Skip to main content
Netherlands News in English

Main navigation

  • Top stories
  • Health
  • Crime
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Tech
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Weird
  • 1-1-2
Image
Shopping cart symbol on the keyboard
Shopping cart symbol on the keyboard - Credit: Rangizz / Depositphotos - License: DepositPhotos
Business
Nibud
buy now pay later
young adult
Debt
Thursday, 9 April 2026 - 10:20

Share this article:

Over half of young adults have normalized buy-now-pay-later

Over half of young adults aged 18 to 27 sometimes make use of buy now, pay later options when making purchases. They view this option as a “debit card,” rather than a loan or debt, according to a study by the National Institute for Financial Information (Nibud).

Nibud investigated for the first time how many young adults in the Netherlands use buy now, pay later. Of the 1,509 respondents, nearly 40 percent never use pay later options.

About 51 percent sometimes pay with a credit card. 54 percent sometimes use pay-later providers like Klarna or Riverty. And about 59 percent have paid off a mobile phone via a subscription.

These young people say they use pay-later options because they want to see the purchased items before paying for them, or appreciate being able to spread the costs over a longer period.

Half, 50 percent, said that their accounts are sometimes overdrawn, and 8 percent said it happens frequently. According to Nibud, young adults who often use pay-later options are more often overdrawn. For this group, there is a risk that they spend more money than they can afford.

37 percent of respondents said that they struggle to make ends meet and sometimes have to borrow money from family or friends.

According to Nibud, a striking number of young adults who use pay-later options say they budget and keep financial records. But young adults who never use pay-later options manage better financially.

Flanderijn, an umbrella organization for debt collection agencies and bailiffs, recently reported that the number of young adults under 25 who come into contact with a debt collection agency increased by half in the past five years. About 45,000 young adults have payment arrears on their health insurance premiums and traffic fines. The number of young people requesting debt assistance increased by over a third in 2024.

Experts recently warned that debt problems make young people more susceptible to being recruited into a life of crime.

More like this

Image
Teenagers using their smartphones on a bench in Amsterdam
18 is too young to be in charge of your finances, debt aid organizations say
Image
Woman on a shopping spree
Dutch gov't against buy now - pay later option in stores, but can't ban it
Image
Debts
One debt can quickly push young adults into financial trouble: report
Image
Bills
Fewer Dutch in dire financial straits; One in eight still can't pay their bills
Make NL Times your top Google source

Follow us:

Latest stories

  • Dutch MP's wants to prosecute influencers for misinformation on contraceptives, STIs
  • Hot & humid with temps up to 35°C; Code yellow warning for oppresive heat until Saturday
  • Two people found dead in recently sold home in Groningen town
  • Netherlands to introduce mandatory psychological evaluation for firearm permits
  • Feyenoord wants to add 10,000 seats to De Kuip as stadium’s new owner

Top stories

  • Hot & humid with temps up to 35°C; Code yellow warning for oppresive heat until Saturday
  • Two people found dead in recently sold home in Groningen town
  • Netherlands to introduce mandatory psychological evaluation for firearm permits
  • VU students sentenced for assault, discriminatory remarks after Nazi song dispute
  • Dutch FM: Europe must quickly reduce reliance on U.S. military by 2030

© 2012-2026, NL Times, All rights reserved.

Footer menu

  • Change Privacy Settings
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact
  • Partner Content