Debt

The Buy Now Pay Later Trap

March 17, 20266 min read

TL;DR

  • • 43% of Gen Z BNPL users have missed at least one payment
  • • Late fees range from $5-25 per missed payment, plus potential interest of 25-36% APR
  • • BNPL makes you spend 20-40% more than you would with cash
  • • If you can't afford it in cash, you can't afford it in 4 payments either

How BNPL Services Actually Work

Klarna, Afterpay, Affirm, and other Buy Now Pay Later services let you split a purchase into 4 interest-free payments over 6-8 weeks. Sounds great, right? A $200 jacket becomes four easy payments of $50.

But here's what they don't highlight in their marketing: BNPL companies make money in two ways. First, they charge merchants a fee (which gets passed to you through higher prices). Second, they make a fortune on late fees when you miss a payment — which 43% of Gen Z users do.

The Real Cost of “Pay in 4”

Let's say you use BNPL for 3 purchases in one month:

New sneakers$160

4 payments of $40 over 6 weeks

Concert tickets$120

4 payments of $30 over 6 weeks

New headphones$80

4 payments of $20 over 6 weeks

Total committed$360

$90/payment every 2 weeks for 6 weeks — on top of your regular bills

Now you have $90 in BNPL payments due every 2 weeks on top of rent, food, and other bills. Miss one payment and you're looking at $7-25 in late fees per purchase. Some services (especially Affirm) charge interest of 25-36% APR if you choose longer payment plans.

Why BNPL Makes You Spend More

Research shows that BNPL users spend 20-40% more than they would paying in cash. The psychology is simple: when the pain of payment is delayed, your brain treats the purchase like it's cheaper than it actually is.

“$40 every two weeks” doesn't trigger the same alarm bells as “$160 right now.” But it's the same money. BNPL companies know this. They're betting on your psychology — and winning.

Does BNPL Affect Your Credit Score?

Increasingly, yes. As of 2025-2026, all three major credit bureaus (Equifax, Experian, TransUnion) have started including BNPL data in credit reports. Missed payments can now hurt your credit score.

Even if a specific BNPL provider doesn't report to bureaus yet, they will send unpaid debts to collections — which absolutely destroys your credit.

When BNPL Is (Barely) Okay

The only time BNPL makes sense is when ALL of these are true:

  • • It's 0% interest and 0% fees (the true “pay in 4” model)
  • • You have the full amount in your bank account right now
  • • It's for a necessity, not a want
  • • You set up auto-pay so you won't miss a payment

If you don't have the full amount in cash, BNPL is just a dressed-up loan. And if you wouldn't pay a 30% interest rate on that jacket, don't risk it with BNPL either.

The Simple Rule

If you can't afford to buy it in cash today, you can't afford it in 4 payments either.

The Bottom Line

BNPL isn't free money. It's a psychology hack that makes spending painless — until the payments pile up. If you're currently juggling multiple BNPL payments, pay them all off and delete the apps. Use the 24-hour rule instead: if you still want something after 24 hours, buy it with money you already have.

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