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Reddit
reddit.com › r/ausfinance › any reason not to use paypal pay in 4 or other similar instalment systems when you have the cash?
r/AusFinance on Reddit: Any reason not to use Paypal pay in 4 or other similar instalment systems when you have the cash?
September 4, 2023 -

So I am about to make a couple of largeish electronics purchases which are eligible for Paypal pay in 4 to be used. I have all the cash now upfront, but it is sitting in an offset account, so I wonder if I should just use the Pay in 4, set it up for auto payment and just save the few cents/dollars in mortgage interest by having the cash in my account that bit longer.

There seems not to be any fees associated with it at all, that I can see. So assuming I pay it all off exactly as per the Paypal terms, is there any negatives that I am missing about using Pay in 4?

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Reddit
reddit.com › r/paypal › i can't pay in 3 installments
r/paypal on Reddit: I can't pay in 3 installments
August 11, 2023 -

Hello everyone, i have a problem with Paypal: every time I try to pay in installments, PP refuses. I tried everywhere: ebay, subito, aliexpress etc.. Only the first time I tried the installments worked, but I was in another country with a different value (I was in Japan, I live in Italy). I don't know why they keep refusing to let me pay that way. When I used it the first time I always paid on time, so I think there are no problems about it. I also have a new credit card attached to PP, so I can't really think about what the problem could be. Anyone with my same problem?

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Reddit
reddit.com › r/aliexpress › can someone explain me how the paypal pay later option works
r/Aliexpress on Reddit: Can someone explain me how the PayPal pay later option works
February 7, 2025 -

Basically I read it actually takes the entire price and is not actually 4 separate payments, and I was wondering what happens if I don't have all the money in my account yet, but enough for at least the first payment, of course I can get the rest of the money in a few days but my problem was that I really wanted to buy something today because the discount ends in a few hours

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Reddit
reddit.com › r/paypal › help understanding paypal pay later
r/paypal on Reddit: Help understanding PayPal pay later
October 27, 2023 -

So I used PayPal pay later for stockx it showed me what the payments would be monthly and I agreed, but it charged me the full amount. I wanna use it again but am hesitant.

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This just happened to me. I was approved for a couple pay in 4 options on Saturday and remember seeing the installment amounts and plan. However today I was charged the full amount (posted not pending) and do not see any history of pay in 4 offer (denied or approved) on my PayPal account. My account just indicated I used my credit card to pay at those sites—which I have my CC saved on those sites so paying through PayPal was unnecessary except to use Pay in 4. My emails from the merchant indicated I used PayPal for full amount which I didn’t think anything of because PayPal was paying them the full amount and then I was to pay PayPal. If it was one payment I would think maybe I hit the wrong button, but two different payments, in addition to seeing payment plans for each, leads me to think it is something on their end. Honestly the purchases were not urgent but figured I could space out payments after holiday this way. I have used Afterpay, Klarna, and Affirm at various times over the last five years with zero issues. I am not sure it is worth dealing with customer service since I am getting product, but it seems like a shady business practice, especially when other sites are doing it with fewer issues. I supposed it is just time to remove my account information from PayPal.
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Abbreviations used in r/PayPal : NAD - Not as described. SNAD - Significantly not as described. INR - Item Not Received. UAT - Unauthorized transaction. OP - Original poster of the message. F&F - Friends and Family (no protection at all.) G&S - Goods and/or Services (has seller/buyer protection.) Posts about PayPal's policies will be removed. No more complaining about PayPal policy and their taking funds from your account for violations of rules. If you don't like the rules don't use PayPal. If you don't want to lose money, don't leave funds in your PayPal account. Simple as that. But these posts are often political or misleading. So no more posts on this subject! Thank you for submitting to r/PayPal , please make sure you have read the FAQ . If your account was created when you were younger than 18, then that is covered in the FAQ! Try contacting PayPal support using social media such as Facebook or Twitter as this works more often than telephoning. I am a bot, and this action was performed automatically. Please contact the moderators of this subreddit if you have any questions or concerns.
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Reddit
reddit.com › r/paypal › issue with paying in installments on paypal
r/paypal on Reddit: Issue with Paying in Installments on PayPal
October 21, 2024 -

I want to pay in installments with PayPal, but every time I select this option, I get the message “Sorry, we cannot offer you this payment method”. I contacted customer support, and they explained that I am registered as a business because I have received over 2000 euros through PayPal. They advised me to delete my account and create a new one to access the installment payment option. I did that, but I still keep getting the same message and cannot pay in installments. Has anyone found a solution?

