PayPal is one of the most recognized payment platforms for small businesses — but it has real trade-offs. Here's what to weigh before you sign up.
Bizee Editorial Staff
Editorial Team
PayPal is a widely used payment platform that lets small businesses accept payments online, send invoices, and move money internationally. It's easy to get started with, but the transaction fees and account-freeze history give some business owners pause. Whether it's the right fit depends on how you sell and who you sell to.
PayPal is an online payment platform founded in 1998 that lets businesses accept credit cards, debit cards, and PayPal wallet payments without a traditional merchant account. It works through a browser or mobile app, and customers don't need a PayPal account to pay you.
A PayPal Business account adds features beyond a personal account: invoicing tools, the ability to accept payments under your business name, access to PayPal Here for in-person sales, and basic reporting. It's free to open — you pay per transaction, not a monthly fee.
PayPal charges a percentage of each transaction rather than a flat monthly fee, which makes it accessible for businesses with low or unpredictable sales volume. The standard rate for online card transactions is 3.49% plus a fixed fee per transaction. Rates vary by payment type.
Those fees add up faster than they look on paper. A business processing $10,000 a month at 3.49% pays roughly $349 in fees — before the fixed per-transaction amounts. For high-volume sellers, that cost can exceed what a traditional merchant account would charge.
PayPal's biggest strengths are recognition and reach — most customers already have an account or trust the brand enough to pay through it. Its biggest weaknesses are fee structure and account stability. Here's the full picture.
Setting up a PayPal Business account takes about 10 minutes. You'll need your business name, email address, and basic business information. Here's how it works.
Once your account is active, you can generate a payment link, set up a checkout button for your website, or send your first invoice. PayPal walks you through each option inside the dashboard.
A PayPal Business account lets you accept payments under your business name, access invoicing tools, add multiple users, and view sales reporting. A personal account is designed for sending and receiving money between individuals. If you're accepting payments from customers, you need a Business account — using a personal account for commercial transactions violates PayPal's terms of service.
Yes. PayPal can place a hold on funds or freeze an account if it detects unusual activity, a spike in transaction volume, or a high rate of disputes. New accounts are more likely to see holds. If your business depends on fast access to funds, this is one of the most important trade-offs to weigh before relying on PayPal as your primary payment processor.
PayPal charges 3.49% plus a fixed fee per online card transaction for most Business accounts. In-person transactions through PayPal Zettle run 2.29% plus $0.09. There's no monthly fee to maintain a Business account. Chargebacks carry a $20 fee per dispute. Rates can vary based on your account history and transaction volume, so check PayPal's current fee schedule for the most accurate figures.
Yes. PayPal supports transactions in more than 200 countries and over 25 currencies, which makes it one of the more accessible options for small businesses selling internationally. Currency conversion fees apply when you receive payment in a foreign currency, so factor that into your pricing if you sell outside the US.
It depends on how you sell. PayPal is better for businesses that want fast setup, built-in invoicing, and a recognizable checkout brand without technical configuration. Stripe is better for businesses that need more customization, lower per-transaction fees (2.9% + $0.30 vs. PayPal's 3.49%), or tighter integration with a custom-built website. Both are solid options — the right choice comes down to your sales volume and technical needs.
Yes, to a degree. PayPal Business accounts let you add multiple users with different permission levels, which gives you some control over who can access funds and initiate transactions. PayPal's business debit card also lets you set spending limits. These controls are more limited than what dedicated business banking platforms offer, but they're enough for most small teams.
Not automatically. PayPal balances are not FDIC-insured by default the way a traditional bank account is. PayPal does offer an FDIC pass-through insurance program through its banking partners, but you need to opt in. If you're holding significant funds in your PayPal balance, check whether you've enrolled — or transfer funds to a business bank account where FDIC coverage applies.