Why are more shoppers struggling to repay 'buy now, pay later' loans?
[May 22, 2025] By
CORA LEWIS
NEW YORK (AP) — More Klarna customers are having trouble repaying their
“buy now, pay later" loans, the short-term lender said this week. The
disclosure corresponded with reports by lending platforms Bankrate and
LendingTree, which cited an increasing share of all “buy now, pay later”
users saying they had fallen behind on payments.
The late or missed installments are a sign of faltering financial health
among a segment of the US population, some analysts say, as the nation's
total consumer debt rises to a record $18.2 trillion and the Trump
administration moves to collect on federal student loans.
Shoppers who opt to finance purchases through BNPL services tend to be
younger than the average consumer, and a study from the Federal Reserve
last year said Black and Hispanic women were especially likely to use
the plans, which customers of all income levels are increasingly
adopting.
“While BNPL provides credit to financially vulnerable consumers, these
same consumers may be overextending themselves,” the authors of the
Federal Reserve study wrote. “This concern is consistent with previous
research that has shown consumers spend more when BNPL is offered when
checking out and that BNPL use leads to an increase in overdraft fees
and credit card interest payments and fees."
As Klarna grows its user base and revenue, the Swedish company said its
first-quarter consumer credit losses rose 17% compared to the
January-March period of last year, to $136 million.
A company spokesperson said in a statement that the increase largely
reflected the higher number of loans Klarna made year over year. The
percentage of its loans at a global level that went unpaid in the first
quarter grew from 0.51% in 2024 to 0.54% this year, and the company sees
“no sign of a weakened U.S. consumer,” he said.

More consumers are using ‘buy now, pay later’ plans
Buy now, pay later plans generally let consumers split payments for
purchases into four or fewer installments, often with a down payment at
checkout. The loans are typically marketed as zero-interest, and most
require no credit check or a soft credit check.
BNPL providers promote the plans as a safer alternative to traditional
credit cards when interest rates are high. The popularity of the
deferred payment plans, and the expanding ways customers can use them,
have also sparked public attention.
When Klarna announced a partnership with DoorDash in March, the news led
to online comments about Americans taking out loans to buy takeout food.
Similar skepticism emerged when Billboard revealed that more than half
of Coachella attendees used installment plans to finance their tickets
to the music festival.
An April report from LendingTree said about four in ten users of buy
now, pay later plans said they had made late payments in the past year,
up from one in three last year. According to a May report from Bankrate,
about one in four users of the loans chose them because they were easier
to get than traditional credit cards.
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People shop for shoes in a Nike store on Nov. 25, 2022, in New York.
(AP Photo/Julia Nikhinson, File)
 The six largest BNPL providers —
Affirm, Afterpay, Klarna, PayPal, Sezzle, and Zip — originated about
277.3 million loans for $33.8 billion in merchandise in 2022, or an
amount equal to about 1% of credit card spending that year,
according to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.
An industry that is coming under less regulatory scrutiny
The federal agency said this month it did not intend to enforce a
Biden-era regulation that was designed to put more boundaries around
the fintech lenders.
The rule treated buy now, pay later loans like traditional credit
cards under the Truth In Lending Act, requiring disclosures, refund
processing, a formal dispute process and other protections.
The regulation, which took effect last year, also prevented
borrowers from being forced into automatic payments or charged with
multiple fees for the same missed payment.
The Trump administration said its non-enforcement decision came “in
the interest of focusing resources on supporting hard-working
American taxpayers” and that it would “instead keep its enforcement
and supervision resources focused on pressing threats to consumers,
particularly servicemen and veterans.”
Consumer advocates maintain that without federal oversight,
customers seeking refunds or in search of clear information about
BNPL fee structures and interest rates will have less legal
recourse.
There are risks to taking out installment loans
Industry watchers point to consumers taking out loans they can't
afford to pay back as a top risk of BNPL use. Without credit bureaus
keeping track of the new form of credit, there are fewer safeguards
and less oversight.
Justine Farrell, chair of the marketing department at the University
of San Diego’s Knauss School of Business, said that when consumers
aren't able to make loan payments on time, it worsens the economic
stress they're already experiencing.
“Consumers’ financial positions feel more spread thin than they have
in a long time,” said Farrell, who studies consumer behavior and
BNPL services. “The cost of food is continuing to go up, on top of
rent and other goods ... so consumers are taking advantage of the
ability to pay for items later."
The Consumer Federation of America and other watchdog organizations
have expressed concern about the rollback of BNPL regulation as the
use of the loans continues to rise.
“By taking a head-in-the-sand approach to the new universe of
fintech loans, the new CFPB is once again favoring Big Tech at the
expense of everyday people,” said Adam Rust, director of financial
services at the Consumer Federation of America.
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