Reviewed by the The Credit Scout Editorial Team
Our Take
For new shoppers without an established credit file, a starter credit card beats buy now pay later in almost every meaningful way: it builds credit history, earns rewards, and comes with federal legal protections that BNPL does not. That recommendation holds as long as the cardholder pays in full each month. The case for BNPL is narrow but real: if you have no access to a credit card, need a specific large purchase with a fixed repayment schedule, and have confirmed income to cover all four payments before you click buy, a Pay-in-4 plan at zero interest is a legitimate short-term tool. It is not a credit-building strategy, and 47% of BNPL users reported at least one late payment in the past year, which means the “interest-free” pitch depends on payment discipline most users don’t demonstrate.
The buy now pay later vs credit cards debate has moved from a niche fintech conversation into a mainstream decision millions of shoppers face at checkout every week. The CFPB’s December 2025 market report documented 335.8 million Pay-in-4 BNPL loans totaling $45.2 billion in a single year, a figure that makes clear this is no longer a fringe payment option. The question isn’t whether BNPL exists; it’s whether it belongs in your financial toolkit.
This article is written for new shoppers: people building credit for the first time, recent graduates, and anyone who just opened their first financial account and wants to understand the actual tradeoffs before picking a payment method. The recommendation works when you can pay a credit card balance in full each month; it breaks down if revolving debt is already a pattern in your household.
Key Takeaways
- 47% of BNPL users reported at least one late payment in the past year as of March 2026, up from 34% in 2024, according to LendingTree’s 2026 Buy Now, Pay Later Report.
- The average U.S. credit card APR for accounts accruing interest was 21.52% in Q1 2026, per the Federal Reserve G.19 report via LendingTree, meaning carrying a credit card balance is genuinely expensive, but paying in full means paying zero interest.
- FICO released FICO Score 10 BNPL in fall 2025, the first major scoring model to incorporate BNPL data, but most lenders still use FICO 8 (released in 2009), so this scoring change may not affect your loan applications for years.
- The CFPB withdrew its 2024 interpretive rule in May 2025 that would have required BNPL providers to offer dispute rights and refund protections similar to credit cards, leaving BNPL users without federal consumer protections that credit cardholders take for granted.
- From what I’ve tracked across reader questions here at The Credit Scout, the most common BNPL mistake isn’t missing one payment, it’s stacking three or four simultaneous plans across different providers and losing track of total obligations entirely.
What BNPL and Credit Cards Actually Are (And How They Make Money)
The structural difference between these two products matters more than most checkout screens let on. A credit card is revolving credit: you draw from a set limit, pay it down, and the credit replenishes. A BNPL plan is a discrete installment loan tied to a single purchase. Once you pay it off, there’s nothing left, no credit line, no reusable account.
The Two Flavors of BNPL That Get Conflated
Calling all BNPL “interest-free” is one of the more misleading shortcuts in consumer finance right now. There are actually two distinct products operating under the same brand umbrella. The standard Pay-in-4 plan (offered by Klarna, Afterpay, and PayPal Pay Later) divides a purchase into four equal payments over six weeks with no interest charged. The second type, longer-term installment loans from providers like Affirm, can run 6 to 48 months and carry interest rates that sometimes exceed credit card APRs. These are fundamentally different products with different risk profiles, and they get lumped together in almost every comparison article you’ll read.
The Business Model Shoppers Miss
BNPL providers charge merchants between 2% and 8% per transaction, compared to roughly 1.5% to 3% for credit card interchange fees. Merchants accept that higher cost because BNPL reliably increases average order value and conversion rates at checkout. The practical implication: some Federal Reserve research suggests merchants may respond by raising retail prices across the board to cover those fees, meaning shoppers who don’t use BNPL may still be subsidizing those who do. The “free” framing looks different once you see who’s actually paying for it.
What I see in practice: Readers often assume all BNPL works like the Pay-in-4 plan they used at a clothing retailer. When they later use Affirm for a larger electronics purchase and see an APR disclosure, they’re genuinely caught off guard. The brand similarity masks a meaningful product difference that changes the cost calculation entirely.
The Real Cost Comparison: When ‘Interest-Free’ Isn’t the Full Story
BNPL is only free if every payment lands on time, every time, with no exceptions. Late fees typically run $7 to $15 per missed payment and kick in immediately, with no grace period in many cases. Some longer-term BNPL installment plans charge interest from day one on the unpaid balance, not just after a missed payment.
