In Hungary, BNPL has mainly been used in online retail by consumers, especially younger digital shoppers, through offers such as “pay in 30 days” or instalment payments at checkout. Until recently, these products were widely used by large online merchants and fintech providers since they boosted sales while appearing simpler than traditional consumer credit.
Until 2025, BNPL largely fell outside Hungarian consumer credit regulation if the payment deferral was short-term and interest-free. Under the Consumer Credit Act (Act CLXII of 2009), many BNPL structures were exempt from licensing, creditworthiness checks and extensive consumer disclosures, which allowed “pay later” options (often up to 30 days or more) to operate in a regulatory grey area. This changed in December 2025, when the Hungarian Parliament adopted amendments to the Consumer Credit Act by introducing the first explicit, BNPL-focused regulatory framework, aiming to close loopholes primarily used by large online platforms.
Under the new rules, most BNPL arrangements will qualify as regulated consumer credit, unless they fall within narrowly defined short-term exemptions. For large online merchants, interest-free deferred payment outside consumer credit law will generally be limited to 14 days, while longer deferrals or third-party BNPL providers trigger full consumer credit obligations. The new regime is expected to apply from 20 November 2026, aligning with broader EU consumer credit reforms, and will be binding on BNPL providers, large e-commerce platforms and, to a more limited extent, smaller merchants offering deferred payment options to Hungarian consumers.