Credit Card vs Buy Now Pay Later in India (2026 Edition)
LazyPay, Simpl, ZestMoney — the BNPL option vs the credit card. The right tool for each spend.
Anika Iyengar
Senior comparisons writer. Specialises in head-to-head card matches, mileage-run strategy, and how banks actually price their products.
The two short-term credit options
In India, you have two ways to defer payment on a purchase:
- Credit card: bank-issued, 18–25 day grace period, ~42%–51% per annum finance charge if you carry a balance.
- Buy Now Pay Later (BNPL): fintech-issued (LazyPay, Simpl, ZestMoney, Slice), short-term instalment, 0%–36% per annum, much shorter duration (15–45 days).
Both let you buy now and pay later. The mechanics, fees, and risks differ significantly.
The mechanics
Credit card
- Apply once, get a revolving line.
- Use for any purchase (subject to merchant acceptance).
- Receive monthly statement.
- Pay minimum or full balance by due date.
- Interest charges if balance carried.
BNPL
- Apply per merchant (often via a one-click checkout).
- Get a short-term credit limit (₹5,000–₹2,00,000).
- Choose 0%–36% APR over 15–45 days.
- Single repayment via auto-debit or UPI.
The cost
Credit card (paid in full)
- ₹0 interest.
- 1%–5% cashback/rewards on most spend.
The best case for a credit card.
Credit card (carried balance)
- 42%–51% per annum.
- ₹50,000 balance → ₹21,000–₹25,000/year interest.
The worst case for a credit card.
BNPL (paid on time)
- 0% interest (most BNPL).
- No cashback (BNPL rarely offers rewards).
The best case for BNPL.
BNPL (defaulted)
- 24%–36% per annum late fee.
- Damaged credit score.
- Possible legal action.
The risk case for BNPL.
The rewards comparison
Credit card
- 1%–5% cashback or points.
- Lounge access (premium cards).
- Insurance (travel, purchase).
- 0% forex markup (premium cards).
BNPL
- ₹0 cashback (most BNPL).
- ₹0 lounge access.
- ₹0 insurance.
- Some BNPL offers small cashback (₹50–₹200 per transaction).
Credit cards win on rewards, hands down.
The credit-score impact
Credit card
- Reported as a tradeline (revolving credit).
- On-time payments reported as positive.
- Late payments reported as negative.
BNPL
- Most BNPL not reported to CIBIL (Slice, Simpl, ZestMoney are reporting gradually).
- On-time payments may or may not improve score (depends on bureau reporting).
- Late payments may be reported as defaults.
Credit cards have a stronger positive impact; BNPL is more variable.
The credit limit
Credit card
- ₹50,000 to ₹5,00,000+ (based on income and credit history).
BNPL
- ₹5,000 to ₹2,00,000 (based on UPI history, bank transactions, employer).
BNPL limits are typically lower than credit-card limits.
The acceptance
Credit card
- Universal (Visa, Mastercard, Amex, RuPay).
- Widely accepted online and offline.
BNPL
- Limited to partner merchants (LazyPay: Myntra, Flipkart, MakeMyTrip; Simpl: Swiggy, Zomato, Nykaa; ZestMoney: Amazon, Flipkart).
- Not accepted at most offline merchants.
Credit cards have universal acceptance.
The use case comparison
Buy on Amazon
- Credit card: 5% on Amazon Pay ICICI. Universal acceptance.
- BNPL: ZestMoney offers 3-month EMI on Amazon. 0% interest (sometimes). No cashback.
Winner: Credit card for the cashback.
Buy on Flipkart
- Credit card: 5% on Flipkart Axis. Universal acceptance.
- BNPL: LazyPay offers pay-in-15-days. No cashback.
Winner: Credit card.
Buy on Myntra
- Credit card: 5% on Flipkart Axis. Or 5% on HDFC Millennia (capped).
- BNPL: LazyPay 15-day. No cashback.
Winner: Credit card.
Order on Swiggy / Zomato
- Credit card: 4% on Flipkart Axis (Swiggy). Or 5% on SBI Cashback (broad online, capped).
- BNPL: Simpl on Zomato. No cashback.
Winner: Credit card.
Book flights
- Credit card: 5X rewards on Axis Atlas. Or 5% on HDFC Infinia (SmartBuy).
- BNPL: LazyPay on MakeMyTrip. No cashback.
Winner: Credit card.
Pay utility bills
- Credit card: 2% on Amazon Pay ICICI (Amazon Pay bills). Uncapped.
- BNPL: Not typically available for utility bills.
Winner: Credit card (uncapped 2% beats BNPL if available).
Buy in offline store
- Credit card: Universal acceptance.
- BNPL: Limited offline acceptance (Slice card can be swiped at POS).
Winner: Credit card.
The right BNPL use cases
BNPL makes sense when:
- Cash-flow timing matters: you've spent this month's salary but need a small purchase now.
- The merchant offers 0% BNPL with no fees: pure 0% interest for 15–45 days is a small float.
- You don't have a credit card: BNPL extends credit access (with limits).
- The merchant offers a BNPL discount: some merchants offer 5%–10% off for BNPL payment (rare but real).
The wrong BNPL use cases
- High-frequency small spend: LazyPay + Simpl encourage frequent use. The cumulative late fees can compound.
- Habitual instalments: BNPL chains (one BNPL used to repay another) are dangerous.
- Cash-flow stress: if you're using BNPL because you can't afford the purchase now, BNPL delays the problem rather than fixing it.
The credit-card discipline
For a credit card to beat BNPL, you must:
- Pay the statemented balance in full every cycle.
- Avoid cash advances.
- Keep utilisation below 30%.
- Don't miss payments.
If you can't maintain the discipline, BNPL may be safer (smaller amounts, shorter terms).
The BNPL discipline
For BNPL to work:
- Auto-debit the BNPL repayment from a stable source.
- Don't use BNPL for more than 1–2 transactions per cycle.
- Don't chain BNPLs (BNPL A used to pay BNPL B).
- Set calendar reminders for repayment dates.
The long-term impact
A credit card with on-time payments for 24+ months builds a strong CIBIL score. BNPL with on-time payments may or may not be reported, but the credit limit is generally lower and the bureau reporting is less reliable.
For long-term financial health, the credit card is the right tool. BNPL is for occasional cash-flow smoothing.
The decision
Use the credit card for:
- All routine spend (Amazon, Flipkart, dining, travel, utilities, subscriptions).
- Big-ticket purchases (electronics, jewellery).
- Anywhere with cashback.
- Anywhere with dispute protection.
Use BNPL for:
- Cash-flow smoothing (one-off, rare).
- Merchants offering 0% BNPL with a real discount.
- Tiny purchases when credit-card acceptance is limited.
Avoid both for:
- Purchases you can't afford.
- Habitual revolving debt.
The bottom line
Credit cards win on rewards, acceptance, and long-term credit-building. BNPL wins on small cash-flow smoothing but lacks rewards and acceptance. For most Indian consumers, the credit card is the right tool; BNPL is the occasional exception. The discipline: pay the credit card in full every cycle, use BNPL sparingly. The annual savings on ₹25K monthly spend with disciplined credit-card use: ₹5,000–₹10,000/year. The cost of undisciplined BNPL: default fees, damaged credit score, and stress.