Can Klarna and PayPal Payment Plans Affect Your Credit Score?

Buy Now Pay Later (BNPL) options like Klarna, PayPal Pay in 3/Payment Plans and similar services have become popular. They let you spread the cost of things online, often interest-free, and they feel easy and flexible. But here’s the part people often overlook: these plans aren’t free from financial consequences, especially when it comes to your credit profile.

1. BNPL Isn’t Traditional Credit, But It Can Show Up On Your File

Traditionally, Buy Now Pay Later plans didn’t show up on your credit report and weren’t used in credit-score calculations. That’s changed, especially in the UK. Many BNPL providers now report customer activity to credit reference agencies like Experian, Equifax and TransUnion.

For example:

  • Klarna reports repayment information to major credit reference agencies. That means your BNPL balance and how you manage it become visible on your credit file.
  • PayPal Pay in 3 may share certain repayment data with credit agencies (for things like defaults), even though simple applications usually involve only a soft check.

2. Soft Checks vs Hard Checks – What’s the Difference?

When you apply for a BNPL plan, most providers do a soft credit check. This is just a basic identity/eligibility check and does not affect your credit score.

However, if you choose a longer-term financing option (beyond simple instalments), some providers may run a hard credit check. Hard checks can have a small negative impact on your credit score, although this impact is usually temporary.

3. Paying On Time Matters, But It’s Not a Guaranteed Boost

Here’s a key point: on-time BNPL payments may help build a positive credit history if your provider reports them to credit bureaus. That said, it’s not as powerful as building credit through a traditional loan or credit card that reports consistently.

In short:

  • On-time payments can show responsible behaviour if they’re reported.
  • But many BNPL services only started reporting this data recently, and its effect on your actual credit score is still evolving.

4. Missed Payments Can Hurt Your Credit Score Big Time

This is the real risk with BNPL:

  • If you miss payments, the provider may report the missed payments to the credit reference agencies.
  • If your debt is passed to a debt collection agency, that agency will show it on your credit file, and that can seriously damage your score for years.

Late or defaulted payments on BNPL accounts can stay on your credit file for up to six years and make it harder or more expensive to borrow in future.

5. What Lenders See And How It Could Influence Decisions

Even if BNPL doesn’t directly lower your credit score, lenders, especially for big products like mortgages, can see your existing payment plans when they review your credit file. That can affect their assessment of how much you can afford to borrow.

Put simply, lots of active BNPL agreements could make you look more reliant on credit, which might lead some lenders to be more cautious when offering you other types of borrowing.

Key Takeaways

✔ Using BNPL like Klarna or PayPal usually won’t hurt your credit if you pay on time and stick to simple instalment plans.
✔ Soft credit checks don’t harm your credit score.
✔ Missed or late BNPL payments, especially ones that go to collections, can damage your credit score and stay on your file for years.
✔ Creditors may still consider your BNPL usage when making lending decisions, even if it doesn’t directly affect your score.

Buy Now Pay Later can be a useful budgeting tool, but only if you understand how it interacts with your credit file. Make sure you:

  • Know whether your chosen plan reports to credit agencies
  • Keep track of payment dates and amounts
  • Don’t over-extend yourself with multiple plans at once

Used wisely, BNPL won’t wreck your credit. Used carelessly – it can do some real damage.