When the credit card company says no, the "bank of family" just might say yes.
Given a choice between maxing out a limit on a credit card or taking a loan from a family member, lower-income households and people of color are more likely to turn to relatives, according to a CNBC Invest in You and Acorns Savings Survey.
Among participants with household income below $50,000, more than half said they would ask to borrow from a family member.
Further, 51 percent of black participants who took the survey said they would ask a relative for a loan, while nearly 6 in 10 Hispanic respondents said they would prefer to turn to family.
The survey was conducted for CNBC by SurveyMonkey in March among a national sample of more than 2,300 adults.
White participants and higher-income households were more inclined to max out their cards. More than half of the people in both cohorts said they would prefer plastic to borrowing from relatives.
Perhaps the biggest upside of taking a loan from family is the fact that costs tend to be lower. The average interest rate on a credit card is now 17.67 percent, according to CreditCards.com.
"Going to a family member might be a knee-jerk reaction," said Louis Barajas, a certified financial planner at Wealth Management LAB in Los Angeles. "They won't charge any interest."
But these loans can also carry risk for lenders and borrowers.
"The person who's funding the loan is making a financial decision based on emotion," Barajas said. "'It's my daughter, it's my niece.'"
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"We can look at a lot of studies that show black and Hispanic people being turned away for even small loans," said Rianka Dorsainvil, a CFP and founder of Your Greatest Contribution in Lanham, Maryland.
Indeed, people of color make up a large share of the population that don't have access to checking or savings accounts. In all, about 8.4 million U.S. households were unbanked in 2017, according to data from the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.
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The unbanked rates for black and Hispanic households were about 17 percent and 14 percent, respectively, versus 2.5 percent for Asians and 3 percent for white families, according to the FDIC.
"Instead of turning to a financial institution, they'd rather turn to a family member," Dorsainvil said of people of color.
A desire to help
While your parents won't report you to the credit scoring companies for failing to make timely repayments on your loan, you risk burning bridges with loved ones.
"There are long-term implications on both sides," Barajas said. "You're going to see disharmony among family members who don't pay them back."
Further, while first-generation wealth builders feel the pressure to bail out relatives experiencing hard times, being too generous will damage their own finances.
"The person who's funding the loan is making a financial decision based on emotion. 'It's my daughter, it's my niece.'" -Louis Barajas, certified financial planner at Wealth Management LAB
"This is like survivor's remorse: 'I made it. Nobody else did, and I feel like I have to help everyone," Dorsainvil said.
"I see it with first-generation immigrants who start earning a great salary," she said. "Family members want to borrow from them, but we know that 'borrow' really means 'give.'"
That's why it's important for prospective lenders to bolster their own finances before they start making loans to family.
This means you should have a plan in place to save for retirement, pay off student debt and reach savings goals, Dorsainvil said.
Reach an agreement