Buy-now-pay-later products โ Affirm, Klarna, Afterpay, PayPal Pay in 4 โ have absorbed waves of regulatory and journalistic scrutiny since they took off during the pandemic. The criticism has merit. It’s also frequently aimed at features that credit cards have offered for 50 years without anyone calling them predatory. The truth is that BNPL is a structurally similar product with somewhat different defaults, used by a younger and less affluent audience, and treated with more concern than older credit instruments that produce more total household debt.
What BNPL actually does
Most “Pay in 4” products split a purchase into four interest-free installments over six weeks. Longer-term BNPL plans through Affirm and similar lenders charge interest, often disclosed at point of sale at rates between 0 percent (promotional) and 36 percent. The CFPB’s 2023 BNPL report found that the median active borrower had three to four open plans, that delinquency rates were higher than for credit cards in the same age bracket, and that BNPL purchases skewed toward apparel, beauty, and lower-priced goods rather than emergency expenses. Compare that to revolving credit card balances: the average U.S. household with credit card debt carries roughly $7,000 at an APR around 22 percent. Total revolving credit card debt in the U.S. exceeds $1.1 trillion. BNPL outstanding is a fraction of that.
The criticisms that don’t quite land
Critics argue BNPL encourages overspending, hides fees, and isn’t reported to credit bureaus. The first is true and equally true of credit cards, which are designed by behavioral economists to maximize spending. The second is partially true โ late fees and interest on extended plans should be disclosed more cleanly โ but credit card APRs and fee schedules are notoriously hard to parse and have been for decades. The third is changing; major bureaus are integrating BNPL data, and Apple’s Pay Later product is reported to bureaus from launch. The genuine concerns about BNPL โ that some users stack five or six plans without tracking total exposure, that returns and disputes are harder to resolve than with cards, that aggressive collections behavior occurs at some lenders โ are real, but they’re problems of execution, not of the product category itself.
How to use it without getting hurt
The same rules that apply to credit cards apply to BNPL. Don’t borrow for things you can’t afford in cash within 60 days. Track total open balances across all providers. Set up autopay from a checking account that won’t bounce. Don’t combine zero-interest BNPL with revolving credit card debt, because the cumulative effect is just leverage by another name. Read the disclosure for longer-term Affirm-style loans, where the APR can match or exceed credit cards. Treat BNPL plans as debt, not as a payment method, because that’s what they are.
The takeaway
BNPL deserves regulatory attention, particularly around disclosure and stacking. It does not deserve to be portrayed as uniquely predatory in a consumer-credit landscape dominated by credit cards charging 22 percent revolving APR on a trillion-dollar debt pile. The product is fine. The user is the variable.
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