In the
summer of 2020, amid fear and uncertainty over the pandemic, Amber Cole of
Colorado Springs,
Colorado, turned to retail therapy. She browsed Lululemon’s
website for trendy athletic apparel like T-shirts and leggings for $50 to $130.
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Cole, 33, saw an
enticing option to pay for her purchases. After entering a few pieces of
information, she could buy the clothing in four installments spread over six
weeks. That way, a $50 T-shirt shrank to a $12.50 payment; a $130 pair of
leggings was a mere $32.50. The best part: She could get the items before
finishing the payments, and she was not on the hook for paying interest.
This friction-free
option to pay off items in chunks — called “buy now, pay later” — was
popularized by
Afterpay, a financial tech firm based in Australia and founded
in 2014. Throughout the pandemic, as people hunkered down at home and sought to
fill voids with material possessions, installment payment plans gained
traction. Afterpay, which Square acquired for $29 billion in 2020, spawned
copycats, including Affirm, Klarna and Fingerhut. This month, Apple announced
that it would offer a similar program.
While the financing
programs offer upsides like interest-free payments, there are potential
dangers. The rule of thumb for financial security is to be aware of your budget
and in control of your spending, personal finance experts said. But buy now,
pay later programs seem intended to make people perceive a product to be
cheaper than it truly is and lose control of their spending, critics said.
In December, the
Consumer Financial Protection Bureau opened an inquiry into these programs,
expressing concern that people could accumulate debt with multiple purchases.
“They can be
helpful to consumers in the sense that they don’t carry interest if paid on
time, but consumers can end up buying more than they planned,” said Laura Udis,
a program manager at the bureau.
Cole fell into that
trap. Using the installment payment plans, she said, she increased her average
purchases from $200 to $400 an order over time. Packages appeared at her door
every day. Her biggest regret was a $600 rug from Anthropologie (spread into
four $150 payments).
Cole soon fell
behind on payments for her regular bills. She eventually came clean to her
husband and, to catch up on payments, got a job at a bakery and sold some of
her impulse purchases on
eBay. A few months ago, she closed her Afterpay
account.
“I had a beautiful
closet full of lovely clothes, purses and shoes,” she said. “But it is also
filled with shame, guilt, and regret.”
Buy now, pay later
has become impossible to ignore. Here is what you need to know.
How does buy now, pay later work?
Well, it depends, but in general, buy now, pay later programs from
companies like Afterpay, Affirm, Klarna, and Zip look identical, but they have
important differences.
They are typically
short-term loans that let you pay for an item in four installments (or fewer)
over a period of about six weeks. After a consumer provides some information,
like a name and Social Security number, the companies typically do a light
credit pull. From there, you make a down payment, which is 25 percent of the
product’s total cost, and the bills for the remaining three payments arrive
every two weeks.
The loans are
interest-free for people largely because the retailer pays a higher transaction
fee — 4 percent, roughly double that of a typical transaction fee incurred by a
credit card company. The benefit for the retailer is that the installment plans
can persuade people to buy things they otherwise would not, said Jared Wiesel,
an executive at Revenue Analytics, a pricing and sales consulting firm.
This friction-free option to pay off items in chunks — called “buy now, pay later” — was popularized by Afterpay, a financial tech firm based in Australia and founded in 2014.
What happens when
you miss a payment? Here is where the differences come up. Afterpay charges a
flat $8 late fee about 10 days after a missed payment. Affirm does not charge a
fee, but it says late payments may ding your credit score, which could hurt
your chances of getting another loan.
That was a major
downside highlighted by John Cabell, a director of banking and payments
research at J.D. Power, which recently published a study about problems with
the payment programs.
“It doesn’t help
you build your credit like a credit card does, but it can certainly hurt your
credit if you’re not making payments in a timely fashion,” he said.
Returns have also
been a source of confusion among consumers who have used buy now, pay later financing,
according to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. For some retailers,
consumers have to first contact the creditor, which then freezes the payment
schedule and informs the retailer of the return. For others, the customer
contacts the retailer, which contacts the creditor.
This is all to say
that these are still early days for buy now, pay later programs, which have
many variations and unknowns. As is always the case with taking out any kind of
loan, people would benefit from reading the fine print.
So who is it good for?
Buying now and paying later can be beneficial in some situations. Cabell
came up with one in which an installment plan could be used to make a single
emergency purchase, like a replacement for a kitchen appliance, so that the
money does not leave a bank account all at once.
Yet that is not how
most people use these loans, according to Cabell’s research. Most buy now, pay
later purchases involve clothing and home furnishings, and 21 percent of
younger consumers say they are using multiple buy now, pay later accounts.
“Suddenly you have
eight payments that are hitting your card, and it can get complicated,” he
said.
Above all, the key to reaping the benefits of these
interest-free loans is knowing you can truly afford what you’re buying, said
Jully-Alma Taveras, a personal finance adviser. Just as important, she said, is
avoiding the use of installments as an excuse to buy more things than you need.
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