200 Million More Friends on Venmo -- Send Money to PayPal Users Around the World
New connection expands Venmo's reach to
Consumers can now move money between friends and family domestically and internationally using just a phone number. There's no complex account details or routing numbers required. For Gen Z, who are nearly twice as likely as the average American to send money internationally every month, this means the app they already rely on to split the dinner bill now works just as seamlessly for paying someone halfway around the world. Whether splitting a vacation rental with friends abroad, sending money to family overseas, or paying back an international contact, the new connection offers the same simplicity and ease as Venmo's core experience.
"Venmo and
Expanded Utility Without Added Complexity
The integration maintains Venmo's intuitive user experience to send money to
-
Search by phone number: Enter your recipient's full phone number in the search bar. The app will surface their
PayPal account if they have one linked to that number and are searchable via the user's privacy settings. - Enter the amount: Choose the amount you want to send in US dollars. Venmo automatically shows the amount your recipient will receive in their preferred currency.
- Add a payment note and send: Personalize your payment with a message and hit send.
All transfers include transparency to the sender of currency conversion rates and any applicable fees before the transaction is completed, and recipients have visibility into the sender on Venmo, the amount of money received, including in what currency, and the payment note. To introduce users to the simplicity of global payments, Venmo is also waiving its international fee for a limited time.1
Americans Want Money to Move as Easily as Their Lives Do
The announcement comes as new survey data commissioned by Venmo shows 59% of payment app users would stop using other apps if one allowed them to seamlessly send money to friends and family globally. Among 2,000 Americans surveyed across generations, the findings highlight a clear gap: money moves across global, cross-generational social circles, but today's fragmented tools make it harder to settle up quickly and easily.
The fragmented payment app landscape is making it harder to pay friends back.
- Nearly half (49%) say they've had to download or switch apps just to pay someone back.
- Nearly one third (30%) have forgotten to pay someone back entirely because they didn't have the right app. That's especially true for over half (52%) of Gen Z.
The need for seamless payments extends well beyond
- 41% of Americans send money or gifts to friends and family who live in another country, with almost half (42%) of Gen Z doing so at least once a month.
- Of Americans who have traveled or lived abroad in the past three years, 77% say it's important to use the same payment app they rely on at home, with millennials feeling this most strongly (88%).
Intergenerational money support experiences the same pain points.
- An overwhelming 82% of those who send money across generations say using the same payment platform would make financial support both easier and faster.
- One in five Americans has delayed or avoided sending money to a family member due to differences in preferred apps or platforms.
The new integration between Venmo and
For more information, go to: https://venmo.com/send-receive/paypal-users.
About Venmo
Venmo is the go-to money movement app of the next generation, offering fast, safe, and social payments. With best-in-class experiences for users to send, split, shop, and sell, Venmo enables a seamless flow of money between the people and places that matter most to millions of users across
DISCLOSURES
1 Venmo will waive international fees through 8/24/26.
To find and pay eligible
Not available in all regions where
Research Methodology: Venmo commissioned
CONTACT: press@venmo.com
View original content to download multimedia:https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/200-million-more-friends-on-venmo--send-money-to-paypal-users-around-the-world-302721542.html
SOURCE