Recent reporting shows the “buy now, pay later” (BNPL) lending model is expanding at a startling rate, raising concerns among regulators and financial professionals about consumer debt burden and hidden systemic risks. According to the article in TechCrunch, BNPL use in the United States has soared to roughly 91.5 million users, with 25 % of them using these plans to pay for essentials like groceries. The default-rate for BNPL users climbed to 42 % in 2025 (up from 39 % in 2024 and 34 % in 2023). Simultaneously, many BNPL loans are not reported to credit bureaus, creating what regulators call “phantom debt” that isn’t captured by traditional credit-scoring systems. Meanwhile, state and federal oversight remains fragmented: for example, Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) rules were reversed in 2024 after an earlier push to treat BNPL like a credit card, and individual states such as New York are now acting in isolation to license BNPL lenders and fill regulatory gaps. Additional analysis from Morgan Stanley and Deloitte confirm the risk of debt accumulation among vulnerable consumers, regulatory and transparency shortfalls, and the potential for B2B BNPL to extend such risks to small businesses. The convergence of all these factors suggests that what began as a niche fintech payment option is evolving into a broad and lightly regulated credit channel — one that could carry meaningful consequences for households, lenders and the broader economy.
Sources: TechCrunch, Morgan Stanley
Key Takeaways
– The BNPL market is surging rapidly, including adoption for non-discretionary purchases, and default or late-payment rates are climbing.
– A significant portion of BNPL debt is not captured by credit bureaus, meaning traditional credit-risk models and regulatory visibility may be missing major exposures.
– Regulatory frameworks for BNPL remain incomplete and patchwork: federal oversight is limited, state regimes vary, and new business models (including B2B BNPL) are pushing into less-regulated territory.
In-Depth
We are witnessing a pivotal moment in consumer finance: the proliferation of “buy now, pay later” (BNPL) services is reshaping how Americans finance purchases, yet the emerging picture raises serious flags—especially from a conservative vantage point focused on personal responsibility, financial stability, and market discipline. BNPL began as a disruptive and appealing alternative to traditional credit cards — splitting big purchases into interest-free installments often at the point of sale. That simplicity and marketing appeal brought rapid uptake among consumers who might otherwise avoid revolving credit. Over time, though, the convenience has blurred into a broader form of credit for everyday expenses, and the growing scale invites close scrutiny.
The recent TechCrunch piece shows a dramatic escalation: 91.5 million Americans using BNPL, and a full quarter of them employing it to finance groceries rather than discretionary items. The late-payment rate has increased to 42 % in 2025 — not just one late payment, but an indicator that many consumers are stretching to cover even basic bills. At the same time, because many BNPL providers do not report these loans to credit bureaus, the debt remains largely invisible in credit-scoring systems and national data sets. That “phantom debt” situation means that a consumer may take on multiple BNPL obligations without a lender’s full knowledge, and other creditors — or regulators — may not see the full picture.
From the regulatory angle, the system looks behind the curve. The CFPB’s earlier shift to treat BNPL under Truth in Lending protections was reversed, leaving a vacuum at the federal level. Some states are stepping up — New York introduced a licensing regime for BNPL providers — but state-by-state regulation yields a patchwork with uneven guardrails. Meanwhile, BNPL companies are branching beyond consumer retail into business-to-business lending, where the scale is larger and risks less visible. Small business BNPL usage reportedly boosts purchases by 40 % on average, but also increases overall debt exposure. Packaging BNPL loans and re-selling them as asset-backed securities (e.g., some firms with tens of billions in exposure) echo the pre-2008 subprime playbook: high growth, thin oversight, and leveraged debt.
From a conservative finance lens, these trends are troubling. Encouraging consumers to buy now and pay later may erode personal accession to debt-discipline and shift risk onto households least positioned to absorb shocks. The fact that repayment performance is slipping and transparency remains weak should prompt caution. Moreover, in an economy where wages are stagnant, inflation persists, and unsecured borrowing is already at elevated levels, adding a largely untracked layer of credit is reckless from the perspective of systemic risk. For retirees or savers — individuals who have worked to budget, save and build credit — this surge in alternative credit channels weakens the discipline of lending standards, increasing the chance that defaults will ripple into other parts of the financial system and, ultimately, impact mainstream credit availability.
The time for sharper oversight has arrived. Policymakers ought to ensure BNPL products are subject to the same disclosures, credit-checks, reporting requirements and consumer protections as other forms of lending. The consumer benefit of flexible payments must be weighed against the risk of debt stacking and financial fragility. At the same time, individuals should treat BNPL not as cost-free convenience but as credit obligating serious obligations, keeping personal budgets and savings plans in mind. In short: just because it’s easy doesn’t mean it’s harmless. As BNPL moves from niche fintech to mainstream finance, both consumers and regulators must recalibrate their comfort level with unseen debt and deferred risk.

