Key Points
- The credit union private student loan market splits into three models: credit unions that originate their own loans, credit unions that fund loans through a fintech platform, and credit unions that simply refer members to outside marketplaces.
- Two networks (LendKey and Student Choice) power most credit union private student lending in the U.S. Student Choice alone connects borrowers to over 200 credit unions.
- Some well-known names, including PenFed, are no longer originating their own student loans at all, but rather partnering with other companies.
When federal aid runs out, college families are often pointed toward credit unions as a “safer” or more affordable private student loan option. The pitch: lower rates, member-first service, fewer fees, is real for many borrowers.
But the back end is more complicated than the marketing suggests.
Some credit unions handle the whole student loan process from end to end, but this is getting very rare. Some use a fintech partner to handle the technology while keeping the loan on their books. And a growing number refer members to outside student loan marketplaces and never touch the loan at all.
Understanding which model a credit union uses changes who underwrites the loan, who services it, and who answers the phone if a payment problem comes up.
How Credit Union Student Loans Actually Work
There are three working models in the credit union private student loan market.
The first is direct origination, where the credit union underwrites and funds the loan with its own balance sheet and services it in-house or through a contracted servicer.
The second (and the most common today) is platform-powered lending, where a fintech runs the application, decisioning, and servicing, but the credit union still holds the loan on their books.
The third is a referral or marketplace model: the credit union markets a student loan program to members but is not the lender of record. Sometimes they are obviously referring members elsewhere, but sometimes it’s white-labeled as a credit union service.
Federal regulators recognize all three approaches. An NCUA letter on private student loans notes credit unions may originate loans either directly or indirectly through a third party, including via loan marketplaces.
For borrowers, those distinctions show up on the loan disclosures. The Creditor line tells you who actually owns the loan and that name may not match the credit union logo on the website.
Credit Unions That Originate Their Own Private Student Loans
Some credit unions still hold their own private student loans, even when the application experience is powered by a platform.
USC Credit Union offers private student lending designed to fill funding gaps after federal aid. Los Angeles Federal Credit Union (LAFCU) markets private student loans alongside scholarships and student credit cards.
Educators Credit Union in Wisconsin, Capital Credit Union, Visions Federal Credit Union, Summit Federal Credit Union, Educational Systems FCU, and Skyward Credit Union all keep private student loans on their books and target members in their fields of membership.
Many of these credit unions use Student Choice to handle the application and servicing, but the credit union sets the underwriting criteria, the rates, the program terms, and the loan note belongs to the credit union, not the platform.
Credit Unions That White Label Other Technology or Partner With Other Platforms
Two of the largest names in credit union student lending use the partner model.
Navy Federal Credit Union is the largest credit union in the United States by assets, but the program is built on top of LendKey’s lending-as-a-service platform. Navy Federal supplies the funding and underwriting parameters but LendKey provides the consumer-facing application and the servicing infrastructure.
PenFed is a different story. PenFed discontinued its own student loan refinance product in 2024 and now refers members to Sparrow, an online student loan marketplace. The credit union states that it does not fund those student loans and is not the creditor. Sparrow’s lending partners make and hold the loans, and PenFed receives a referral fee.
The practical effect: a borrower who thinks they are getting a PenFed student loan is actually shopping a marketplace, and the rate, the terms, and the servicer come from whichever partner approves the application.
The Major Networks That Power Credit Union Student Loans
If a credit union offers a private student loan in 2026, there is a strong chance one of two networks is behind it or working with it. And you might save time (and money) by simply shopping rates on these platforms.
LendKey, founded in 2009, has originated more than $7 billion and services more than $3.6 billion in consumer loans. It powers Navy Federal’s program along with private student loan and refinance products at dozens of smaller credit unions.
Student Choice (sometimes referred to as CU Select) takes a different approach. Rather than acting as a fintech servicer, it built a network of 212 credit unions (as of 2026) that offer a private student loans or private education lines of credit. The credit union sets the rate and the terms and Student Choice handles the matchmaking, the underwriting tools, and the disclosures.
What This Means For Families
The model behind a credit union loan affects three things that matter at the kitchen-table level.
Membership eligibility comes first. Credit union loans are usually limited to members, and credit unions vary widely on who can join. Some require a geographic tie, an employer relationship, or a school affiliation. Many will let approved borrowers join during the application process, but the requirement is real.
Servicing comes second. A loan from a credit union that uses LendKey will be serviced by LendKey, not the credit union itself. That’s important to know and could be a positive or negative.
Rate shopping comes third. Now that you understand the models, it’s essential that you always get 3-5 quotes and compare rates. This is the only way you know if you’re getting the best rate. And sometimes the loans offered on the marketplace may have different rates than if you would have gone direct.
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Editor: Colin Graves
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