If your score isn’t perfect but an app still shows a loan offer, it’s not a mistake. Here’s how modern lenders think beyond just your credit number.
Many lenders prefer higher scores (for example, 725+). But app-based systems also review income, job stability, and existing EMIs before deciding to fully reject an application.
Regular salary credits, consistent employer, and manageable debt-to-income ratios can sometimes compensate for a lower score and still make you eligible for a smaller loan amount.
UPI payments, on-time EMIs, bill payments, and healthy balances in your main account signal disciplined behaviour. Lenders may factor this into their internal risk models.
If you’ve previously taken and repaid a loan or EMI product with the same institution on time, their system may be more flexible even if your current score has dipped.
Lower scores can mean smaller approved amounts, shorter tenures, and higher interest. You get access to funds, but borrowing costs and penalties for delays are usually stricter.
Only borrow for genuine needs, keep EMIs affordable, avoid multiple simultaneous loans, and focus on rebuilding your score through timely repayments and controlled spending habits.