Car loans are secured debt. Almost every auto loan you get from a dealer, bank, credit union, or online lender is secured by the vehicle itself.
What Secured vs. Unsecured Actually Means
Secured debt is backed by an asset, called collateral, that the lender can claim if you stop paying. A mortgage uses the home. An auto loan uses the car.
Unsecured debt, such as credit cards and most personal loans, has no collateral. If you default, the lender’s only recourse is to pursue you through collections or the courts.
That distinction determines your interest rate, your approval odds, and the consequences if something goes wrong.
How a Car Loan Is Secured in Practice
When you finance a vehicle, the lender places a lien on the car title. That lien is a legal claim that stays attached to the vehicle until the loan is paid off in full.
In practical terms, this means:
- The lender is recorded as a lienholder on the title.
- You cannot sell or freely transfer the vehicle while the lien is in place.
- If you stop paying, the lender has the legal right to repossess the car.
- Once you make your final payment, the lien is released, and the title transfers fully to you.
How Lenders Price and Approve Secured Auto Loans
Because the car backs the loan, lenders carry less risk than with unsecured lending. That’s why secured auto loans typically come with lower interest rates and are more accessible to borrowers with imperfect credit. The vehicle provides a recovery option if the borrower defaults.
Key factors lenders weigh:
- Credit score and payment history
- Income and debt-to-income (DTI) ratio
- Loan-to-value ratio (LTV)
- Vehicle age and mileage
Can an Auto Loan Ever Be Unsecured?
Technically, a truly unsecured car loan doesn’t exist as a standard product. What does exist is using a personal loan to buy a car. Since the loan isn’t tied to the vehicle, the lender has no repossession rights. The trade-off is a higher interest rate, stricter credit requirements, and typically a shorter repayment term.
This approach makes sense in specific situations like:
- Buying an older vehicle a lender won’t accept as collateral
- Purchasing from a private seller where dealer financing isn’t available
- Financing a small amount where the flexibility of a personal loan outweighs the extra cost
What Happens If You Stop Paying a Secured Car Loan?
With a secured auto loan, the consequences are direct. After a series of missed payments, typically starting around 30 to 90 days, depending on the lender and state, the lender may repossess the vehicle. In most states, they can do this without going to court.
After repossession, the car is usually sold at auction. If the sale price doesn’t cover the remaining loan balance, you may be held responsible for the difference. That leftover amount is called a deficiency balance, and it becomes unsecured debt that the lender can pursue through collections or a lawsuit.
If you used a personal loan to buy the car instead, the lender can’t repossess the vehicle. But they can report the default to credit bureaus, send the debt to a collection agency, and seek a court judgment that could lead to wage garnishment.
How Secured Auto Debt Is Treated in Bankruptcy
Secured and unsecured debt are treated differently in bankruptcy, and auto loans are a good example of why that matters.
In Chapter 7, you generally have to either reaffirm the loan and keep paying, or surrender the car and discharge the debt.
In Chapter 13, you may be able to restructure the loan balance through the repayment plan, sometimes at a reduced amount if the car is worth less than what you owe. The secured nature of the debt means the lender’s claim on the vehicle doesn’t simply disappear the way unsecured debt can.
Conclusión
Car loans are secured or unsecured depending on how the financing is structured; the standard auto loan is secured, with the vehicle as collateral. That structure often works in your favor when it comes to interest rates and approval.
It also means that missing payments has concrete, fast-moving consequences. Knowing how your loan is structured before you sign puts you in a better position to manage it.



