What info does Paypal show someone when I pay them with my account?
Can someone explain to me, walk me though how the paypal fees and percentages work when sending money from the US?
ELI5: How does Paypal draw money directly from your bank account?
Does PayPal allow you to send money to yourself?
How do I send money using PayPal?
How do I receive money using PayPal?
What are the fees for sending money using PayPal?
Videos
After reading this, if I understand correctly, when sending money to a
Personal account: they see your name, avatar, and only if you've chosen to share it, your mailing address.
Business account: they see your name, email, "if they need to contact you about your purchase" your phone number, and "if you bought something that needs to be mailed" your mailing address.
But it's not always very clear what is actually being shown to the user you're paying. For example I paid an invoice to someone with a Business account with my Personal account, and it doesn't explicitly show me anywhere if my name or the email tied to my Paypal was sent. It also doesn't clarify if my phone number was sent, and as for mailing address it does say "This purchase is a digital good and will not be shipped to an address." so I guess that means it didn't send my mailing address. Or did it?
I might just ask the person I paid what they see. But still, it baffles me that with Personal accounts there doesn't seem to be a way to obscure say your name, or any clear controls to easily determine whether or not you want to send your name, email, phone number or mailing address to someone.
[THIS IS NOT A PAID TASK. THIS IS A REQUEST FOR INFORMATION. HOPEFULLY EVERYONE WILL BENEFIT FROM THE ANSWER]
Basically I'm confused what PayPal (PP) takes when I want to send money to someone outside the US. I confused what my options are (in currency, in paying for the fee or having the fee taken from the amount sent), and confused how the different payment methods work out actually.
Can anyone break it down for me?
And if it helps, we set up a hypothetical:
Let's say I want to send $10 (or $100, just to make the math easier) from the USA to a person in the Philippines. Let's say I'm going to use American Express Send, which has no commission. I choose the "Personal, send to friend" option.
How much does the recipient actually get? What are the fees, who pays them, etc.
And then, same question but with these variables:
I choose Debit/Credit instead of American Express Send. I choose USD instead of the local currency. I send to Brazil instead of the Philippines. I have the recipient pay the fee instead of me (if possible)
How do the numbers work out?
Basically I can't tell what's going to be taken out. A flat fee, a percentage commission and a currency exchange fee?!
Then finally any options to do this without paying fees. (No crypto).
(Editing to add that this is regarding a VA situation that I am hiring for. A couple people, incl. me, aren't sure how to interpret the PP fees)
So, you link your paypal account to your bank account. It has to be an account belonging to the same person, so that's a safety barrier. But when the connection is successful, how does it operate? Under what agreement is paypal allowed to draw money? The only other way to charge my account is through my debit card, or through a direct money transfer from within the bank's system.
Is there some kind of special agreement between Paypal and banks globally? Do the banks offer some kind of API system to link accounts with a 3rd mechanism to enable management of multiple accounts under one app? Is it something else entirely?
They can also charge your card in the same way. Again, instead of using the bank's app to approve or reject the payment, paypal connects to your card directly and the bank sends the money. What is the system under all that?
It really sounds risky for me.