Buy Now, Pay Later (BNPL) vs. Credit Cards: Smarter Holiday Shopping

Two women sit on a couch; one is on the phone holding a credit card, while the other looks concerned with her hand over her mouth. A laptop is open in front of them.

Summary

It’s the holiday season! A time for joy, family, and making memories, not debt. Stress can start to pile up with holiday expectations and mounting costs. Keep the interest at bay by knowing how Buy Now, Pay Later (BNPL) and credit cards affect your wallet and even your credit!

Between the group chat gift exchange, kid wish lists, and surprise travel, it’s easy to click “pay later” and hope the future you just figures it out.

What are BNPL and Credit Cards

BNPL (buy now, pay later) is like a “bite-sized” button that slices your purchase into four predictable payments. Often, the attraction of BNPL is no interest on these payments. Typically, you set up autopay to process your expected payment every two weeks.

It’s a handy option when the payment dates mirror your paycheck cycles. However, it can be risky when you stack three BNPL plans together and quickly lose track.

During the 2024 holiday season, BNPL drove $18.2 billion in U.S. online spending, according to Adobe Analytics reporting cited by Reuters, and 41% of BNPL users say they paid late at least once in the past year, according to a 2025 LendingTree survey.

Pros

  • Simple, fixed payments.
  • Often no interest or fees on pay-in-4.
  • Easy approval, soft credit check.
  • Big purchase payments are spread out..

Cons

  • Limited protections vs. credit cards, where returns or disputes can be messy.
  • Late fees and multiple overlapping plans can snowball.
  • Longer plans may charge interest.
  • May not build credit; however, missed payments can still hurt your credit.

Credit Cards work anywhere and are known for the perks that follow, like travel rewards, dispute help, and extended warranties. If you pay your statement balance in full, it’s basically a short-term, free loan. However, if you carry a balance, the interest turns expensive quickly.

Pros

  • Widely accepted.
    Good for travel and online purchases.
  • Rewards, purchase protection, extended warranties, and fraud safeguards.
  • Pay in full and avoid any interest.
  • Can help build credit with timely payments and low utilization.

Cons

  • High interest if not paid in full.
  • Fees for late payments, annual fees, or foreign transactions.
  • Easy to overspend with a high credit limit.
  • Can harm credit if payments are late or balances run high.

Both tools require some thought about which is the best match for you.

Another great option to consider is a secured credit card. They can actually help you rebuild credit, and unlike unsecured cards, you are required to fund secured credit cards, helping you stay within your means.

BNPL vs Credit Card

Maya is upgrading her son’s school tablet for a new one that costs $320. At checkout, she picks BNPL. She sets weekly autopay, four $80 auto payments that all clear by New Year’s, and she ends up paying no interest. Her friend, Ciara, stacked three BNPL plans at the same time. Her payday shifted, autopay failed, late fees hit all three plans, and her “0% interest” purchase ended up costing more than the price tag.

Jordan buys the same tablet for himself with a rewards card and pays his statement in full on the due date. His total cost is $320, and he pockets about $6 in cash back due to perks on his credit card! His friend, Sam, buys the same tablet as him. Sam could not afford to make his payments, paying the minimum, and the tablet came out costing more than the price tag.

Rule of thumb: Do not swipe your card or start a BNPL plan unless you have expected funds to pay the card in full or make every BNPL payment on time. No exceptions.

Choose the right tool, keep promises to your future self, and finish the season funded!

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