The End of Unregulated Buy Now, Pay Later
For nearly a decade, buy now pay later products operated in a regulatory blind spot. While traditional credit cards and personal loans required lenders to verify affordability and report to credit bureaus, BNPL providers could extend credit with minimal checks and no obligation to share data with credit reference agencies. That era ends on July 15, 2026, when the UK’s Financial Conduct Authority begins regulating Deferred Payment Credit — the formal name for third-party BNPL lending.
The FCA published its final rules in Policy Statement PS26/1 on February 11, 2026. The stakes are substantial: the UK BNPL market exploded from £0.06 billion in 2017 to over £13 billion by 2024, with 10.9 million adults — 20% of UK consumers — using BNPL services in the twelve months leading up to May 2024, according to the FCA’s Financial Lives Survey.
What Changes on July 15
The new regime transforms BNPL from a loosely monitored payment method into a fully regulated consumer credit product. Three pillars define the new framework.
Mandatory affordability checks. Providers must assess whether customers can afford repayments before approving any BNPL transaction, regardless of value. The FCA will apply its CONC 5.2A creditworthiness rules to BNPL lenders, requiring them to consider credit history, existing debt, and repayment capacity. These rules are deliberately non-prescriptive, giving firms flexibility in how they assess risk — but the obligation to assess is absolute.
Consumer Duty compliance. BNPL lenders fall under the FCA’s Consumer Duty framework, which requires firms to deliver good outcomes for customers. Products must provide fair value, meet genuine customer needs, and include clear upfront information about payment schedules, amounts due, and consequences of missed payments.
Financial Ombudsman access. For the first time, BNPL users will be able to escalate complaints to the Financial Ombudsman Service. Previously, consumers who felt mistreated by BNPL providers had no independent recourse beyond the provider’s own complaints process.
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The Consumer Harm That Forced Regulation
The regulatory intervention follows years of mounting evidence that unregulated BNPL was causing real financial harm. FCA data shows BNPL users are more than four times as likely to have missed a bill payment compared to non-users. Nearly one in five BNPL borrowers use credit cards to fund their BNPL repayments — a dangerous debt layering pattern.
By May 2024, more than one million people had £500 or more in outstanding unregulated BNPL debt, and 5.3 million adults (11% of the UK population) carried at least £50 in BNPL obligations. BNPL users skew younger and carry higher levels of unsecured debt, making them nearly twice as likely to be in serious financial distress compared to the general population.
The credit reporting gap compounded the problem. Because BNPL providers were not required to share lending data with credit reference agencies like Experian and TransUnion, a consumer could accumulate BNPL debt across multiple providers without any of it appearing on their credit file — invisible to mortgage lenders, banks, and other creditors assessing their overall financial health.
How Providers Must Adapt
Klarna, Clearpay, and other third-party BNPL lenders face a compressed compliance timeline. The temporary permissions regime opens for registration between May 15 and July 1, 2026. Once registered, firms can continue operating while they apply for full FCA authorization, which must be submitted within six months of July 15.
The authorization process imposes significant operational costs. Providers must build or upgrade affordability assessment systems, implement Consumer Duty-compliant product governance, establish Financial Ombudsman-compatible complaints handling, and prepare for mandatory credit reporting to reference agencies.
One critical nuance: the regulation applies only to third-party lenders who provide BNPL through merchant partners, not to retailers offering deferred payment directly to their own customers. This scope distinction means a fashion retailer’s own installment plan remains unregulated, while the same retailer’s checkout integration with Klarna falls under full FCA oversight.
Academic analysis published in The Conversation estimates that 10-30% of current BNPL users will be rejected once affordability checks are fully implemented, with exclusion concentrated among those in the most precarious financial positions — the very consumers the regulation aims to protect.
A Global Regulatory Wave
The UK is not acting in isolation. The European Union’s Consumer Credit Directive II (CCD II), taking effect across member states in 2026, eliminates the exemption that previously shielded short-term, interest-free BNPL products from consumer credit rules. Australia now requires BNPL providers to hold a credit license and join the Australian Financial Complaints Authority. Singapore introduced a BNPL Code of Conduct in November 2023 through industry self-regulation overseen by the Monetary Authority of Singapore.
The pattern is clear: every major market that saw rapid BNPL adoption is now bringing these products into existing consumer credit frameworks, requiring the same affordability checks, transparency standards, and dispute resolution mechanisms that govern traditional lending.
This matters beyond the UK. Africa’s BNPL market is projected to grow from $5.2 billion in 2025 to $16.8 billion by 2031, driven by mobile-first consumers and limited traditional credit access. As the sector scales, regulators across the continent are extending consumer credit frameworks to cover BNPL, with emphasis on licensing, disclosure, and financial inclusion. The UK’s approach — proportionate affordability checks rather than one-size-fits-all prescriptive rules — offers a pragmatic template for emerging markets navigating the same tension between innovation and consumer protection.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the FCA regulating under the new BNPL rules from July 2026?
The FCA will regulate Deferred Payment Credit (DPC) — buy now pay later agreements provided by third-party lenders like Klarna and Clearpay through merchant checkout pages. This means mandatory affordability checks, Consumer Duty compliance, Financial Ombudsman access, and credit reporting to reference agencies. Retailers offering their own installment plans directly to customers are not covered.
How will BNPL regulation affect consumers who currently use these services?
Consumers gain stronger protections: clear upfront terms, affordability assessments before credit is extended, support during financial difficulty, and the right to complain to the Financial Ombudsman. However, an estimated 10-30% of current users may lose access because they cannot pass affordability checks, with exclusion concentrated among the most financially vulnerable borrowers.
Why does UK BNPL regulation matter for emerging markets like Algeria?
The UK’s approach to BNPL regulation provides a tested blueprint for countries where BNPL is still emerging. Africa’s BNPL market is projected to reach $16.8 billion by 2031, and Algeria’s Fintech Strategy 2024-2030 is actively encouraging digital payment innovation. Learning from the UK’s experience — including the consumer harm that prompted regulation — helps Algerian regulators design proactive frameworks rather than reactive ones.
Sources & Further Reading
- Regulating Buy Now Pay Later — FCA
- New Protections Confirmed for Buy Now Pay Later Borrowers — FCA
- BNPL Regulation: FCA Confirms the Final Rules — Grant Thornton
- BNPL Rules in the UK: Protection or Exclusion? — The Conversation
- BNPL Regulations Across Major Global Markets — Checkout.com
- Africa’s BNPL Market to Triple to $16.8 Billion by 2031 — Ecofin Agency
- Buy Now Pay Later Regulation Marks Step Forward — StepChange













