Turned off by the risky proposition of taking on more credit card debt during the pandemic, a skyrocketing number of shoppers have turned to a burgeoning industry of installment payment service apps to manage paying off new TVs or clothes. But while many customers rave about the ease and transparency of interest-free “buy now, pay later,” or BNPL, apps such as Affirm, Afterpay and Klarna, some shoppers have found that these services come with surprise fees and a long slog to recoup money owed to them after a refund — if they receive a refund at all.
Hundreds of customers have filed complaints with agencies that report to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau detailing frustrations with continued charges for returned items and surprise fees after using BNPL loans to make purchases. At the Better Business Bureau, hundreds of shoppers have complained they continued to be charged for purchases they returned or were hit with unexpected fees.
It’s just been ongoing nonsense. It’s kind of like a shakedown.
One shopper told NBC News they were slapped with an unexpected $25 fee — doubling their monthly payment — after they were two days late paying their bill for a laptop. Another shopper told NBC News she continued to be charged for months for a $1,000 Sears stove order she canceled and never received. Another customer told NBC News he paid off a faulty air conditioning unit he returned to Walmart because he was afraid of his account being sent to collections.
“It’s just been ongoing nonsense,” said Jessica Bramble, an Affirm customer who was reported to a collections agency this year over a $185 returned purchase from clothing store Universal Standard. “It’s kind of like a shakedown.”
Matt Gross, a spokesperson for Affirm, told NBC News that “refunds are subject to merchants’ policies.” However, “Affirm will intervene on behalf of consumers if the merchant is unresponsive or unable to help, as we have done in each of the situations described” by NBC News in a note to the company for comment.
As the popularity of "buy now, pay later" loans grows, these emerging financial products have caught the eyes of regulators. The House Financial Services Committee’s Task Force on Financial Technology held a hearing Tuesday with industry leaders and consumer advocates to investigate the risks and benefits of these loans.
“It is difficult to shop online without seeing a 'buy now, pay later' option,” said Rep. Stephen Lynch, D-Mass., during the hearing. “However, these products also raise important questions about use of consumer data, the exploitation around spending patterns, the application of lending laws and the potential for unsustainable levels of consumer debt.”
Before the pandemic, BNPL, which allows shoppers to split up their purchases over time, was popular among younger, digitally native generations. But over the last year, these services have grown exponentially. Online revenue from BNPL services has been 10 percent higher this year than 2020 and 45 percent higher than 2019, according to Adobe Analytics. One-quarter of respondents in an Adobe survey reported they had used a BNPL loan in the last three months.
Over the last year, the top five payment installment services — Klarna, Afterpay, Affirm, Zip and Sezzle — have seen an overall 100 percent growth compared to the year before, with 26 million app downloads combined, according to the app analytics and app market data firm App Annie. Tara House, a Walmart spokesperson, told NBC News in an email that the retailer ditched its layaway program in favor of a BNPL financing option with Affirm because of changing customer needs and shopping habits. Target announced last month that it is partnering with Affirm and Sezzle to let shoppers break up their payments on purchases ahead of the holiday season.
Over the last year, the top five BNPL services have seen 100 percent growth compared to the year before, with 26 million app downloads combined.
“We’re seeing strong demand for 'buy now, pay later' for both merchants and consumers, and rapid adoption amongst both, especially among younger consumers,” said Jack Dorsey, CEO of the online payment service Square, in an August call with investors. Square acquired Afterpay in August for $29 billion. “It’s a simple idea to enable our sellers’ customers to pay for purchases later, interest free, without having to use traditional credit sources,” Dorsey said.
As for fees, the company charges late fees that can be $8 or 25 percent of the order amount.
Shoppers are also now using 'buy now, pay later' services for smaller purchases, putting them squarely in line with how people use credit cards, according to Salesforce data. The average order paid by a BNPL loan is $149, compared to $141 with a credit card, Salesforce said.
Big banks have certainly taken notice. Mastercard recently announced it is rolling out its own installment payment program called Mastercard Installments. In an earnings call with investors last month, JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon said the company will “spend whatever we have to spend to compete with all these folks in our space.”
Unlike traditional credit cards, a big part of the draw to 'buy now, pay later' loans is the ability to pay off purchases over time with no interest. For shoppers like Jace Guyer, a 32-year-old parent of six in St. Joseph, Missouri, who prefers gender neutral pronouns, that option helped them budget during a year of pandemic-driven unemployment.
A big part of the draw is the ability to pay off purchases over time with no interest.
Guyer, who was the family's sole financial supporter, lost their job at the beginning of the pandemic. Guyer and their husband scraped by most of the pandemic borrowing money from friends to pay their utility bills and Guyer’s $25 monthly bill with Klarna to pay off a Dell laptop. They were two days late in paying their October 2020 bill, resulting in a $25 late fee on top of their balance.
“It was the first time I had ever been late, let alone two days late,” Guyer told NBC News. “When you look at it, $25 isn’t that much — but $50 in the middle of the pandemic is a lot.”
Klarna markets itself as “No interests. No fees.” But it has three options that come with varying terms around late fees and interest, according to the company’s website. In its two most commonly used programs, shoppers can expect up to a $7 late fee capped at 25 percent of the installment amount if the company can’t collect payment twice. Guyer financed through its “legacy financing solution,” which charges a late fee up to $35, resulting in the assessment of a $25 late fee, said Brendan Lewis, a spokesperson for Klarna, in an email to NBC News. Globally, the company’s delinquency rate is less than 1 percent, he added.
