Emergency Loans: Get Cash Fast When Life Doesn't Wait
A dead transmission, an ER bill, a last-minute flight to family — emergencies don't check your savings balance first. Borrow $200–$5,000 online with a decision in minutes and money as soon as today.*
What Is an Emergency Loan — and How Do You Choose One?
"Emergency loan" isn't a single product — it's any fast, short-term loan used to cover an urgent, unexpected expense. At Cash Store that means three tools: a cash advance ($200–$1,000, repaid once on payday) for small gaps, an installment loan ($500–$5,000, fixed payments over 3–12 months) for bigger bills, and a title-secured loan (up to $5,000) if you own your vehicle and want to use its equity.
Choosing is mostly two questions. How much do you need? Under $1,000, a cash advance is the simplest; above that, you're into installment or title territory. How will you repay? If one paycheck can absorb it, a single-payment advance keeps things short; if not, fixed installments protect your budget from a second emergency — the repayment itself.
One honest note before you borrow: if your emergency can wait even a few days, check the cheaper routes first — a payment plan from the hospital or mechanic, local assistance programs, or a credit union Payday Alternative Loan. Our responsible lending page lists them. If it truly can't wait, we're built for exactly that.
Is an Emergency Loan Right for You?
A good fit if you…
- Face a real, one-time emergency. A repair, medical bill, or urgent travel that can't wait for savings to catch up.
- Need a decision now, not next week. Applications are reviewed in minutes, any time of day.
- Have steady income from a job, self-employment, or benefits that can absorb the repayment.
- Have imperfect credit. Underwriting weighs income and ability to repay, not just a score.
- Want the full cost upfront. Every fee is disclosed in writing before you sign — no surprises later.
Look elsewhere if you…
- Can wait a few days. Payment plans, provider hardship programs, and assistance funds cost far less.
- Face a recurring shortfall. If every month is an emergency, borrowing deepens the hole — see our resources first.
- Qualify for cheaper credit. A credit union PAL or an employer paycheck advance beats a short-term loan on cost.
- Would repay one loan with another. That cycle is the single biggest risk with emergency borrowing.
- Can trim the expense instead. Ask the biller — hospitals and mechanics negotiate more often than people expect.
How It Works: From Application to Cash
No branch visits, no paperwork marathons. Most people finish the whole process before their coffee gets cold.
Apply Online
Tell us how much you need and share basic details — about 5 minutes, fully encrypted.
Get a Fast Decision
We look at your full financial picture — income and ability to repay, not just a credit score.
Review Clear Terms
See your rate, payment schedule, and total cost in plain English — before you commit.
Receive Your Money
Funds go to your debit card or bank account — as soon as the same business day.*
See What a Loan Could Cost Before You Apply
Slide to your amount, pick a product and term, and get an instant estimate. Free, no obligation, and no impact on your credit to check.
Which loan fits your needs?
How long to pay it back?
6 monthly payments
- Loan amount$1,500
- Representative APR189%
- Est. total interest & fees$210
- Est. total to repay$1,710
Estimate only, shown for illustration. Your actual rate, term, and payment depend on your application and state, and are disclosed in writing before you sign. Checking your rate won't obligate you to accept a loan.
Which Loan Fits Your Emergency?
Match the loan to the size of the problem and the way you want to repay it.
| Installment Loan | Cash Advance | Title-Secured Loan | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Amount | $500 – $5,000 | $200 – $1,000 | Up to $5,000 |
| Repayment | Fixed scheduled payments | Single payment on payday | Monthly installments |
| Term | 3 – 12 months | Until next payday | 3 – 12 months |
| Collateral | None | None | Vehicle title |
| Best for | Larger one-time expenses | Small payday-gap bridges | Bigger amounts using car equity |
| Learn more | Installment loans | Cash advances | Title loans |
Availability, amounts, rates, and terms vary by state — see Rates & Licenses for the disclosures that apply where you live.
What You Need to Apply
Government-issued ID — a driver's license, state ID, or passport showing you're 18 or older.
Proof of income — a recent pay stub, benefits statement, or bank deposits if self-employed.
Active checking account — where we send your funds and collect repayment.
Working phone & email — so we can verify your application quickly — speed matters in an emergency.
Emergency Loan FAQ
What counts as an emergency loan?
Any fast short-term loan used for an urgent, unexpected expense — at Cash Store that's a cash advance ($200–$1,000), an installment loan ($500–$5,000), or a title-secured loan (up to $5,000). The right one depends on how much you need and how you want to repay it.
How fast can I actually get emergency cash?
Most applicants get a decision within minutes. If approved and verified, funds can be sent to your debit card or bank account as soon as the same business day — applying earlier in the day and having your documents ready makes same-day funding much more likely.
How much can I borrow in an emergency?
From $200 up to $5,000 depending on the product, your income, and your state. Borrow only what the emergency actually costs — a smaller loan is a cheaper loan.
Which loan type should I choose for my emergency?
Rough rule: under $1,000 and one paycheck can cover it — cash advance. Larger bills or repayment over months — installment loan. Own your car outright and need a larger amount — title-secured loan. The comparison table above breaks it down.
Can I get an emergency loan with bad credit?
Yes — all credit types are considered. Approval is based on income and ability to repay rather than a single credit score. Approval isn't guaranteed.
What should I try before taking an emergency loan?
If you have even a little time: ask the biller for a payment plan, check local assistance programs (211.org), ask about hospital financial aid, or see if your credit union offers Payday Alternative Loans. If none of those fit and the expense can't wait, that's what emergency loans are for.
Get an Answer in Minutes — Not Days
Checking is free, won't obligate you to accept, and shows your exact payment schedule and total cost before you decide anything.
Start My Application