Contrast that with credit cards honestly: the average U.S. credit card APR reached 21.52% in Q1 2026 according to the Federal Reserve G.19 report, and total U.S. credit card balances hit $1.252 trillion as of Q1 2026 according to the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. Those numbers are genuinely alarming for anyone carrying a balance. But a cardholder who pays the full statement balance each month pays zero interest and essentially borrows free for up to 30 days. The high APR is only relevant if you carry a balance.
There’s also a psychological cost built into BNPL’s design. Because each plan splits one purchase into small-seeming installments, it’s easy to lose sight of total debt exposure. A shopper with three simultaneous BNPL plans might owe $400 in upcoming payments without any single statement making that visible. A credit card statement consolidates everything. That might sound like a minor convenience difference; in practice, it’s one of the primary drivers of why late payment rates are climbing.

How Each Option Affects Your Credit Score, Including the New 2025 Rules
Credit cards are unambiguously better for building a credit profile, and that gap widened in 2025 in ways most BNPL coverage hasn’t caught up to.
The Pre-2025 Status Quo
Before fall 2025, most BNPL Pay-in-4 loans were invisible to Equifax, Experian, and TransUnion. They built no positive credit history and created what regulators called “phantom debt”: obligations that lenders couldn’t see when evaluating new applicants for mortgages, auto loans, or credit cards. For a new shopper trying to build a credit file, using BNPL exclusively meant running in place.
FICO 10 BNPL and the Adoption Lag Problem
FICO released FICO Score 10 BNPL and FICO Score 10 T BNPL in fall 2025, the first major scoring models to incorporate BNPL repayment data. Responsible, on-time BNPL use may now raise scores for some users; missed payments will hurt them. That sounds like progress, and it is, but here’s the nuance almost no article is getting right: most lenders still use FICO 8, which was released in 2009, for everyday lending decisions. The new model exists; lender adoption is slow and uneven. A shopper making credit-building decisions today based on the assumption that their BNPL payments will help their score may be waiting years before that assumption is true for the lenders who actually matter to them.
If you’re serious about building credit from scratch, the faster path is still a secured credit card or a credit-builder loan. Our guide on alternative ways to build credit covers options that generate bureau-reporting activity immediately, not eventually.
What clients often miss: As of May 2026, only Affirm universally reports Pay-in-4 data to the major bureaus. Most BNPL activity still goes unrecorded on the positive side but can reach bureaus immediately if sent to collections. That asymmetry means you absorb all the downside risk with none of the credit-building upside.
Consumer Protections: The Legal Gap Is Bigger Than Most Shoppers Realize
This is where the credit card advantage becomes concrete and legally enforceable, and where the 2025 regulatory environment made things materially worse for BNPL users.
What Credit Cardholders Are Guaranteed by Law
Under the Truth in Lending Act (TILA) and Regulation Z, credit card holders have the right to dispute charges, withhold payment during an investigation of a disputed transaction, initiate chargebacks for fraudulent purchases, and receive formal billing statements. These aren’t optional features card issuers offer, they’re federal legal requirements. If a merchant delivers a broken product, a credit cardholder can dispute the charge with the issuer and often see a provisional credit within days while the investigation runs.
The 2025 Regulatory Reversal
In 2024, the CFPB issued an interpretive rule that would have classified BNPL providers as credit card issuers under TILA, requiring them to provide dispute rights, process refunds promptly, and issue formal billing statements. That rule was withdrawn in May 2025. BNPL users now have no federal backstop for disputes, their protections depend entirely on the provider’s own terms of service. New York enacted its own BNPL Act in 2025, and several state attorneys general have sent inquiry letters to BNPL providers, but a shopper’s legal protections now depend on which state they live in.
The Returns Trap Nobody Warns You About
Here’s a specific scenario worth understanding before you use BNPL for any substantial purchase. When you return a BNPL-financed item, you remain legally obligated to continue making installment payments while the merchant and the BNPL lender process the refund, a timeline that can run several weeks. You may end up paying a full installment to Afterpay or Klarna while the merchant is still processing your return and the lender hasn’t yet applied the credit. The CFPB rule that would have required prompt refund crediting was the rule withdrawn in May 2025. There is no federal timeline governing how quickly that refund credit must appear. This is a concrete and under-reported reason to favor a credit card for any purchase you might need to return.
