💰 Payment Tools — 2026 Verified Rates

PayPal Fee Calculator 2026

Calculate exact net payout, reverse invoice amount, and compare domestic vs international fees. Covers US, UK, EU, Canada, and Australia. Free — no sign-up required.

🛡️ Runs Locally: No data is uploaded or stored. All calculations happen in your browser.
Updated June 2026 Built by R.K., Creator & Business Economics Analyst

How much does PayPal charge per transaction in 2026?

The standard US rate for online Goods and Services checkout is 3.49% + $0.49 per transaction. Card-only payments (no PayPal login) run at 2.99% + $0.49. In-person QR code payments cost about 2.29% + $0.09. Pay by Bank invoices cost roughly 1.0%, capped at $25. International transactions add +1.5% and currency conversion adds a further 3–4% spread. Chargebacks cost $20 flat regardless of outcome. These are reference figures — always verify in your PayPal dashboard at paypal.com/us/business/paypal-business-fees.

PayPal doesn’t have one fee — it has at least seven, depending on payment method, region, and whether currency conversion is involved. This calculator covers every common scenario: standard online checkout, QR code, Pay by Bank, and international surcharges — in both Standard mode (you have a gross amount, you want your net) and Reverse mode (you need a specific net amount, the calculator tells you what to invoice). It also shows cheaper method alternatives automatically so you’re not stuck paying the highest rate by default.

3.49%+$0.49US Standard Checkout
2.29%+$0.09QR Code (In-Person)
~1% cap $25Pay by Bank (Invoices)
+1.5%International Surcharge
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How to Use This Calculator

Two modes, one result. Updates live as you type.

Mode A

Standard (Gross → Net)

You know the invoice amount. The calculator shows exactly what lands in your bank account after PayPal’s fees.

Mode B

Reverse (Net → Invoice)

You need a specific net amount. Enter your target and the calculator works backward to the exact gross invoice amount to charge your client.

Region

Pick Your Market

US, UK, EU, Canada, and Australia all have different base rates. Selecting your region applies the correct figures automatically.

Method

Choose Payment Method

Standard Checkout, QR Code, Pay by Bank, and Micropayments all carry different rates. Selecting the right one produces an accurate result.

Override

Custom Rate

If PayPal updates rates or you have a negotiated merchant rate, toggle the custom override and enter your exact percentage and fixed fee directly.

💡 Cheaper Alternatives to Standard Checkout

Standard online checkout (3.49% + $0.49) is PayPal’s most expensive common rate. For in-person sales, QR codes run roughly 2.29% + $0.09 — about 40% less. For large invoices, Pay by Bank costs approximately 1.0% capped at $25, which becomes dramatically cheaper above roughly $2,500. The calculator shows your saving vs. standard checkout after every calculation.

Transaction Setup

Sets the base processing rate and fixed fee for your account region. Rates verified June 2026.
Each method has a different rate. QR and Pay by Bank are significantly cheaper for the right scenarios.

Override any rate here

Use if PayPal updates pricing after this publication date or you have a negotiated merchant rate. Enter the percentage as a number (e.g. 2.9 for 2.9%) and the fixed fee in dollars. These override the region and method selectors above.

Results

You Will Receive (Net)
$96.02
Effective Rate: 3.98%
Invoice (Gross) $100.00
Total Fees −$3.98
Fee Breakdown
Base Processing Fee−$3.49
Fixed Fee−$0.49
Total PayPal Fee−$3.98
Net to Your Account$96.02
💡 To net exactly $96.02, invoice your client $100.00. Switch to Reverse mode to calculate this automatically for any target amount.
✅ Updated June 2026 — Rates Verified Against PayPal’s Official Fee Pages

PayPal Has More Fee Tiers Than Most Sellers Realise

The most common misconception about PayPal is that there is a single rate. In reality, standard online checkout, card-only checkout, QR code in-person, Pay by Bank, invoicing, micropayments, and cross-border payments each use different rate structures. For US merchants, the default online checkout rate is 3.49% + $0.49, but several alternatives are substantially cheaper depending on the scenario. Paying the headline rate on every transaction when cheaper options are available is a real and avoidable cost.