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Reddit
reddit.com › r/povertyfinance › paypal’s “pay in 4” has seriously saved me many times
r/povertyfinance on Reddit: PayPal’s “pay in 4” has seriously saved me many times
September 6, 2023 -

LPT: PayPal’s “pay in 4” has seriously saved me many times

PayPal’s option to “pay in 4” has got me out of quite a few sticky situations. My credit is not great, but I am approved for every time I “apply” for this option when paying online. I get paid biweekly, so after bills if I do not have the means to make a big purchase (most recent example: four new tires) I can make four even payments over four months that has zero interest and does not affect my credit. (I’m making 4 payments of $240 as opposed to a lump sum of $960).

Highly recommended for anyone with a PayPal account who is struggling to make a necessary purchase.

If there are cons to this, please let me know!! I’ve done so much research and cannot find any negative feedback.

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Honestly, I don’t know why people are shaming you for this. I think it’s a great option! 0% interest and automatic payments. I was having a conversation with my husband yesterday that I honestly am a fan of these “spread your payment’s out with no fee places” it’s much better than putting it on a credit card. And also you are handling your finances! Don’t let anyone tell you you’re not allowed to make a purchase that’s spread out, just keep managing it, like you are!
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As long as it's zero interest it's not the worst thing. I genuinely hate these companies doing micro loans. As soon as affirm showed a bunch of success, other companies started coming out of the woodwork. My general rule of thumb I tell people is if you don't have the money readily available don't buy it. I've used it once because a credit card I have offered extra points if you utilized it when they started doing it, so you put it on the card and then break the charge out over equal payments at 0% so my thinking was "sweet, free points" but if you're putting day to day charges on it then you still have to make those minimum monthly's on that financed charge and pay off your CC. So it can get risky. I knew a buddy who screwed himself financially because he looked at it as a cheaper way to buy dumb shit. "Oh I don't have $1k right now for this thing, but, I can pay $X a month and be good" and it spiraled out of control. And that's exactly why I despise these things because it allows people to think like that and it can be financially detrimental if you're not smart.
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Reddit
reddit.com › r/paypal › is the pay later option monthly, weekly, or every 2 weeks?
r/paypal on Reddit: Is the Pay later option monthly, weekly, or every 2 weeks?
March 29, 2024 -

Im about to get a ps5, i have the money to just purchase in full but I feel this woulf be financially safer but im unsure of how this works.

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Paypal has 2 Pay Later options. 1)Pay in 4 where you can choose this and if approved, pay for your item in 4 installments. The first payment is due at the time of purchase(although if you use your checking account it can take a few days before the 1st payment actually gets taken out). You are able to use Pay in 4 from $30 to a max of $1500 on each purchase(broken down into 4). Just be aware the higher value your item is the harder it might be to get approved 2)Pay Monthly - this is where you can split your payments into once a month for either 6, 12 or 24 months depending on the value. You can use this for high ticketed items of up to $10,000 and the minimum is $200. I have used Pay in 4 a lot and I like it but I like Pay Monthly better. It's just harder to get approved for it. They both do a soft credit check but imo Pay Monthly has some harder criteria to get approved. I have 4 Pay Monthly plans going now and I love it because you don't have to pay anything for a month after you get approved which is great. Hope that helps.
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Abbreviations used in r/PayPal : NAD - Not as described. SNAD - Significantly not as described. INR - Item Not Received. UAT - Unauthorized transaction. OP - Original poster of the message. F&F - Friends and Family (no protection at all.) G&S - Goods and/or Services (has seller/buyer protection.) Posts about PayPal's policies will be removed. No more complaining about PayPal policy and their taking funds from your account for violations of rules. If you don't like the rules don't use PayPal. If you don't want to lose money, don't leave funds in your PayPal account. Simple as that. But these posts are often political or misleading. So no more posts on this subject! Thank you for submitting to r/PayPal , please make sure you have read the FAQ . If your account was created when you were younger than 18, then that is covered in the FAQ! Try contacting PayPal support using social media such as Facebook or Twitter as this works more often than telephoning. I am a bot, and this action was performed automatically. Please contact the moderators of this subreddit if you have any questions or concerns.
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Reddit
reddit.com › r/finanzen › paypal offers 0% monthly installments on payments for certain online shops and products. would it adversely affect your schufa score if you regularly make purchases this way?
r/Finanzen on Reddit: PayPal offers 0% monthly installments on payments for certain online shops and products. Would it adversely affect your SCHUFA score if you regularly make purchases this way?
February 2, 2023 -

3 months ago I bought a robot vacuum that I have been meaning to buy for a while from alternate for 6 monthly instalments. And now I am thinking of buying parts for a power-efficient home server I wish to build.

I can afford to pay for both these things upfront but I don't really see why I should do it given the 0% interest rate. I could be investing this money monthly.

This brings me to my original question in the title. Is it ok to do this on a regular basis? How adversely if at all it affects the SCHUFA? Are there any other downsides to this assuming you have a stable job and income and aren't buying things you don't need or can't afford?

