What is Buy Now Pay Later?
Buy Now Pay Later, often shortened to BNPL, is a type of short-term credit where you buy something now and pay for it later, usually through scheduled instalments.
Buy Now Pay Later quick reference
BNPL explained in plain English
BNPL lets you spread the cost of a purchase instead of paying the full amount upfront. For example, you might pay £25 today and another £25 every two weeks until a £100 purchase is paid off.
Some BNPL offers are interest-free if every payment is made on time. Others may include fees, late charges or different rules depending on the provider. The important point is that you are still committing future income to today’s purchase.
BNPL can feel smaller than other borrowing because each instalment may be low. The risk appears when you have several plans at once. Five small instalments across different retailers can become a large monthly commitment.
BNPL should be treated like any other debt commitment. Before using it, check the total amount due, payment dates, what happens if a payment is missed, and whether the repayment fits your budget.
How BNPL usually works
BNPL products vary, but many follow a simple instalment pattern.
| Stage | What happens | What to check |
|---|---|---|
| At checkout | You choose a BNPL option instead of paying in full. | Total cost and whether any fees apply. |
| Payment schedule | The purchase is split into future payments. | Exact due dates and payment amounts. |
| Repayment | Payments are collected automatically or manually. | Whether the payment method has enough funds. |
| If payment is missed | The provider may charge fees, restrict use or take collection steps. | Missed-payment consequences before agreeing. |
Estimate BNPL instalment pressure
Use the BNPL calculator to add up instalments, fees and due dates before committing.
Simple BNPL example
Imagine you split a £240 purchase into four payments.
| Purchase | Instalments | Payment amount | Total paid if on time | Budget risk |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| £240 item | 4 payments | £60 each | £240 if no fees or interest apply | Future months have £60 less spare cash. |
| Three similar purchases | 12 payments in total | £60 each | £720 if all are fee-free | Multiple dates can become hard to track. |
The second example shows the real issue. BNPL may look manageable one purchase at a time, but several purchases can create a larger repayment calendar.
UK BNPL regulation from July 2026
The FCA says it will start regulating Deferred Payment Credit, often known as Buy Now Pay Later, on 15 July 2026. This is intended to bring stronger protections to borrowers and clearer rules for firms.
For consumers, this means BNPL should increasingly be treated like a regulated credit product rather than just a checkout convenience. Clear information, affordability, complaint routes and support for people in difficulty become more important.
Important: regulation does not make BNPL risk-free. You still need to check whether repayments fit your budget before using it.
BNPL vs credit card
What to check before using BNPL
- Total amount due: make sure the full repayment amount is clear.
- Payment dates: check when each instalment is due.
- Missed-payment rules: know whether fees or collection steps can apply.
- Existing plans: add up every BNPL commitment you already have.
- Refund rules: understand what happens if you return the item.
- Affordability: check whether future payments leave room for bills and emergencies.
Check monthly debt pressure
If BNPL repayments are part of a bigger debt picture, use the DTI calculator to compare repayments with income.
BNPL warning signs
- You are using BNPL for essentials because cash is short.
- You do not know how many BNPL plans are currently active.
- You need one BNPL payment to clear before starting another.
- You have missed or nearly missed repayment dates.
- You are using credit cards or overdrafts to cover BNPL repayments.
- The instalment seems small, but your total monthly commitments are rising.