Marketplace®

Daily business news and economic stories

Savings app aims to combat predatory payday loans

Still in its pilot phase, Onward promotes saving in small increments with a view to building a nest egg and eventually creating credit.

Savings app aims to combat predatory payday loans
Oli Scarff/Getty Images

Payday loans are a short-term, high-cost way to borrow money; 12 million Americans used them last year, often for one-off expenses like car repair or medical bills. According to the Consumer Federation of America, the loans typically run at about a 400% annual interest, and finance charges can range from $15 to $30 on a $100 loan.

 
Astry Sosa, 25, is a lead on the manufacturing line at Prier Products in Grandview, Missouri. Using Onward, she has saved enough money to pay for the taxes and licensing on her truck.
Peggy Lowe/KCUR

There are now a growing number of efforts underway to help consumers avoid the need for those kinds of loans. One of them is Onward, a program still in pilot stage that allows workers to save small amounts of money over time, building a small nest egg for emergencies and creating credit.

Related Topics

Latest Episodes

View All Shows
  • Marketplace
    5 hours ago
    25:13
  • Marketplace Morning Report
    10 hours ago
    7:08
  • Marketplace Tech
    15 hours ago
    4:54
  • Make Me Smart
    a day ago
    15:13
  • Million Bazillion
    2 days ago
    5:01
  • This Is Uncomfortable
    23 days ago
    2:27
  • Financially Inclined
    2 months ago
    12:30
  • How We Survive
    2 months ago
    22:09
  • The Uncertain Hour
    3 months ago
    22:50
  • Corner Office from Marketplace
    5 years ago
    20:58