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FundsForBudget > Homes > LendingClub Introduces Cash-Back Reward For Personal Loan Borrowers
Homes

LendingClub Introduces Cash-Back Reward For Personal Loan Borrowers

TSP Staff By TSP Staff Last updated: July 21, 2025 9 Min Read
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Key takeaways

  • The personal loan lender’s new LevelUp Checking account offers 2 percent cash back for customers who make an on-time monthly payment toward their debt.
  • The feature is five times more valuable than a similar perk offered by competing lenders.
  • Borrowing from the same financial institution where you bank might be convenient, but it’s still wise to pursue the best loan possible.

When it goes well, personal loan repayment is boring. You have your funds, and you’re simply whittling the balance down, one installment payment at a time.

LendingClub, however, recently announced an innovation that should improve the experience for its customers: If you enroll in its LevelUp Checking account, you get 2 percent of your monthly personal loan payment as cash back each month, as long as you pay on time. That might not sound like a lot — and we did the math to find out — but there are no reward limits. The cash back could be significant if you have multiple LendingClub loans or a very large balance.

Also, consider that for the average personal loan repayment, LendingClub’s cash-back bonus is almost five times more valuable than other lenders’ closest facsimile: an interest-rate reduction (typically of 0.25 percentage points) for enrolling in automatic payments or having a bank account with the lender.

That might explain why this is a true first.

“We spent a lot of time looking,” LendingClub chief customer officer Mark Elliot tells Bankrate. “We haven’t seen anybody doing this.”

Personal loan benefits are typically few and far between

If you borrow a student loan from some lenders and you graduate on time or with a certain GPA, they might reduce your principal balance. And if you take out an auto loan, you might qualify for a promotional APR or cash-back bonus upon buying your car.

The pros and cons of personal loans, however, are largely the same among lenders and don’t change as often as other financial products. Heck, we’ve even pointed out the fact that origination fees still (unnecessarily) exist.

That’s partly what makes LendingClub’s new feature so novel. Nobody else is doing it.

The basics of LendingClub’s LevelUp Checking accounts
  • Only available to current members (or after you get a personal loan)
  • 2 percent of your payment as cash back for each loan you make an on-time payment toward (with no reward limits)
  • 1 percent cash back when you use a LevelUp Checking debit card for gas, grocery and pharmacy purchases (among other common bank account features)

LendingClub, which also offers a high-yield savings account, sees its checking account’s features as a way to reward their borrowers on a regular basis — and offer credit card-like rewards with lower risks of accumulating debt.

“We want to [incentivize] those really good financial behaviors and not just have our customers feel like, ‘OK, I’m paying this loan on time,’ but ‘I’m getting rewarded for doing the right thing,’” LendingClub’s Elliot says. “Obviously, it helps your credit score and it helps you qualify for loans in the future and all those things. But … when we tested this with our members, their eyes lit up. They were like, ‘Nobody’s doing this in the industry, this feels like it really recognizes me for taking all of those steps.’”

Just how valuable is LendingClub’s cash-back offer?

Say you have the average personal loan: $6,200 with a 21.8 annual percentage rate percent on a three-year repayment term, according to early 2025 TransUnion data. An on-time payment would net you nearly $5 each month. Again, larger balances (or multiple loans) could multiply the reward.

Loan 1: $6,200

Loan 2: $12,400

Loan 3: $24,800

Monthly payment

$236

$472

$945

Monthly reward

$5

$9

$19

Annual reward

$57

$113

$228

The most similar personal loan perk offered elsewhere might be an interest-rate reduction (typically of 0.25 percentage points) for enrolling in automatic payments or having a bank account with the lender.

To compare the value of these benefits, let’s use the same $6,200 loan and compare cash back with LendingClub versus savings at SoFi, another major online lender.

Reward

LendingClub’s 2 percent cash back for on-time payment

SoFi’s relationship discount: Rate decreases to 21.55 percent

Monthly

$5

$1

Annual

$59

$12

Total (three years)

$170

$36

While even a slightly lower APR lasts for the duration of your repayment and offers nominal savings, it doesn’t offer the same flexibility. After all, you could use a cash-back award to pay off your personal loan faster, but it could also help you build an emergency fund or accomplish another savings goal.

With the 2 percent back, it’s an … ongoing reminder around the right financial behavior. So, rather than just give you an upfront discount, what we wanted to do is deliver value to you over the course of the loan, but also create those ongoing moments of delight.

— Mark Elliot, LendingClub chief customer officer

OK, but should you borrow from the financial institution where you bank?

The best personal loan for your situation likely has the lowest interest rate, best available repayment term and the least fees. Still, if multiple lenders quote you similar loan offers, features like LendingClub’s could be a tie-breaker.

Just don’t expect many personal loan lenders to copy-cat this new invention. Elliot, who has long worked in the financial services industry for firms like Capital One, J.P. Morgan Chase and TIAA, is skeptical. For one, many lenders aren’t banks and can’t offer checking and savings accounts. For another, even those that do might not want to lose money on paying out bonuses.

“And so, as a result, when you look at a product like this, you say to yourself, ‘All right, well, 2 percent back for on-time loan payments, that’s a cost to the company,’” Elliot says. “The worst thing that happens is a lot of our members get it, and they’re all paying [their loans] on time, and we’re spending a lot of money on rewards… but that would be a great outcome for our members.”

As a consumer, having multiple accounts under one roof, even a digital one, means it’s easier to shuttle cash between them with seconds-long transfers. The question then becomes whether there’s any fly in the ointment. Most notably, if you default on loan repayment, it’s also easier for the financial institution to seize your liquid cash if it’s already in their vault.

For his part, Elliot says this isn’t a common practice at LendingClub — and is avoidable.

“Our approach is to try to help the borrower and try to figure out ways to solution with them,” he adds. “Like every borrower or lender, we do loan modifications for borrowers in trouble. And we have a lot of procedures and processes and analytics around, ‘How can we help the borrower?’”

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