- PayPal now allows US merchants to accept payments in over 100 cryptocurrencies, with automatic conversion to PYUSD or USD.
- The new feature boasts transaction fees as low as 0.99%, aiming to provide a cost-effective and faster alternative to traditional cross-border payments for small and mid-sized businesses, though its currently unavailable in New York.
PayPal will allow US-based merchants to accept payments in more than 100 cryptocurrencies, part of a broader push to expand stablecoin adoption and streamline cross-border transactions.
The feature supports crypto payments in Bitcoin, Ethereum, Solana, USDC, XRP, and others, and comes with wallet integrations for MetaMask, Coinbase Wallet, Phantom, Kraken, Binance, OKX, and Exodus.
For now, the crypto payment feature is limited to merchants in the US, excluding those in New York.
The premise is pretty simple: at checkout, customer payments will be converted automatically into PYUSD, PayPals native stablecoin, or just US dollars, hence shielding merchants from any potential price swing.
Advertisement

Moreover, PayPal is positioning the 0.99 % transaction fee as a discount alternative to credit card processing, which typically starts around 1.75 % with providers like Visa.
The company says the new tool is aimed at helping small and mid-sized businesses bypass traditional cross-border payment rails, often marked by delays and high costs.
Imagine a shopper in Guatemala buying a special gift from a merchant in Oklahoma City. Using PayPals open platform, the business can accept crypto for payments, increase their profit margins, pay lower transaction fees, get near instant access to proceeds, and grow funds stored as PYUSD at 4% when held on PayPal.

Related: All Altcoins Will Go to Zero, Says Bitcoin-Bull Adam Back
The rollout comes as PayPals stablecoin, PYUSD, sees renewed traction. Since January, PYUSDs market cap has grown from US$497M (AU$792M) to US$894M (AU$1.3B), according to data from CoinGecko.
Similarly, Stripe, another payment giant, recently reintroduced crypto payments. As Crypto News Australia reported, the company is now allowing crypto transactions with USDC on Solana, Ethereum, and Polygon.
Earlier this month, PayPal teamed up with Coinbase to allow Aussies to buy and move crypto in Australia using linked bank accounts.
Advertisement

Related: Block/Earner to Pioneer Bitcoin-Backed Home Deposits in Australia