Connecticut · Strong borrower protections

Installment loans in Connecticut.

Connecticut is one of the more protective states for installment-loan borrowers — it caps what licensed lenders can charge. Below is how a loan works here, what that 36% ceiling means for your cost, and how to request $500–$5,000 from a licensed lender.

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Resident of Connecticut reviewing an installment loan payment plan at home
Connecticut Borrower Protection Score
Strong

Connecticut offers a $2,000 APR cap of 36% — among the more protective states.

Our rating, derived from the National Consumer Law Center's state cap data. It reflects whether the state caps APR, licenses lenders, and limits high-cost terms. See the NCLC source →

APR cap
36% max on a $2,000 loan
Lender licensing
Required — verify any lender with Connecticut Department of Banking
Your move
Compare the total of payments, not just the monthly figure

How installment loans work in Connecticut

Borrowers in Connecticut get more protection than in most states. Installment lenders must be licensed by Connecticut Department of Banking, and state law caps the APR on a $2,000 loan at 36% — which keeps the cost of a Connecticut loan comparatively predictable.

Connecticut's $2,000 APR cap of 36% sits right at the widely-cited 36% benchmark and is stricter than 12 of the 43 states that cap a loan this size.

In dollars: a $2,000 one-year loan at Connecticut's 36% cap costs about $2,720 in total, versus about $2,340 in the strictest state (Arkansas, 17%).

Maximum APR caps in Connecticut

According to the National Consumer Law Center, the highest APR (including fees) a licensed lender may charge in Connecticut:

Loan sizeMax APR in Connecticut
$500 6-month loan36%
$2,000 2-year loan36%
$10,000 5-year loan25%
Source: NCLC, Dec 2025 — $500/$2,000 as of Sep 2025, $10,000 as of Aug 2023. Confirm current limits with Connecticut Department of Banking.

Requesting a loan in Connecticut

The request is fully online: pick an amount and term, share basic income and bank details, and review offers from lenders licensed in Connecticut. Popular with Bridgeport residents and borrowers statewide, with funds often arriving as soon as the next business day. Some Connecticut lenders weigh income over credit score — see lenders that weigh income over your score and lenders that look beyond your score.

224
CFPB complaints from Connecticut since 2023
#32
of 50 states by complaint volume
“Charged fees or interest you didn't expect”
most common complaint nationwide

Source: CFPB Consumer Complaint Database — payday, title & personal loans. A real-world signal of what to watch for in Connecticut.

Why your state matters

A $2,500 loan: Connecticut's cap vs. a no-cap state.

12-month $2,500 loanExample APRMonthlyTotal repaid
Connecticut (strong)36%$283$3,400
A state with no APR cap99%$415$4,975
Illustrative comparison showing why state protections change real cost. Figures are examples, not quotes.
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What Connecticut actually searches for.

Average U.S. monthly searches. We build this page around what Connecticut borrowers really look for.

Connecticut questions

Straight answers.

Are installment loans legal in Connecticut?

Yes. They're legal and regulated by Connecticut Department of Banking; lenders must be licensed to operate in Connecticut.

What's the APR cap in Connecticut?

Per NCLC, the maximum APR is 36% on a $500 loan, 36% on a $2,000 loan, and 25% on a $10,000 loan. Confirm current limits with Connecticut Department of Banking.

How much can I borrow in Connecticut?

Online installment loans here typically range $500–$5,000 over 3–24 months, depending on the lender and your income.

How fast is funding in Connecticut?

Many lenders fund approved loans as soon as the next business day after you sign.

See Connecticut offers.

Only lenders licensed in Connecticut. No credit impact to check.

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