Regulation of Buy Now Pay Later (BNPL) in the UK is no longer theoretical. As the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) prepares to bring BNPL under formal regulation and continues embedding Consumer Duty through 2026, public commentary has largely focused on risk: rising arrears, over-indebted consumers, and the potential for slower growth.
That narrative is understandable but incomplete.
The more important question is not whether BNPL regulation in the UK will constrain BNPL. It is whether regulation, particularly Consumer Duty, may actually strengthen the sector by forcing a rethink of how arrears are understood, managed, and governed.
For BNPL firms willing to adapt, the next phase of regulation may prove less a threat to growth and more a structural inflection point.
Much of the debate around BNPL arrears and BNPL lending risk has treated missed payments as evidence of systemic weakness. Headlines tend to frame arrears as proof that the product encourages unsustainable borrowing, or that affordability controls have been insufficient.
From a regulatory standpoint, the focus has been on transparency, creditworthiness assessments, and fair treatment of customers in difficulty.
All of this is valid. But it risks reinforcing a simplistic interpretation: arrears equal failure.
In reality, arrears are not just an outcome. They are a signal.
And under Consumer Duty, signals matter.
The FCA’s Consumer Duty framework requires firms to deliver good outcomes across the product lifecycle. This goes beyond compliance with rules. It demands evidence of:
For BNPL providers, this shifts the emphasis from reactive collections to demonstrable governance of outcomes.
In practical terms, arrears can no longer be viewed purely as a collections metric. They become an indicator of:
This reframing is significant. Under Consumer Duty, the key question is not “Did the customer miss a payment?” but “What does this tell us about our systems, assumptions and controls?”
That is a more sophisticated and ultimately more resilient lens.
BNPL models generate high-frequency behavioural data. Instalment structures, short tenors, and digital engagement provide early visibility into payment friction.
In an unregulated environment, this data may primarily support credit risk modelling and collections prioritisation.
In a Consumer Duty regulatory environment, it must also support outcome governance.
For example:
These questions move arrears from a back-end operational issue to a front-end design consideration.
Firms that treat arrears as a governance feedback loop — rather than simply a loss event — will be better placed to evidence compliance and improve portfolio performance simultaneously.
One of the less discussed consequences of Consumer Duty is that it raises the bar for early-stage support.
The FCA has consistently emphasised that BNPL lenders must identify and assist customers in financial difficulty promptly. For BNPL providers, where balances are typically lower but customer volumes higher, scalable early intervention becomes critical.
There is a commercial logic here that goes beyond regulatory alignment.
Well-designed early engagement strategies can:
In other words, the same operational improvements that satisfy Consumer Duty can enhance profitability.
The misconception is that stricter conduct expectations inevitably increase cost. In practice, poorly governed arrears processes are already costly — through remediation, reputational risk, and inefficient collections.
Consumer Duty simply makes those weaknesses more visible.
BNPL’s growth has been driven by convenience and merchant integration. However, sustained scale in a regulated market will depend increasingly on trust.
Formal FCA oversight of BNPL and alignment with Consumer Duty may serve as a trust accelerator rather than a brake on growth. Clear standards around affordability, transparency and fair treatment can reassure both consumers and institutional partners.
This is particularly relevant as traditional lenders, card issuers and banks evaluate the competitive landscape. Firms that can demonstrate disciplined arrears governance and outcome monitoring may be better positioned for partnerships, funding relationships, and long-term capital access.
In this context, clearer BNPL regulation reduces uncertainty.
Consumer Duty also compels BNPL providers to revisit product architecture.
Short-term instalment products are often assumed to be inherently lower risk due to their duration. Yet repeat usage, stacking across providers and behavioural biases can alter the effective risk profile.
Arrears data, analysed properly, can reveal:
Embedding these insights into product design is not simply about compliance. It is about reducing volatility.
Over time, portfolios built on clearer affordability signals and earlier support mechanisms are likely to exhibit lower loss variability a meaningful advantage in a maturing market.
The UK economic environment remains uncertain. Inflationary pressures, real income constraints and shifting employment patterns will continue to test consumer credit performance.
For BNPL firms, resilience will depend on more than headline arrears rates. It will depend on:
Consumer Duty embeds these expectations into regulatory DNA.
Firms that adapt early will develop stronger internal governance frameworks — not only for regulatory reporting, but for strategic decision-making.
In this sense, regulation acts as a forcing function for maturity.
The regulatory trajectory is clear. The strategic response remains open.
BNPL providers may need to rethink:
Regulation often appears restrictive in its early stages. But markets tend to stabilise around clear rules.
For BNPL in the UK, FCA oversight and the embedding of BNPL regulation and Consumer Duty through 2026 may represent the transition from high-growth disruptor to an established consumer credit category.
That transition will not be frictionless. Some business models will need recalibration. Margins may compress where risk has been mispriced.
Yet for firms prepared to rethink arrears management, not as a defensive function but as a source of governance intelligence, the regulatory shift may strengthen rather than weaken long-term prospects.
Arrears, properly interpreted, are not a verdict on the model.
They are a diagnostic tool.
Under Consumer Duty, the firms that learn fastest from that diagnostic will define the next phase of BNPL in the UK.
As BNPL regulation evolves, lenders will need stronger capabilities in arrears monitoring, early intervention and outcome governance.
Explore how advanced debt management and collections platforms can support BNPL providers in meeting Consumer Duty expectations while maintaining portfolio performance. Contact an EXUS expert to learn more.