A credit union branch has a certain silence that isn’t found in a bank. fewer screens. fewer pre-written salutations. Often, all you need is a few desks and someone who is willing to look at the numbers with you. Because credit unions continued to perform the unglamorous task of writing loans that people could afford while Wall Street spent the last few years creating complex machinery around used-car debt, that silence has proven to be one of the more underappreciated forces in American finance.
It’s easy to overlook the story that the numbers convey. Currently accounting for about 28% of the U.S. auto loan market, credit unions briefly outpaced banks during the most recent cycle’s rate spikes. A marketing campaign was not responsible for that change. Banks tightened, which is why it occurred. Captive finance arms, the lending divisions associated with manufacturers, became pickier about credit scores, and lenders such as Ally reduced approvals even as applications hit all-time highs. Customers needed a place to go.
Almost casually, credit unions filled that void. The loans were not securitized into exotic bonds. They weren’t combined for rating agencies. They simply charged a few fewer points, kept them on their books, and bided their time. This slower, smaller, less leveraged model seems to have always been theirs; it just happened to look amazing after the subprime auto party’s music stopped.
For the duration of the party, there was a lot of noise. According to ProPublica, Wall Street treated used-car debt as a dependable yield machine and invested about $76 billion in subprime auto bonds in just 2021 and 2022. Then American Car Center fell apart. U.S. Auto Sales came next. The CFPB began bringing legal action regarding double-billed insurance and kill switches. When all was said and done, the nation’s auto loan debt had grown more quickly than any other type of consumer debt, surpassing $1.5 trillion. It was inevitable that some of those loans would fail. It was required by the math.
In the meantime, the new car affordability crisis became almost comical. The monthly average car payment exceeded $800. Once a curiosity, seven-year loans now account for over 25% of new financing, while six-year terms are now the norm. Fifteen years after everyone last vowed they wouldn’t, eight-year loans are slowly making a comeback. Veteran Los Angeles dealer Mike Schwartz put it plainly: the industry doesn’t learn its lessons. Most likely, he is correct.
Credit unions found their moment in this mess. Consider Shirria McCullough, a social worker in North Carolina who discovered her seven-year Honda Pilot loan only after reading a comment on TikTok. She paid it off in full after refinancing through a credit union. That is precisely the kind of micro-rebellion against dealership financing that credit unions have covertly enabled, as it has been told and retold in various forms across thousands of households. reduced prices. shorter phrases whenever feasible. Options for refinancing when the initial loan begins to appear suspicious.
This dynamic hasn’t always been well received by dealers. Credit unions “flip” deals, which means they cancel the protection products and add-ons dealers sell in the F&I office, according to a long-standing grievance expressed in industry forums. That’s lost revenue. However, there’s also a growing recognition that, in 2026, credit union partnerships might be the only way dealerships keep monthly payments affordable for regular consumers, as noted by commentators like Josh Amaton.
It’s difficult to ignore the irony. In order to maximize returns on auto loans, Wall Street created a whole ecosystem. With their fluorescent lighting and leisurely tellers, credit unions continued to make dull loans. And this time, boring looks a lot like winning.

