Connect with us

Shopping

Yorkshire family with £62k income turns to Klarna for food shopping

Published

on

Yorkshire family with £62k income turns to Klarna for food shopping

A mum-of-five with a combined household income of £62,000 has been forced to turn to Klarna to manage her food bills amidst the soaring cost-of-living.

Laura Caine, 40, finds it tough to stretch her family’s finances to meet their needs, despite receiving £1,000 monthly from universal credit and her husband Martin’s £50,000 salary as a games programmer.




The couple, parents to five children ranging from 18 to nine-years-old, have found that feeding their large family three times a day is becoming increasingly costly, leading them to rely on the buy-now-pay-later service.

Read more:

In recent times, Laura has had to use Klarna for food shopping because she “can’t afford” to pay for a substantial shop in one go. Both Laura and Martin have reached their limits on their credit cards after their energy bill doubled to £450 per month from £200.

While some find the option of paying off debt interest-free over a short term beneficial, many of these schemes impose a fee for missed payments.

Originally from Fife, Scotland, but now residing in Huddersfield, West Yorkshire, Laura shared: “I’ve seen the struggles of so many families – I’ve been to food banks with mums and dads with their kids, waiting and wondering what they will be getting, it’s awful.”

She explained her shopping strategy: “The way I shop now, if I have £35 to spend for the week, I could get a £105 shop using Klarna and that’s £105 worth of food in your cupboards and pay £35 per month back for three months.”

Continue Reading