For a broader look at where credit-building mistakes tend to compound, our piece on credit building mistakes that are actually making your score worse covers several patterns that start innocently with payment tools and escalate quickly.
| Feature | Pay-in-4 BNPL | Credit Card (paid in full) |
|---|---|---|
| Interest on purchases | 0% if on time; late fees $7–$15/payment | 0% if paid in full; 21.52% avg APR if not |
| Credit bureau reporting | Mostly none (Affirm reports; most others don’t) | Yes, all three bureaus, every month |
| Dispute rights | Provider policy only; no federal mandate | Federally guaranteed under TILA/Reg Z |
| Rewards | None (Klarna’s paid tier offers limited cash back) | 1–5% cash back, miles, or points per purchase |
| Purchase protection | Not included | Extended warranty, theft/damage protection on many cards |
| Typical purchase size | $135 avg per CFPB 2025 report | No minimum; accepted nearly universally |
| Credit building | Minimal; no guaranteed positive reporting | Strong; builds history, utilization, and payment record |
What Credit Cards Offer That BNPL Cannot Match
The rewards gap between credit cards and BNPL is not abstract. It represents real money left on the table by disciplined shoppers who choose BNPL for purchases they could have put on a card and paid off the same month.
A shopper who uses a 2% flat-rate cash back credit card for all purchases and pays in full monthly earns $200 back on $10,000 in annual spending at zero interest cost. BNPL earns nothing. Klarna’s new tiered membership does offer some cash-back functionality, but it requires a paid subscription and the rewards are limited relative to what competitive credit cards provide outright. The “free” framing of BNPL ignores this opportunity cost, which compounds meaningfully for regular shoppers over time.
The Protections You Don’t Think About Until You Need Them
Beyond rewards, credit cards offer a bundle of protections that BNPL simply doesn’t replicate: extended manufacturer warranties on eligible purchases, purchase protection against theft or accidental damage, travel insurance on many travel cards, and zero-liability fraud protection up to the full purchase amount. These aren’t edge-case benefits. Purchase protection and extended warranties become relevant the moment an expensive item breaks within the first year.
One practical detail worth knowing: Capital One has blocked BNPL lender charges from processing on its credit cards since 2020, citing consumer risk. If you try to use a Capital One card to fund BNPL payments, the transaction will be declined. This is rarely mentioned in comparison guides but matters if Capital One is your primary card.
The Card-Linked Installment Hybrid Most Articles Ignore
Major card issuers have built BNPL-style installment plans directly into existing credit accounts: American Express Plan It, Chase Pay Over Time, and Citi Flex Pay all allow cardholders to convert eligible purchases into fixed monthly payments, usually for a flat monthly fee rather than interest. These products combine the predictable payment schedule of BNPL with the full consumer protections, rewards accumulation, and bureau reporting of a credit card. For a cardholder who already qualifies, they’re arguably superior to standalone BNPL for any purchase large enough that installment payments are attractive.

Where This Recommendation Falls Short
The credit card recommendation doesn’t work for everyone, and pretending otherwise would be dishonest.
The most significant drawback is access. A new shopper with no credit history often can’t qualify for an unsecured credit card with meaningful terms. A secured card is the usual solution, but it requires a cash deposit, typically $200 to $500, that not every new shopper has available. For someone in that position, BNPL’s no-credit-check approval is not a gimmick; it’s the only option. The tradeoff is that they’re using a product with limited credit-building upside, no federal dispute rights, and a late-payment rate that has climbed to 47% as of 2026, per LendingTree’s 2026 Buy Now, Pay Later Report.
The catch with the credit card recommendation is impulse control. A revolving credit line with a $2,000 limit can generate a $2,000 balance that takes months to pay down at 21.52% APR. A BNPL Pay-in-4 plan caps exposure at the purchase price and ends in six weeks. For a shopper who has demonstrated an inability to manage revolving credit, BNPL’s fixed-payment structure is a genuine constraint that reduces the risk of a prolonged debt cycle. That’s not a hypothetical: it’s the realistic profile of a portion of the shoppers who are choosing BNPL over cards right now.
The risk is also real in a specific category: large, longer-term BNPL loans. A shopper who uses Affirm for a $1,500 mattress at 18% APR over 18 months is not getting a better deal than a credit card. They’re getting worse terms with fewer protections. This recommendation doesn’t apply uniformly to all BNPL products; it applies most clearly to Pay-in-4 plans compared to using a starter credit card responsibly. The moment interest enters the BNPL equation, the calculus shifts significantly toward the credit card for anyone who can qualify for one.
