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Prime Rate

Bank lending benchmark applied to many floating-rate consumer and business loans for strong borrowers.

The prime rate is the interest rate that banks quote to their most creditworthy customers and use as a reference point for pricing many variable-rate consumer and business loans.

In practice, prime is less a market price you trade and more a public lending benchmark that helps banks express loan pricing.

Why the Prime Rate Matters

Prime matters because it shows up directly in real borrowing decisions.

It often affects:

  • business lines of credit
  • home equity lines of credit
  • some adjustable-rate consumer loans
  • credit card pricing formulas

When a lender says a loan is priced at “prime plus” or “prime minus” a spread, prime is the visible base rate and the spread reflects borrower-specific risk.

How It Works in Finance Practice

Prime is usually influenced by broad monetary conditions and policy rates, but it is not the same thing as the Fed Funds Rate.

The relationship is indirect:

  • policy rates influence bank funding conditions
  • funding conditions influence loan pricing
  • loan pricing informs the prime rate banks publish

That means prime often moves in the same direction as policy tightening or easing, but it remains a retail and commercial lending benchmark rather than a wholesale overnight funding rate like SOFR.

Prime Rate vs. Other Common Benchmarks

Benchmark What it reflects Most common use What it is not
Prime Rate Bank-published reference rate for top-tier borrowers Pricing credit cards, business credit lines, and some consumer variable-rate loans A wholesale money-market transaction rate
Fed Funds Rate Overnight interbank policy-linked target range and trading conditions Monetary-policy transmission and short-term bank funding interpretation A borrower-facing loan quote
SOFR Secured overnight wholesale funding cost against Treasury collateral Loans, swaps, floating-rate notes, and valuation curves A retail lending benchmark for households and small businesses

That comparison matters because borrowers often hear all three names in the same rate cycle. Prime is borrower-facing, fed funds is policy-facing, and SOFR is market-benchmark-facing.

Practical Example

Suppose a business line of credit is priced at:

$$ \text{Prime} + 2.00\% $$

If the published prime rate is 7.50%, the borrowing rate becomes:

$$ 7.50\% + 2.00\% = 9.50\% $$

If prime later rises to 8.00%, the loan rate rises automatically to 10.00% unless the contract specifies some other cap or adjustment rule.

Prime rate vs. fed funds rate

The federal funds rate is a short-term interbank policy-linked benchmark. Prime is a bank lending benchmark for top-tier borrowers.

Prime rate vs. SOFR

SOFR is a market benchmark tied to secured overnight borrowing in Treasury-collateralized funding markets. Prime is a retail and commercial lending reference.

Prime rate is not the rate every borrower gets

Most borrowers pay a rate above prime, or a contract formula tied to prime, because their credit risk is higher than the bank’s best customers.

  • SOFR: A modern funding benchmark used in many floating-rate contracts.
  • Fed Funds Rate: A policy-linked overnight benchmark that often influences bank rate decisions.
  • Credit Score: A borrower-quality input that can affect the spread applied above prime.
  • Loan-to-Value Ratio: Another credit-pricing factor in secured lending.

FAQs

Does the prime rate only apply to businesses?

No. It is widely used in both business and consumer lending, especially for variable-rate products such as credit lines and some credit cards.

Can the prime rate change without a borrower renegotiating the loan?

Yes. If the loan is contractually tied to prime, the interest rate can move automatically when the benchmark moves.

Is prime always the cheapest borrowing rate in the market?

No. It is a reference point for strong borrowers, but specific secured products or wholesale-market rates can still be lower.
Revised on Monday, May 18, 2026