £1,100
P2P platform (excellent credit) 7.5% £233 £882
P2P platform (good credit) 11% £246 £1,356

In this example, a top-tier P2P rate saves around £218 versus the bank — modest. If Daniel has only good (not excellent) credit, the bank is cheaper. The saving is not worth the extra research time unless Daniel is actively getting quotes from both.

Is P2P Borrowing Right for You?

P2P may be worth comparing if:

  • You have an excellent credit profile and want the best possible rate
  • You are comfortable using online-only platforms
  • The platform is clearly FCA-authorised and has a track record

Stick with a bank or building society if:

  • You prefer an established, familiar institution
  • You already have a good relationship with your bank (may get better rates)
  • You want face-to-face support

Consider a credit union instead if:

  • Your credit profile is not excellent
  • You want more flexible underwriting

Next Steps

Before borrowing from any source, compare real quotes using soft eligibility checkers — not advertised rates. The Loans and Borrowing Hub covers all borrowing options side by side, including the alternatives to standard loans.

Sources

  1. FCA — Peer-to-peer lending platforms
  2. FCA Financial Services Register