Thanks!

Edit: Thanks, everyone. I will refrain from making purchases through instalments.

Edit 2: Paypal does not offer 0% anymore. Changed it to 9.99%. Problem solved on its own.

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Reddit
reddit.com › r › paypal › comments › 1fb3k3e › paying_installment
Reddit - The heart of the internet
April 28, 2024 - Great for questions about PayPal, transactions, and problems! This is not an official PayPal support channel. We are a community of users, helping other users; not PayPal or PayPal employees. ... I am purchasing from a legitimate website who offers installment plan using Paypal.
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Reddit
reddit.com › r/paypal › paypal monthly payments
r/paypal on Reddit: PayPal monthly payments
September 1, 2021 -

Hey guys, i bought an item and chose that option in PayPal to pay over time, so now i have 12 monthly payments to make.

Now there is the option to pay also whatever amount you want before hand so the overall amount i have to pay is reduced faster.

But will this result in less money per month that is drawn from my account or will it result in less months to pay?

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Reddit
reddit.com › r/paypal › been using pay in 4 for 6 months, need some deeper understanding please
r/paypal on Reddit: Been using Pay in 4 for 6 months, need some deeper understanding please
January 4, 2024 -

Hello

So I have recently been building my credit for about 3.5 months. I have had a PayPal account for a few years now and used it sporadically.

This past summer I was trying to buy an airline ticket and was denied for Pay in 4. I had no credit history at all so no surprise. So I started using PayPal for a lot of day to day purchases like Uber and Lyft rides, UberEats and DoorDash, etc...

Anyways in August I was approved for a ticket with Pay in 4, then denied for another one. But I made all the payments on time and then was approved for another ticket and by mid September I started building my credit with a starter credit card. Also got a couple Secured Cards.

By mid December I had 8 Pay in 4 approvals that were all paid off with no issues. When I checked in my app up until 2 weeks ago I was always seeing me only prequalified for $400 or $500. When I used $400 for a Pay in 4 purchase it showed $100 left for prequalification.

All of a sudden 2 weeks ago I looked and it showed I am prequalified for $1500!! How did I go from $500 to $1500 seemingly overnight? Also I had to make a bunch of purchases on ebay and airline tickets and I currently have 7 open Pay in 4 plans(a few are almost paid off though). But now I can literally buy a $450 airline ticket with Pay in 4 and it still shows $1500 prequalified no matter what.

My question is this, is this because my credit is pretty good 3.5 months in? And is it because I have paid off all previous plans with no issues? I am shocked how much trust PayPal is all of a sudden giving me. Pleasantly surprised actually but I worry this is too good to be true.

Lastly, I decided to take a plunge and apply for PayPal Credit last week and got approved for that too with a $1200 CL. This just all seems too good to be true for someone 6 months ago had trouble getting approved for a Pay in 4 $200 purchase.

What can any experts tell me about this? Thx so much.

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Reddit
reddit.com › r/simracing › finance payment in installments via paypal.
r/simracing on Reddit: Finance payment in installments via Paypal.
July 24, 2025 -

Hello everyone, I'm thinking about getting a SimRacing set from Fanatec. But since I don't have that much money available at once, I wanted to finance it via Paypal. Now my question: Has anyone ever done this this way? I don't want to end up paying over 800 euros via Paypal all at once because Paypal doesn't let me decide how I want to pay.

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Reddit
reddit.com › r/personalfinance › is it a good idea for me to use paypal's pay-in-4 system?
r/personalfinance on Reddit: Is it a good idea for me to use PayPal's pay-in-4 system?
July 21, 2025 -

UPDATE: It seems like this was just no-strings-attached free money, except after a few weeks, I went to use pay in 4 and they tried to charge me. I stopped using it then, but I can definitely see how someone might have developed a habit and could now be stuck in a predatory situation.

Title. PayPal's pay-in-4 system was pushed to me recently, and it seems like a good deal to me--an interest-free, short-term loan over the course of two months. I don't see any gotchas in the fine print (e.g., "it's free now but we'll charge you later"). It seems like I should pay for everything I can through this system--an interest-free loan sounds pretty great. I'm not worried that I'll overspend--I've had a credit card for several years and have not paid a dime of interest on it. Is it a good financial decision for me to use this system?

USA, Washington State.

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Reddit
reddit.com › r/paypal › pay monthly vs pay in 4
Pay Monthly vs Pay in 4 : r/paypal
January 31, 2024 - So my questions to you would be, how much were your Pay monthly loans for? Also you should have a prequalified amount for your Pay in 4, it only shows in the app. Go tour Pay in 4 plans on the PayPal app and you'll see a prequalified amount.