NetCredit is an online lending platform operated by NC Financial Solutions, LLC, a subsidiary of publicly traded Enova International (NYSE: ENVA). Headquartered in Chicago, the company offers unsecured personal loans ranging from $1,000 to $10,000 and lines of credit up to $17,500, primarily targeting borrowers with fair-to-poor credit who may not qualify for traditional bank loans or mainstream fintech lenders.
NetCredit's application process is entirely online with same-day or next-business-day funding for approved borrowers. The platform uses its own proprietary scoring model alongside traditional credit data to evaluate applicants, and rate checks are available via soft credit inquiry. Loan terms range from 6 to 60 months depending on the product and state.
The critical caveat with NetCredit is cost. APRs range from 34% to 155%, making it one of the most expensive personal lending options available. For context, mainstream personal loan APRs typically range from 6% to 36%. A $5,000 NetCredit loan at 100% APR would cost significantly more in total interest than the same loan from a traditional lender. The company positions itself as an alternative to payday loans, but the APR range overlaps with high-cost lending territory in many states.
NetCredit's parent company Enova International has a troubled regulatory history. The CFPB fined Enova $15 million in November 2023 for debiting consumer accounts without authorization, canceling loan extensions without notice, and violating a prior 2019 consent order — earning Enova the label of "repeat offender." While NetCredit itself has not been separately sanctioned, its operations are governed by the same parent company management and compliance infrastructure.
NetCredit is available in approximately 37 states. It is not available in Colorado, Connecticut, Iowa, Massachusetts, Maryland, Maine, North Carolina, New Hampshire, New York, Pennsylvania, Vermont, Washington, West Virginia, or DC. BBB A+ accredited since January 2026.
Borrowers comparing personal loan lenders should consider the full range of borrowing and credit-building options available. Those with damaged credit may find personal loans for bad credit more accessible, though typically at higher rates. Debt consolidation loans are specifically designed to combine multiple high-interest balances into a single payment with a lower rate. For credit rebuilding alongside borrowing, credit builder loans and secured credit cards offer structured paths to improving scores over time. Consumers dealing with existing negative items should also explore credit repair services to address inaccuracies before applying, as a cleaner credit report often unlocks better loan terms. Many of these lenders offer installment loans with fixed monthly payments over 12 to 60 months, giving borrowers a clear payoff timeline.