Short answer: "No credit check" describes how an application is reviewed; "payday loan" describes a type of short-term credit and repayment structure. They are not synonyms. Desert Rock Capital offers no-credit-check signature installment loans with fixed biweekly payments. A payday loan is commonly due in one lump sum on the next payday, although individual terms vary.
Why the labels are easy to confuse
Many products marketed to people with limited or damaged credit do not use a traditional credit score. That shared feature does not make their payment schedules, costs, account requirements, or credit-reporting practices the same.
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau says payday lenders generally do not conduct a traditional credit check and describes payday loans as usually short-term and due in one payment. Those are common traits, not a substitute for reading a particular agreement.
Side-by-side comparison
- What the name describes: No credit check refers to underwriting. Payday refers to a short-term loan commonly tied to the next payday.
- DRC repayment: Equal biweekly installments over a fixed term, with no balloon payment.
- Typical payday repayment: One payment for the balance and fees on the stated due date, though some payday products or arrangements use installments.
- Bank account: DRC does not require one. Utah's statutory deferred deposit definition involves a check or authorization for an electronic debit; see Utah Code Section 7-23-102.
- Credit reporting: An application credit check and later payment reporting are separate practices. Ask each lender which bureaus, if any, receive payment information and review the written agreement before signing.
- Amount: DRC offers $100 to $3,000 if approved. Payday-loan amounts vary.
No credit check does not mean guaranteed approval
DRC reviews the application and required documents without using a traditional credit score. You may apply with bad credit, no credit, or a past bankruptcy, but meeting the document requirements does not guarantee approval or a particular amount.
Start with the DRC no-credit-check loan overview and prepare the items on the requirements checklist. You can begin online, then complete the review in person at a branch.
Credit inquiry and credit building are different questions
Because DRC does not pull a traditional credit report, its application does not involve that type of credit inquiry. Payment reporting is a separate issue. Before borrowing, ask which bureaus, if any, receive payment history and whether that reporting can affect or help build credit.
Compare terms, not just access
Before choosing any loan, compare the amount financed, APR, finance charge, payment dates, total of payments, and late or default terms. For covered closed-end credit, 12 CFR 1026.18 identifies applicable federal disclosures.
The Utah Department of Financial Institutions provides consumer-lending information and points to NMLS Consumer Access for Consumer Credit Notification verification. Verification and disclosure review answer different questions; do both.
Frequently asked questions
Are all no-credit-check loans payday loans?
No. No credit check is an application feature. A loan may be an installment loan, payday loan, title loan, or another product, each with different terms.
Does DRC require a post-dated check?
No. DRC does not hold a post-dated check and does not require a bank account.
Will a DRC loan build my credit score?
Not necessarily. A no-credit-check application does not by itself tell you whether payment history will be reported. If credit building is your main goal, ask for the current reporting policy and compare products that state their practices in writing.
Can I get DRC funds without visiting a branch?
No. You can start online, but DRC completes lending in person. If approved, funds can be ready the same day, but funding timing is not guaranteed.
Which product costs less?
The labels do not answer that. Compare the APR, finance charge, total of payments, payment timing, and any late or renewal costs in the actual offers.
Bottom line
A no-credit-check installment loan and a payday loan may both avoid a traditional credit pull, but their repayment structures can be very different. Identify the product first, then evaluate the written cost and schedule.