“As a matter of practice, Klarna works with our customers to ensure they make payments on time,” Lewis said. “This includes laying out a clear payment schedule at the time of purchase and contacting them if we are initially unable to collect payment.”
Klarna refunded Guyer’s $25 late fee after they disputed the charge.
Jessica Bramble, a 28-year-old shopper in Rahway, New Jersey, told NBC News she used Affirm to buy a jumpsuit and a white turtleneck from Universal Standard in January for $185. But when she received the order in the mail, she realized she had received the order twice and was charged twice. She returned the extra clothes to Universal Standard, but Affirm was responsible for the refund, according to a July email from a Universal Standard customer service representative to Bramble that was reviewed by NBC News.
Bramble eventually received a refund through her bank for the duplicate purchase, and Affirm confirmed the debt had been resolved in an email. However, days later, she received an email from a debt collections agency that she still owed $185. The debt collections firm was still collecting on the bill as recently as September, according to emails reviewed by NBC News. She was able to dispute the charges and receive a refund through her bank.
“I have been rebuilding my credit and I don’t need a company to stick me with almost $200 in unpaid debt,” said Bramble, who added the collection account hasn’t yet appeared on her credit report.
Matt Gross, a spokesperson with Affirm, said the company does not comment on individual customer cases. But he said refunds “are subject to merchants’ policies,” adding that “Affirm will intervene on behalf of consumers if the merchant is unresponsive or unable to help.”
Unlike traditional credit cards, BNPL apps do not all report every loan to credit bureaus. Klarna runs a soft credit check before every purchase, which does not appear on credit reports, and does not report anything to any consumer agencies. Sezzle allows consumers to opt in to credit bureau reporting. Afterpay doesn’t report payment history to credit bureaus. With Affirm, loans that offer 0 percent APR and those that allow four biweekly payments are not reported to credit bureaus. But on other loans, Affirm may report consumer payment history to reporting agencies. Zip, formerly known as Quadpay, does not run hard credit checks and does not report payment history to credit bureaus.
Unlike traditional credit cards, BNPL apps do not all report every loan to credit bureaus.
Instead, Afterpay, Affirm and Klarna use proprietary risk models to assess a shopper’s ability to pay for each purchase, the companies each told NBC News. Zip uses a set of “customer assessment guidelines” to determine creditworthiness that it does not disclose.
This might be a draw for consumers with bad credit, but it also raises questions among consumer advocates who argue that this does not provide a full picture of a shopper’s ability to pay off their loan, Rebecca Borné, senior policy counsel with consumer advocacy group Center for Responsible Lending, told NBC News.
“There is a growing body of debt that is not reflected in credit reports,” she said.
The companies earn revenue by charging fees to businesses who use their services and consumer fees for late payments and transactions.
Kassondra Sturtevant, a shopper in Pueblo, Colorado, told NBC News she has paid $50 to $60 in transaction fees to Zip. The company told NBC News it charges a $1 to $4 transaction fee on payments with merchants outside of its partner network. A majority of transactions do not have fees, said Jinal Shah, chief marketing officer of Zip U.S.
“Their big thing is no hidden fees and no interest,” she said. “They say they charge a transaction fee in their terms and conditions but unless you really search for it, you can’t find it.”
Zip shows the total purchase cost including the fee at the top of the checkout page in a transaction and includes a photo of a mock checkout process on its website. Strutevant used Quadpay before it merged with Zip in June, and the fee was not included in the total borrowed amount. It only appeared in her final bill, according to invoices reviewed by NBC News. Quadpay's information about its fees only appear on its “how it works” page online, according to a chat between a customer service representative and Sturtevant.
Because BNPL apps earn revenue from merchant fees, their business model “tilts toward maximizing the amount of credit people take on,” Borné said. RBC Capital Markets estimates "buy now, pay" later loans increase retail purchase rates by 20 to 30 percent and increase the average ticket size by anywhere from 30 and 50 percent.
“That is a concern in and of itself, especially when there is no traditional underwriting to make sure borrowers can afford it,” Borné said.
For the most part, "buy now pay later" loans have a murky regulatory structure, Borné said. Providers are subject to the Dodd-Frank Act, a consumer protection regulation passed in 2010 after the subprime mortgage crisis to prevent unfair, deceptive and abusive lending practices — which means the CFPB can bring actions against lenders. But BNPL services fall outside of the Truth in Lending Act’s disclosure requirements, since they typically offer loans that must be paid in fewer than five installments.
California is the only state that treats BNPL loans as lines of credit. These services also don’t come with the same dispute protections as credit cards and operators may hold consumers responsible for the total cost of a returned purchase, the CFPB warned in a July blog post.
Affirm CEO Max Levchin, who served on the CFPB advisory board for three years beginning in 2015, told investors in September that “regulatory attention is a positive thing so long as it is rooted in understanding of the product, understanding of what the intent is.”
“We tend to think of ourselves as sort of the one honest actor in the space, having chosen from the very beginning to charge no fees of any kind, including neither the late fees,” he said. “And I think that direct connectivity with a person’s well-being and the regulatory intent has served us really, really well and grounded our regulatory conversations just the right way for many years now.”
As federal lending regulators take a harder look at these types of loans, consumer advocates warn shoppers to keep a skeptical eye.
“It’s always important to look under the hood of big shiny vehicles,” Borné said. “Although 'buy now, pay later' has big promises, we need more data and oversight. Because it’s growing extremely quickly, whatever impact it has, it’s going to have on a wide scale.”
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