Shoppers who used<a href="https://www.thenationalnews.com/business/money/2022/08/17/bnpl-companies-target-business-payments-after-shake-up-of-gen-zs-shopping-habits/" target="_blank"> buy now, pay later</a> schemes to help finance gifts this holiday season may soon encounter an unwelcome surprise: <a href="https://www.thenationalnews.com/business/money/2021/10/22/strategies-to-make-buy-now-pay-later-services-work-for-you/" target="_blank">Returns can be more challenging</a> than when buying from the store with cash or a credit card. Returns and disputes are a common concern among <a href="https://www.thenationalnews.com/business/money/2021/10/05/is-the-buy-now-pay-later-model-a-win-for-consumers-or-a-potential-debt-trap/" target="_blank">buy now, pay later users</a>, according to a September 2022 report from the US Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, and dispute resolution is the top BNPL-related complaint in the CFPB’s consumer complaint database. But <a href="https://www.thenationalnews.com/business/money/2022/08/08/more-than-80-of-uae-consumers-choose-security-as-top-reason-for-digital-payments/" target="_blank">making a seamless return with BNPL</a> is possible if you know the process ahead of time. Whether it is a gift you bought or received, you will want to deal with the retailer when making the return and follow up with the BNPL provider, if necessary. When you use a <a href="https://www.thenationalnews.com/business/money/how-the-buy-now-pay-whenever-culture-is-taking-off-across-the-globe-amid-covid-19-1.1047880" target="_blank">BNPL provider such as Afterpay, Affirm or Klarna</a>, you are opting to divide your total purchase into smaller, often interest-free instalments while the provider pays in full on your behalf. That means when you make a return, the refund goes to the BNPL provider. It is up to the provider to apply the refund to your account, and there is usually a lag. Because BNPL loans have quick turnarounds — payments are due every two weeks on standard pay-in-four loans — you can get stuck making payments on a gift that has been returned. The industry also remains largely unregulated. If a package goes missing or arrives damaged, consumers have fewer protections compared with other financing products. “Returns can be a challenge with buy now, pay later because there are specific dispute provisions that apply to credit cards that may not exist in the BNPL space depending on the lender,” says Laura Udis, senior programme manager of small dollar, marketplace and instalment lending at the CFPB. Ms Udis points out that some providers voluntarily offer protections. PayPal and Klarna, for example, have formal protection policies, which may increase the likelihood of a refund. According to Klarna, its buyer protection policy was implemented to reassure shoppers they can safely shop with the app. “If goods are not delivered or if there is something wrong with them, we have a clear process to help shoppers resolve any issue and ensure that no customer is unjustifiably liable to pay for a purchase,” says Kristina Elkhazin, head of Klarna North America. However, returns are ultimately subject to the store’s policy, and shoppers should prioritise getting returns approved with the store before contacting the BNPL provider. If you need to return a holiday gift that was purchased with buy now, pay later, follow these steps.