Clearpay is the UK’s second most widely used Buy Now Pay Later provider after Klarna. Available at ASOS, Boots, JD Sports, and thousands of other retailers, it’s popular for fashion and beauty purchases. Here’s exactly how it works and what the risks are.
How Clearpay Works
Clearpay splits any eligible purchase into four equal fortnightly payments:
| Payment | When |
|---|---|
| Payment 1 | At checkout (25% of total) |
| Payment 2 | 2 weeks after checkout |
| Payment 3 | 4 weeks after checkout |
| Payment 4 | 6 weeks after checkout |
Payments are charged automatically to your linked debit or credit card. There is no interest. You must be 18+, a UK resident, and have a UK payment card.
Example: £120 purchase at ASOS
- Payment 1: £30 at checkout
- Payment 2: £30 in 14 days
- Payment 3: £30 in 28 days
- Payment 4: £30 in 42 days
Total paid: £120 — no extra cost if paid on time.
Clearpay vs Klarna — Key Differences
| Feature | Clearpay | Klarna |
|---|---|---|
| Repayment model | 4 x fortnightly | 3 x monthly (Pay in 3) or 30 days |
| Repayment period | 6 weeks | 60 days (Pay in 3) or 30 days |
| First payment | At checkout | At checkout or at delivery |
| Late fee | £6 per instalment | Up to £5 per instalment |
| In-store use | Via app (selected retailers) | Via Klarna card or app |
| Financing option | No | Yes (Klarna Financing) |
| Initial limit (new customers) | ~£150 | Variable |
| Credit reporting | Yes (since 2023) | Yes (since June 2023) |
Both providers now report to UK credit reference agencies. Both charge late fees but not interest. The main practical difference is the repayment schedule — Clearpay’s 4 x fortnightly is slightly faster than Klarna’s 3 x monthly.
Fees and Costs
| Situation | Cost |
|---|---|
| All payments on time | £0 |
| One missed payment | £6 late fee |
| Second missed payment | £6 late fee |
| Cap per order | 25% of order value or maximum fees charged |
| Interest | None |
| Default — debt collector involved | Credit damage, potential CCJ |
Fees are capped per order — you will never pay more in fees than 25% of the original order value through Clearpay’s own fee structure. However, if debt is passed to a collector, their costs may be additional.
Spending Limits
Clearpay starts new UK customers at a spending limit of approximately £100–£150. Limits increase as you build a track record of on-time payments. Clearpay assesses limits using:
- Payment history with Clearpay
- A soft credit check at each purchase (not visible to other lenders)
- Purchasing patterns
Your limit can be checked in the Clearpay app. Limits can be reduced if payments are missed or if Clearpay reassesses your account.
Credit File Impact
Since 2023, Clearpay reports payment data to the UK’s three main credit reference agencies:
| Behaviour | Credit impact |
|---|---|
| All payments on time | Positive — builds credit history |
| Late payment | Negative — stays on file 6 years |
| Default | Significant negative impact |
| Account suspended | May signal credit risk |
This reporting applies to purchases made from the date Clearpay began reporting — older purchases are not retrospectively reported. The change makes Clearpay more similar to a credit product in terms of credit file management.
For mortgage applications: Lenders are increasingly checking BNPL balances and history as part of affordability assessments. Clear all Clearpay balances and avoid new applications 3–6 months before a mortgage application.
Returning Goods
If you return goods purchased via Clearpay:
- The return must be processed by the retailer
- Your Clearpay payment schedule does not automatically pause for returns in all cases
- If a payment falls due during the return window, you may need to pay and wait for a refund credit
- Clearpay’s app shows active orders and refund status — check regularly
Best practice: Keep evidence of returns (tracking numbers, receipts). Contact Clearpay if a refund doesn’t appear within 5–7 days of the retailer confirming the return.
Is Clearpay Regulated?
Clearpay’s standard Pay in 4 product is currently exempt from FCA consumer credit regulation as a deferred payment product. The Financial Services and Markets Act 2023 legislated to bring BNPL into full FCA regulation — Clearpay will become FCA-regulated once implementation regulations come into force (expected 2026, date TBC).
Until full regulation:
- Section 75 Consumer Credit Act protection does not apply to Clearpay purchases
- You cannot escalate complaints to the Financial Ombudsman for BNPL specifically (though this will change post-regulation)
- Clearpay voluntarily follows many of the principles of the FCA’s Consumer Duty
Debt Stacking Risk
The same BNPL stacking risk that applies to Klarna applies to Clearpay:
- Multiple simultaneous orders across retailers add up
- Fortnightly payments from multiple orders overlap
- The Clearpay app shows your total outstanding but not combined with other BNPL providers
Before each purchase, review your total BNPL commitments across all providers (Klarna, PayPal Pay Later, Laybuy, etc.) and ensure total payments in the next 6 weeks are affordable from your income.
Getting Help
If you’re struggling with Clearpay payments:
- Contact Clearpay directly — before missing a payment, not after
- Request a payment extension — Clearpay may be able to adjust your schedule
- Contact Citizens Advice — 0800 144 8848 for BNPL debt advice
- Contact StepChange — 0800 138 1111 if BNPL is part of wider debt
Related Guides
- Buy Now Pay Later hub — full BNPL guide including all providers
- Klarna UK Guide — how Klarna compares to Clearpay
- Credit Scores hub — how BNPL affects your credit file
- Credit Cards — the regulated alternative with Section 75 protection