Paypal changes flat fee to enormous value

Listed information is right when one personal acc paypal owner sends money to another personal acc paypal owner abroad using pay for goods option (private ebay seller etc.).
Problem is that seller dont know fee amount (it depends where the buyer from) so probably most tiny shops will have to encrease their prices by bigger flat rate (or have individual listings for different countries).
Example:
I have one ebay listing with item that costs $12 for buyer (shipping included). Ebay fees are 11.8, if paypal fees will be ~$5 and 3 - it will left near $5.8 for me which is slighly less than shipping cost (or -$0.2 for each sold item in my pocket).

AFAIK this is only for cross-border payments. So basically sending/receiving from Asia, outside of your country, or the zone you are in (basically the way PP looks at the world is with “zones” or economic markets where fees or regulatory/compliance requirements are bundled and priced).

It will, as an example, have an impact if you’d order from kiriba-ru!

Ok, so buying anything from China for example (GearBest, Fasttech, Etc) from the USA would incur in a $2.99 to $4.99 fee + 2.9% of the cost of the item?

So lets say a $5.00 item from Gearbest would now be in the best case scenario $5 + $2.99 + $0.15 = $8.14, and worst case $10.14 am I understanding this correctly?

Paypal just killed online global trading! Better get your orders in before the price gouging beggins!

Paypal have problems in many countries. They want to play similar rules in all counries while governments dont see them right. In many countries they work partly - you can pay but cant receive, can receive but cant withdraw, can use it for business but only for domestic sales. Thats why many sellers have to pay this big fees (business acc fees are much more reasonable).
If you practice ordering rare cheap items from all over the world - check your watch list. I guess after deadline prices will increase.

@AlexGT

Well, the email I have received was for regular consumer customers. We don’t know what rates large corporations like GB, BG, … pay. I am sure they have ways to negotiate these things differently.

No, big markets have business accs, also they can make separate acc for US buyers.

This is a copy/paste of what I found on the paypal policy link

We’re removing the variable rate pricing for sending money to friends and family members who have PayPal accounts in a country other than the United States when you send money using PayPal balance or your bank account and introducing a new flat fee of $2.99 or $4.99 per transaction depending on the recipient’s country. However, when you send money using your credit card, debit card, or PayPal credit you will be charged the new flat fee per transaction depending on the recipient’s country + 2.9% of the transaction amount + a fixed fee based on the currency.

Ok this is what I got on my email

NOTICE OF POLICY UPDATES

Hello _:

Because you’re a valued PayPal customer, we want to let you know about the changes we’re making to the PayPal User Agreement, PayPal Here Agreement and the PayPal Website Payments Pro and Virtual Terminal Agreement that will go into effect on April 19, 2018. We’re also launching an update to the PayPal Privacy Policy that will replace the existing PayPal Privacy Policy on the same date. If you’re interested in more detail, please visit our Policy Updates Page.

What you’ll see in the updated User Agreement

If you want to get a better understanding of what’s different in the User Agreement, some highlights are:

• Changing some of the fees we charge.
• Changing the balance functionality for your PayPal account depending on whether we have been able to verify identifying information that you provide to us.
• Updating the additional requirements for coverage of Unauthorized Transactions under our Seller Protection program, so that they require that the payment must have been made in connection with a transaction where the buyer logged into their PayPal account to complete the transaction, in order for sellers to be covered under the program.
• Updating the eligibility requirements for the PayPal Purchase Protection program.
• Clarifying that certain checkout transactions will require a backup funding source.
• Clarifying how we calculate transaction exchange rates where we perform a currency conversion.
• Removing terms related to the Pay After Delivery product, as we will soon no longer offer this product.
• Adding terms providing that a hold may be placed on a payment sent to you at the instruction of the marketplace, if you sell on a marketplace and accept payment through your PayPal account.
• Clarifying that Sellers have certain obligations under applicable law around how they collect, store and protect user data of customers in Europe.
• Updating the user agreement to enable you to seek public injunctive relief in court instead of arbitration, if a court decides that you have a right to pursue that type of relief and it is not available in arbitration under the terms of the user agreement’s arbitration provision.
What you’ll see in our new Privacy Policy

We updated and streamlined our privacy disclosures in the PayPal Privacy Policy. This Privacy Policy, which includes a Consumer Privacy Notice, will replace our current Privacy Policy for PayPal Services and explains the information we collect, how we use it, and the choices and controls you have across our various services.

