You missed one Buy Now, Pay Later payment. Maybe you forgot the date, your wages arrived late, your card had expired. Perhaps you returned an item and assumed your repayments had been paused or maybe an unexpected bill landed at exactly the wrong time.
Whatever the reason, the worry often starts immediately. Will you be charged a fee? Will debt collectors get involved? Will your credit score be affected? Could one missed payment cause problems for years to come?
If you’ve found yourself asking those questions, Resolver complaint data suggests that you’re not alone, and that payment related issues are a significant source of frustration for BNPL users. While refund disputes remain the largest category of complaints, payment problems regularly appear across cases involving missed payments, payment failures, excessive fees, collection activity, affordability concerns, defaults and credit reporting disputes. What starts as a single missed instalment can quickly become something much bigger.
The good news is that missing one payment does not automatically mean you’re heading for financial disaster. But it does mean you need to understand what might happen next.
First things first: don’t panic
A missed payment is rarely the end of the world. Most BNPL providers will send reminders if a payment fails. You may receive an email, text message, app notification or account alert asking you to make the payment manually or update your payment details. In many cases, you’ll have an opportunity to put things right before the situation escalates. The biggest mistake you can make at this stage is ignoring the problem.
Resolver complaints show that consumers often become most frustrated when a small issue is allowed to grow into a larger dispute. A missed payment that could have been fixed in a day can eventually become an argument about fees, account restrictions or credit reporting.
Why missed payments happen
There is a common assumption that missed payments happen because someone borrowed irresponsibly, but in reality, consumer complaints often tell a very different story. Many people miss payments because of everyday life. Some forget the payment date, change their bank account or replace a debit card. Some experience illness, job loss or an unexpected drop in income. Others simply lose track of multiple BNPL agreements spread across different providers.
One recurring theme in Resolver complaints is that consumers often don’t realise a payment is due until they receive a reminder or discover a failed payment notification. BNPL can feel less formal than a credit card or loan, but it is still borrowing. And when you have several payment plans running simultaneously, it becomes surprisingly easy to lose track.
What happens after you miss a payment?
The first consequence is usually communication. You’ll typically receive a notification asking you to make the payment or update your details. But if the payment remains outstanding, other consequences may follow.
Depending on the provider, these can include:
- Late payment fees.
- Reduced spending limits.
- Account restrictions.
- Temporary suspension of your account.
- Collections activity.
- Credit reporting.
What catches many consumers by surprise is that the impact isn’t always financial. Resolver complaints include consumers who say they missed a payment by only a few days and later found their spending limits reduced or their accounts restricted. Some reported that restrictions remained in place even after the outstanding balance had been paid.
One consumer described missing a payment after changing their contact details and not receiving reminders, only to discover that additional restrictions had been placed on their account. Others complained that access to BNPL services remained limited long after the original issue had been resolved. These experiences highlight that the consequences of a missed payment can extend beyond the payment itself.
Will you be charged a late fee?
Possibly, different providers take different approaches. Some may apply late fees after a certain period, while others may focus on restricting account access or repeatedly attempting to collect the payment before applying charges.
If you receive a late fee, don’t automatically assume it is correct.
Ask yourself:
- Did you receive adequate notice?
- Was the payment genuinely missed?
- Had the item already been returned?
- Had you already informed the provider about any financial difficulties?
- Was there a technical problem, bank outage, etc?
If you believe a fee has been applied unfairly then challenge it. Keep copies of emails, payment confirmations and any communication with the provider. Evidence can be extremely useful if the issue later becomes a formal complaint.
What if you’re already struggling financially?
Many Resolver complaints show that missed payments don’t happen in isolation. Consumers frequently describe wider financial pressures, including illness, unemployment, reduced working hours, rising household costs and existing debts.
In some cases, complainants questioned whether they should have been approved for BNPL borrowing at all given their financial circumstances. If you know you’re going to struggle with a payment, contact the provider before you miss it if possible. Tell them what’s happening and ask what support is available. Find out whether alternative repayment arrangements can be agreed. Many consumers wait until several payments have been missed before seeking help. By that stage, the situation is often more difficult to resolve.
Could debt collectors get involved?
Yes. If a balance remains unpaid and you don’t respond to attempts to contact you, the account may eventually be referred to a collections team or debt collection agency. For many people, this is the point where anxiety starts to rise, but receiving contact from a debt collector does not mean you have lost your rights.
You can still:
- Ask for a breakdown of the balance.
- Challenge incorrect fees.
- Dispute inaccurate information.
- Explain financial difficulties.
- Request affordable repayment options.
Resolver complaints show that some consumers become particularly frustrated when collection activity begins while another issue remains unresolved.