Where this falls short entirely: if you already have high-interest revolving credit card debt and a pattern of carrying balances, adding another credit card is not the right move. In that situation, the question of whether to pay off debt first matters more than which payment method to use at checkout. Pay down the existing balance before worrying about optimizing rewards or payment tools.
For readers trying to rebuild after financial difficulty, the comparison also looks different. Our DIY credit repair guide covers how to approach this sequence in the right order, starting with your existing accounts before layering in new ones.
How We Sourced This
This article draws from the CFPB’s December 2025 Buy Now, Pay Later Market Report, the Federal Reserve G.19 Consumer Credit Report for Q1 2026, the Federal Reserve Bank of New York’s Consumer Credit Panel for Q1 2026, and LendingTree’s 2026 Buy Now, Pay Later Report published in March 2026. Data ranges cover Q1 2024 through Q1 2026 for statistical comparisons. We excluded any BNPL provider-level claims not corroborated by at least one independent regulator or research institution. All statistics and regulatory status claims were verified against primary sources as of May 2026. FICO Score 10 BNPL details were cross-referenced against FICO’s published product announcements from fall 2025.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does using BNPL help build your credit score?
In most cases, no. As of May 2026, only Affirm universally reports Pay-in-4 data to the major credit bureaus, and most lenders still use FICO 8, which predates the new FICO Score 10 BNPL model launched in fall 2025. A missed BNPL payment sent to collections will hurt your score; on-time BNPL payments mostly go unrecorded on the positive side. A secured credit card is a faster and more reliable credit-building tool for most new shoppers.
Is BNPL safer than a credit card for large purchases?
Not from a consumer protection standpoint. Credit cardholders have federally guaranteed dispute rights under TILA and Regulation Z; BNPL users do not, since the CFPB withdrew the rule that would have extended those protections in May 2025. For any purchase you might need to return or dispute, a credit card is the legally safer option. BNPL’s fixed payment schedule can limit debt exposure, but that’s a budgeting feature, not a consumer protection.
What happens if I return something I bought with BNPL?
You may remain obligated to make installment payments while the merchant and BNPL lender process your refund, a timeline that can span several weeks with no federal deadline governing how quickly the credit must appear. Keep documentation of your return and contact both the merchant and the BNPL provider simultaneously. This is one of the clearest practical advantages of using a credit card for uncertain or high-value purchases.
Can I use my Capital One credit card to fund BNPL payments?
No. Capital One has blocked BNPL lender charges from processing on its cards since 2020, and that policy remains in place as of May 2026. If you try to use a Capital One card to pay Afterpay, Klarna, or a similar provider, the transaction will be declined. Check with your specific card issuer if you’re unsure about their policy before attempting this.
Are the card-linked installment plans from Amex, Chase, and Citi better than standalone BNPL?
For cardholders who already qualify, yes, in most cases. Products like American Express Plan It, Chase Pay Over Time, and Citi Flex Pay give you BNPL-style fixed payments with full credit card consumer protections, rewards accumulation, and bureau reporting. The cost is usually a flat monthly fee rather than interest. The primary limitation is that you need to already have the credit card, which means you need the credit history to have qualified for it.
What’s a safer way to use BNPL without getting into trouble?
Limit BNPL to necessary, durable purchases where you have confirmed income to cover all four payments before clicking buy. Never use it for consumables like groceries or takeout. Run a calendar check before approving any BNPL plan: write down all four payment dates and amounts alongside your other bills, and only proceed if every payment is covered with margin to spare. Stacking more than one BNPL plan at a time significantly increases the risk of missing a payment.
Should a first-time credit card user worry about the high APR?
The high APR is only relevant if you carry a balance. A new cardholder who uses the card for one recurring monthly bill and pays the full statement balance on time every month pays zero interest and builds a credit profile simultaneously. The comparison between secured and unsecured starter cards is worth reading before you apply, since the right card type depends on your current credit situation.
Sources
- Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, The Buy Now, Pay Later Market (December 2025)
- LendingTree, Credit Card Debt Statistics (May 2026), citing Federal Reserve G.19 and NY Fed Consumer Credit Panel
- LendingTree, 2026 Buy Now, Pay Later Report (March 2026)
- Federal Reserve, G.19 Consumer Credit Statistical Release
- Federal Reserve Bank of New York, Household Debt and Credit Report
- FICO, FICO Score 10 BNPL Product Announcement (2025)
- Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond, Buy Now, Pay Later: Financial Stability Considerations (2024)