We reworded some content and added details to make our practices easier to understand. The ways we use and share your information will not change under our updated Privacy Policy. Our Policy Updates page contains highlights of the changes, as well as a link to the PayPal Privacy Policy. We encourage you to review the changes and the full Privacy Policy in advance here.

What you’ll see in the updated Pro/VT and PP Here Agreements

To clarify that PayPal is not acting as a money transmitter in connection with the PP Here and Pro/VT agreements, we added a section to those agreements stating that PayPal is acting as the merchant’s agent to receive payments on their behalf from their payers.

These changes, along with the others detailed on our Policy Updates Page, will become effective April 19, 2018 for all U.S. users. We encourage you to review the Policy Update and familiarize yourself with the changes that are being made. If you do not agree to these amendments, you may close your account before April 19, 2018.

Thank you for being a PayPal customer.

Sincerely,
PayPal

I guess sending money to friends or people you know from a credit card (or credit facility) is a disguised way of a “cash advance”; if you’d do that from an actual credit card in a different region (say, while on vacation abroad), it would also be very expensive.

Based on the quote above, does this not apply for goods or services purchased from abroad?

This is for personal payments, right? I ran into the same issue earlier this year trying to send a small extra payment for an item to an international account. Below a certain threshold (about $100 in Canada) it’s actually cheaper to make a normal payment and just add the fees the recipient will pay.

what I saw was for international money transfers to friends and family, when funded by a credit card

I see nothing about new fees for payment for goods and services paid for with a credit card, or not

from what I have read so far,
no
and no

the fees seem to be for people who are using credit cards, for international money transfers, to friends and family

afaict
no

the fees are not for receiving a payment for a merchant, they are fees for transmitting money to friends and family, that is my interpretation of this part of the PayPal notice:

PayPal is not acting as a money transmitter in connection with the PP Here and Pro/VT agreements, we added a section to those agreements stating that PayPal is acting as the merchant’s agent to receive payments on their behalf from their payers.

to me it sounds like PayPal simply added fees to cover credit card transactions.

So my next move is to go relink my paypal to my bank account as primary source, instead of my credit card. But I dont actually send money to friends and family overseas, funded by a credit card, so Im not sure I really need to care.
.
.

obviously kiriba-ru thinks his sales will be affected, but I dont see anything about a fee for sales, yet… all Ive seen is about friends and family transfers

maybe as a seller, paypal gave him a different notice, that tells him that if I use a credit card to buy from him, there will be fees… if so, the way to solve that is to pay him from a bank, not from a card…???

You can check full policies text (as I said I even checked it for different countries). 1.1 is about internal fees for transactiojs from credit cart, while 1.2 is about family and friends trasfers. This updates came together with PP protection. So, part of this fees are insurance.
Did you find another page with right fees for pay for goods option?

afaict
no

I found this while digging around on PayPal:
We don’t charge a fee to make a transfer to your bank

Im getting lost digging around, so no, I have not seen what you are asking me about…
if you post a link, I will read it

Ah, the beauty of monopoly.
I wonder why the internet is so great at creating monopolies.

It’s a good time to shift some transactions to cryptocurrencies.

Maybe revolut ?

I was always hesitant to link my bank account . If PP gets hacked ,your account becomes vulnerable.

My bank account is unlinked because it becomes the default payment method with no way to change it. After a decade of carefully selecting my credit card every single time, it took one single late night mistake to generate a huge NSF fee because I kept the account empty.

My cousin sends money to his sister every month by using Moneygram. Lowest fees and best exhange rates.

You can get a debit card linked to a checking account, where you can keep a 0 balance without penalty.

Transfer only enough to cover any purchases you want to make. Even if hacqued, you lose almost nothing.

If you can do it online (I intentionally didn’t enable that feature, ymmv) you can do the transfer minutes before PPing anything.

Wouldn’t a credit card be easier?