Several Resolver users described being chased for payment while simultaneously trying to resolve disputes about returned goods, refunds or account balances. Others said they felt trapped between a retailer and a BNPL provider, with neither side accepting responsibility for fixing the problem.
If you believe the balance is wrong, say so immediately and provide evidence.
Can a missed payment affect your credit file?
Potentially, yes. Many consumers still assume that BNPL sits entirely outside the credit system. That is increasingly no longer the case. Depending on the provider and product, information about your borrowing and repayment behaviour may be shared with credit reference agencies.
Resolver complaint data includes cases involving:
- Credit report disputes.
- Incorrect defaults.
- Accounts consumers say should not have been reported.
- Problems clearing balances after repayment.
- Missed payment markers consumers believed were inaccurate.
One recurring complaint theme involves consumers discovering a problem only after checking their credit file. Some say they found a default they didn’t expect. Others complained that missed-payment markers remained even after balances had been cleared.
That doesn’t mean every missed payment will appear on your credit report. But it does mean you should take payment problems seriously, even when the original purchase was relatively small.
What if you returned the item?
This is one of the most common and frustrating scenarios. You return the goods and assume the repayment plan will stop. Then you receive a missed-payment notification.
Resolver complaints suggest that returned goods and missed payment disputes frequently overlap. Consumers regularly report returning items and assuming repayments had automatically been paused, only to discover that payments continued as normal. Some Resolver users described receiving payment reminders while waiting for refunds to be processed. Others reported being chased for balances they believed should already have been cancelled.
If you’ve returned an item:
- Keep proof of postage.
- Keep tracking information.
- Confirm the retailer has received the return.
- Contact the BNPL provider directly.
- Ask whether repayments have been paused.
- Get confirmation in writing.
Never assume the retailer and provider are communicating with each other effectively.
What if you think you should never have been approved?
Another recurring theme in Resolver complaints relates to affordability. Some consumers do not dispute missing a payment. Instead, they argue they should never have been offered the borrowing in the first place. Several complainants describe already having significant debts, defaults or financial difficulties when they were approved for additional BNPL borrowing. Others say they struggled with repayments almost immediately after taking out the agreement.
As regulation of the BNPL market increases, affordability checks are becoming an increasingly important issue. If you genuinely believe a provider failed to lend responsibly, that may form part of your complaint.
When should you complain?
You should consider making a formal complaint if:
- You believe fees have been applied unfairly.
- Your balance is incorrect.
- Your account has been restricted without explanation.
- You have been chased for payment after returning goods.
- Your credit file contains inaccurate information.
- You are unhappy with how your case has been handled.
- You cannot get a clear answer from customer services.
Interestingly, Resolver complaint descriptions suggest that many consumers become more frustrated by poor communication than by the missed payment itself. Long response times, difficulty reaching customer support and complaints that appear to go unanswered are recurring themes across BNPL cases.
When making a complaint, explain clearly what happened, what evidence you have and what outcome you’re seeking.
When should you contact the Financial Ombudsman?
The Financial Ombudsman Service exists to help resolve disputes between consumers and financial firms. Before contacting the Ombudsman, you’ll normally need to give the provider an opportunity to investigate your complaint first. If you’re unhappy with the final response, or the provider fails to respond within the required timeframe, you may be able to escalate the matter.
You may wish to contact the Financial Ombudsman if your complaint involves:
- Unfair fees.
- Incorrect credit reporting.
- Poor complaint handling.
- Affordability concerns.
- Unfair collections activity.
- Refusal to correct an obvious mistake.
The stronger your evidence, the easier it will be to support your case.
Missing one BNPL payment doesn’t automatically mean you’re heading for serious financial trouble.
But Resolver’s complaint data suggests that payment problems rarely stay confined to a single missed instalment. What starts as a missed payment can quickly evolve into disputes about fees, account restrictions, collections activity, affordability, defaults or credit reporting. The experiences described by consumers show that the biggest risk is often not the missed payment itself, but the knock-on effects that follow when the issue isn’t addressed quickly.
Open the email, read the notification, contact the provider, remember to keep records of every conversation and challenge anything that doesn’t look right. The sooner you act, the easier it is to stop a small problem becoming a much bigger one.
If you have a complaint about a Buy Now, Pay Later (BNPL) provider and are struggling to get it resolved directly with the company, you can use Resolver, to raise and track complaints with the company and escalate if needed. Visit Resolver to get started.
This content is provided for general information purposes only and does not constitute financial, legal, or professional advice. Resolver does not provide financial advice and does not recommend any particular course of action. You should consider seeking independent professional advice if you require guidance specific to your circumstances.
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