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Company doesn't want to pay by BACS, only Paypal
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^fees are much more for PayPal0
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SummerSunshine2 wrote: »^fees are much more for PayPal
If the client are overseas (OP still need to confirm) it will cost a lot more to send an international payment. 15+ years ago, it cost £15 to send a such a payment. They may have decided to use paypal on smaller invoices to reduce bank charges/fees.0 -
Ask them to do as a gift, so you don't incur any fees.
Add any fees to next invoices, and make clear late / part payment may incur legal costs as well..
I am dubious as to why any firm would want to pay like this, though- off the official books, or has their bank frozen accounts?
Could offer a 'discount', for prepayments!Long time away from MSE, been dealing real life stuff..
Sometimes seen lurking on the compers forum :-)0 -
brightonman123 wrote: »I am dubious as to why any firm would want to pay like this, though- off the official books, or has their bank frozen accounts?
As the amounts being sent are very small, it is most likely quicker, cheaper and easier to do.0 -
It's a lot easier to do a chargeback on PayPal than if the money was sent via BACS...brightonman123 wrote: »I am dubious as to why any firm would want to pay like this, though0 -
I sell tickets via viagoggo on occasion and they always send the money directly to my Paypal account. I then withdraw the money directly to my bank account and I am not charged any fee to do this.
Why wouldn't Paypal charge you? If they charge people for selling something for 99p plus 50p P&P on ebay (they definitely do, even for the P&P part), why wouldn't they charge someone selling a ticket for £50 on Viagogo?0 -
Why would they need to? The assignment was completed to their full satisfaction, a purchase order was sent to me and the invoice amount was accepted. Why would they need to do a chargeback if they've already approved everything?Wayne_O_Mac wrote: »It's a lot easier to do a chargeback on PayPal than if the money was sent via BACS...0 -
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Why wouldn't Paypal charge you? If they charge people for selling something for 99p plus 50p P&P on ebay (they definitely do, even for the P&P part), why wouldn't they charge someone selling a ticket for £50 on Viagogo?
I don’t know.
Viagogo move the money directly into my paypal account which I then withdraw directly into my bank account. There are no fees associated with this.
This provides more information confirming there are no fees.
https://www.paypal.com/sr/smarthelp/article/what-are-the-fees-for-withdrawing-money-to-my-local-bank-account-faq11890 -
General_Grant wrote: »I have at least 3 email addresses linked to my PayPal account though PayPal communicates with me by only one of them. So that is not itself a problem.
Does that mean that you could use either of those 3 email addresses to log in, with the same password, or would it have to be the primary one? i.e. if a hacker managed to get hold of one of the secondary email addresses (but not your primary one) may they be able to use that to gain access? Don't mean to scare anyone but I've been the victim of online card fraud more than once over the last few years (not on Paypal so far but they've managed to hack into well-known online retailers and place orders in my name, so who knows what they might try in the future) so I'm wary of things that could potentially make things easier for hackers.0
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