PayPal is now offering next-day money transfers

TECHi's Author Lorie Wimble
Opposing Author Technobuffalo Read Source Article
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Lorie Wimble
Lorie Wimble
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PayPal, one of the worldwide leaders when it comes to secure online payment, has not rest on their laurels when it comes to servicing their customers with better and improved features. In fact, over the past one and a half years, PayPal has worked on being a better partner to the numerous businesses that engage them, whether online or in-store. PayPal Working Capital was introduced in fall last year, where WebBank, the lender, provides aid to small businesses so that they can fund their growing companies. As for this month, PayPal has introduced Next-Day Settlement that will target eligible businesses throughout the US in an initial pilot program.

Technobuffalo

Technobuffalo

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For a long time PayPal was the best and often only way to quickly and easily transfer money online, but the eBay-owned company’s four-day waiting period is starting to feel painfully slow compared to speedier services like Venmo (which eBay also happens to own). Today PayPal is finally catching up with a new Next-Day Settlement (NDS) option, though for now it’s limited to business accounts. NDS is launching as a pilot program this month in the U.S., where eligible businesses will be able to transfer money from a PayPal account to a bank account overnight instead of waiting as long as four full business days. It looks like PayPal has handpicked the companies it’s inviting to try the pilot program, so if you use the service for your business keep an eye out for a notification this month. PayPal has definitely struggled to stay relevant in the face of small upstarts like Venmo, and the company even offers its own credit card reader to compete with Square. Offering next-day money transfers for businesses should be a good way to hold onto those accounts, but if the company wants to stay competitive it may need to offer a similar service for individual customers in the very near future as well. Then again, with eBay running both companies it might make sense to position one as a business service and another for consumers to avoid too much overlap.

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