Here's a question that sounds reasonable on the surface: If you've got the money sitting in your account ready to go, why not use a Buy Now, Pay Later service to split up a purchase? You're not paying interest, and technically your money keeps earning interest while it sits in savings. Free money, right?
That's what one woman on Reddit wanted to know. She was looking at a $1,700 purchase and considering using services like Klarna (KLAR) or Afterpay to break it into installments. "Unlike a credit card, there's no interest charged, and I'm making interest when the money is sitting in my account, so… why not?" she asked. "Am I missing some obvious downside?"
Turns out, she was missing quite a few.
The Psychology Problem
"In theory, there's no downside," one user wrote. "In practice, it conditions you to buy more than you can afford."
That response pretty much set the tone for the entire discussion. Sure, if you're disciplined and only use BNPL sparingly, maybe it's fine. But the real trap isn't financial—it's psychological. When you split payments into smaller chunks, your brain starts treating expensive things as affordable things.
"It gives the illusion of having more purchasing power," another person explained. "Someone might not buy a $2,000 item, but they might very well buy it if it's 'only' $500 every 2 weeks."
That mental trick is exactly what these services count on. They're designed to make you comfortable spending money you might otherwise hesitate to part with. Multiple commenters pointed out that this structure becomes especially dangerous for people living paycheck to paycheck, where those smaller installments start piling up fast.
One user shared a cautionary tale: "We had someone here a few months ago who had $900 in monthly Klarna payments and was wondering how to get out of it because they couldn't afford it. 50 bucks here, 30 bucks there starts to add up."
The Math Doesn't Really Work Either
Let's talk about that interest you're supposedly earning by keeping the money in your account. Several Redditors did the calculation, and the numbers aren't impressive.
If you park $1,700 in a high-yield savings account, you might earn somewhere between $3 and $5 in interest over six weeks. That's it.
"That juice can't possibly be worth the squeeze," one person wrote. Another added: "We're literally talking about a few dollars maximum."
Compare that to using a credit card with a decent cashback rate. A standard 2% cashback card would net you $34 on a $1,700 purchase—way more than you'd earn in interest. Plus, credit cards typically come with purchase protection, fraud protection, and chargeback options if something goes wrong.
Hidden Risks And Weak Protections
Then there are the less obvious problems. Late fees, for one. "BNPL systems overwhelmingly have dark patterns designed to make you more likely to miss a payment," one commenter warned. Miss a payment, and you could be looking at fees of $25 or more—instantly wiping out any interest you might have earned.
Consumer protections are another weak point. Because BNPL providers pay the merchant upfront, they often don't offer much help if your order is wrong or never arrives. "Should the vendor fail to send you product, it's very hard to get the BNPL providers to do any kind of consumer protection," one user cautioned.
With a credit card, you can dispute charges and initiate chargebacks. With BNPL, you're often on your own.
The Gut Check You're Skipping
Maybe the most compelling argument against BNPL came down to mindset. "Writing the big check is a gut check that lets you know if you can really afford something," one commenter wrote. Breaking a purchase into four smaller payments removes that moment of hesitation—that internal signal that tells you whether spending this much money is actually a good idea.
Another user put it bluntly: "If you have the money, and can pay the balance in full every month, use a credit card and forget this BNPL crap."
The consensus seemed clear: If you've got the cash, just pay for it. The financial upside of BNPL is negligible, and the behavioral downside is real. You're training yourself to think of expensive purchases as manageable installments, which is exactly the habit that gets people into trouble down the road.




