A co-signer is someone who agrees to be legally responsible for a loan if the primary borrower fails to make payments. Adding a co-signer can help you qualify for a loan or get a lower interest rate — but it comes with serious risks for both parties.
What Does a Co-Signer Do?
When you apply for a loan and do not meet the lender’s requirements on your own — because of low credit, limited credit history, or low income — the lender may require a co-signer.
The co-signer’s credit history and income are considered alongside yours. If your co-signer has strong credit, you are more likely to be approved and may receive a better interest rate.
If you stop making payments, the lender can come after your co-signer. The full debt becomes their responsibility.
Co-Signer vs Co-Borrower
These terms sound similar but they are different.
A co-signer is a backup. They are only responsible if the primary borrower defaults. They typically do not have ownership rights to whatever the loan was used for.
A co-borrower (or joint borrower) shares equal responsibility for the loan from day one. They also typically share ownership of the asset. A spouse on a joint mortgage is a co-borrower, not a co-signer.
When Do You Need a Co-Signer?
Lenders may require a co-signer when:
- You have no credit history (common for young people or recent immigrants)
- You have a low credit score (typically below 620 for most lenders)
- Your income is too low to qualify for the loan amount you need
- You have a history of missed payments or defaults
Common loans that use co-signers include student loans, auto loans, personal loans, and apartment lease agreements.
Benefits of Having a Co-Signer
- Easier approval: Lenders are more willing to approve risky borrowers when a creditworthy co-signer backs the loan
- Lower interest rate: A stronger co-signer can help you qualify for a lower rate, saving you money over the life of the loan
- Credit building opportunity: If you make all payments on time, the loan helps build your credit history
Risks for the Co-Signer
Co-signing is a major financial commitment. Before agreeing to co-sign, every co-signer should understand these risks:
- Full legal responsibility: If the primary borrower does not pay, the lender will demand payment from the co-signer
- Credit damage: Late payments and defaults appear on the co-signer’s credit report, not just the borrower’s
- Debt-to-income impact: The loan shows up on the co-signer’s credit report as their debt, which can affect their ability to get their own loans
- Limited control: The co-signer does not receive the loan funds or own the asset, but bears full financial risk
Risks for the Primary Borrower
- Relationship damage: If you miss payments and hurt your co-signer’s credit, it can permanently damage the relationship
- Pressure to perform: Someone else’s financial wellbeing depends on your ability to pay
How to Get a Co-Signer Removed
There are a few ways to remove a co-signer from a loan:
- Refinance: Apply for a new loan in your name only once your credit and income have improved. The new loan pays off the old one, releasing the co-signer.
- Co-signer release: Some lenders allow co-signers to be released after you make a certain number of on-time payments (commonly 12 to 24 months). Check your loan agreement for details.
- Pay off the loan: Once the loan is paid in full, the co-signer’s obligation ends.
What Co-Signers Should Do Before Agreeing
- Review your own financial situation — can you afford to repay this loan if the borrower cannot?
- Read the full loan terms before signing anything
- Set up alerts so you are notified if a payment is late
- Have an honest conversation with the borrower about expectations and consequences
Alternatives to a Co-Signer
If you cannot find a co-signer or do not want to put someone in that position, consider these options:
- Secured loan: Offer collateral (a car, savings account) to reduce the lender’s risk
- Credit builder loan: Specifically designed to help you build credit history from scratch
- Secured credit card: Build credit with a small deposit as collateral
- Improve your credit first: Spend six to twelve months paying down existing debt and building credit before applying
Related: Best personal loans for bad credit | What is a credit builder loan? | How to dispute a credit report error