Buy Now Pay Later cost calculator
Enter the purchase amount, number of instalments, fees and income. The calculator shows the regular instalment, total BNPL cost and how much of monthly income the plan uses.
How to use this calculator: use the advertised payment schedule, then add any account or missed-payment fees. Try entering all active BNPL plans to see whether commitments may stack up.
Buy Now Pay Later formula
This calculator separates the purchase price from fees so you can see whether a “no interest” plan still creates a cost or monthly commitment.
remaining_balance = purchase_amount − upfront_payment
regular_instalment = remaining_balance ÷ number_of_instalments
total_fees = monthly_account_fee × number_of_instalments + missed_payment_fees
total_cost = purchase_amount + total_fees
monthly_commitment = regular_instalment + monthly_account_fee
income_pressure = monthly_commitment ÷ monthly_income × 100
What your BNPL result means
The regular instalment shows the payment due each period. The total BNPL cost shows the purchase price plus any fees entered. The income pressure figure helps you see whether the payment may compete with bills, rent, food, savings or other debts.
BNPL can feel smaller than paying upfront because the purchase is split into instalments. The risk is that several small plans can overlap and create a larger monthly commitment than expected.
Check the commitment before checkout
Before using BNPL, compare it with paying now, saving first, using a credit card, or delaying the purchase. Avoid using BNPL to cover essentials you cannot afford.
UK BNPL regulation warning
Buy Now Pay Later is changing in the UK. The FCA will start regulating Deferred Payment Credit, often known as BNPL, from 15 July 2026. That means stronger rules are coming for many lenders and clearer consumer protections.
Regulation does not mean BNPL becomes risk-free. You still need to understand the payment dates, missed-payment rules, fees, refund process and whether the commitment is affordable.
Remember: BNPL is borrowing. Even if no interest is charged, missed payments or stacked commitments can create money problems.
What affects BNPL cost?
- Purchase amount: higher basket values create higher instalments.
- Number of instalments: more instalments reduce each payment but extend the commitment.
- Upfront payment: paying something now reduces the remaining balance.
- Monthly fees: account or service fees increase the total cost.
- Missed-payment fees: late or missed payments can make the purchase more expensive.
- Multiple plans: several BNPL plans can overlap and increase monthly pressure.
Why BNPL stacking matters
BNPL stacking happens when you have several instalment plans running at the same time. One £30 payment may feel manageable, but five separate plans can quickly become a meaningful monthly commitment.
To avoid stacking problems, list every active BNPL plan, its payment date, the remaining balance and the final payment date. If you cannot track all of them easily, the commitment may already be too complex.
Buy Now Pay Later FAQs
What is Buy Now Pay Later?
Buy Now Pay Later lets you get goods or services now and spread the cost over future instalments. It is still a form of borrowing.
How do I calculate BNPL payments?
Subtract any upfront payment from the purchase amount, divide the remaining balance by the number of instalments, then add any monthly fees.
Can BNPL affect affordability?
Yes. Several plans can overlap and take up part of your monthly income, especially if you use BNPL for everyday spending.
Does BNPL cost more if I miss a payment?
It can. Missed-payment fees and account consequences depend on the provider and agreement, so check the terms before using BNPL.
Is BNPL regulated in the UK?
The FCA will start regulating Deferred Payment Credit, often known as Buy Now Pay Later, from 15 July 2026.
Key terms used in this calculator
These glossary terms explain the BNPL and borrowing language used on this page.