The key insight: the fixed fee ($0.49) is the number that hurts most on low-priced sales. On a $10 item, the $0.49 fixed fee alone represents 4.9% of revenue before the percentage rate even applies, pushing total fees toward 8.5%. On a $1,000 invoice, the fixed fee becomes negligible and the percentage dominates — making Pay by Bank (capped at $25 total) the significantly cheaper option. The calculator above shows the exact fee for your specific amount so you can compare methods before sending any invoice or payment request.

2026 PayPal Fee Reference Table — US

All rates below are verified against PayPal’s official merchant fee pages as of June 2026. Fixed fees vary by currency for non-USD transactions.

Payment MethodRateFee on $100Fee on $1,000
Standard Checkout (Online)3.49% + $0.49$3.98$35.39
Card-Only (No PayPal Login)2.99% + $0.49$3.48$30.39
QR Code (In-Person)2.29% + $0.09$2.38$23.00
Pay by Bank (Invoices)~1.0%, cap $25$1.00$10.00
Micropayments (Under $10)5% + $0.05n/an/a
International Surcharge (added on top)+1.5%+$1.50+$15.00
Currency Conversion (spread)+3–4%+$3–$4+$30–$40
Chargeback Fee (per dispute)$20 flat$20 per chargeback, regardless of outcome
US standard rates, June 2026. Always verify current rates in your PayPal account dashboard.

Multi-Region PayPal Rates — 2026

RegionStandard Online RateFee on Equivalent of $100
🇺🇸 United States3.49% + $0.49$3.98
🇬🇧 United Kingdom2.90% + £0.30~£3.20
🇨🇦 Canada2.90% + C$0.30~C$3.20
🇦🇺 Australia2.60% + A$0.30~A$2.90
🇪🇺 Europe2.90% + €0.35~€3.25
Domestic card rates by account region. International surcharges and currency conversion apply on top in all markets.

📐 Reverse Pricing Formula

To invoice for a specific net payout: Gross = (Desired Net + Fixed Fee) ÷ (1 − Percentage Rate). To net $100 after standard US checkout: ($100 + $0.49) ÷ 0.9651 = $104.13. For international fees (4.99% combined): ($100 + $0.49) ÷ 0.9501 = $105.77. Switch to Reverse mode in the calculator above and it handles all combinations automatically.

⚠️ International + Conversion: Fees Stack to 7–8%

A $100 sale to an international buyer already costs roughly $4.98 in fees (3.49% + 1.5% + $0.49). If currency conversion is also needed, PayPal adds a further 3–4% spread, pushing total cost toward 7–8% of the sale. For sellers who regularly invoice international clients with currency differences, this is the single biggest cost driver to address in pricing.

💔 Chargebacks Cost $20 — Win or Lose

PayPal charges a flat $20 fee when a US buyer disputes a transaction through their card issuer. This applies regardless of outcome, though sellers covered by Seller Protection may have it waived if they win. For businesses in high-chargeback categories, this fee stacks on top of the disputed transaction amount itself and should be factored into pricing from the start.

When Does Pay by Bank Save the Most?

Pay by Bank (roughly 1.0%, capped at $25) becomes cheaper than standard checkout above approximately $143. The cap means it is especially powerful for large invoices: on a $5,000 invoice, Pay by Bank costs $25 total versus $175.49 for standard checkout — a saving of over $150 per invoice. The trade-off is that it requires ACH-style bank transfer and takes longer to settle than card payments.

1099-K Reporting Threshold in 2026

As of 2026, PayPal is required to issue Form 1099-K to US sellers who receive $600 or more in Goods and Services payments in a calendar year. The form reports gross payment volume — not your net after fees — so PayPal processing fees should be tracked and deducted as a legitimate business expense when filing taxes.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does PayPal charge per transaction in the US in 2026?
The standard US rate for online Goods and Services checkout is 3.49% + $0.49 per transaction. Card-only payments run at 2.99% + $0.49. QR code in-person payments cost about 2.29% + $0.09. Pay by Bank invoices cost roughly 1.0%, capped at $25. International transactions add +1.5%. Currency conversion adds a further 3–4% spread. Always verify in your PayPal dashboard.
Does PayPal charge extra for international payments?
Yes. When the buyer’s PayPal account is registered in a different country, PayPal adds an international surcharge of approximately 1.5% on top of the standard rate. If currency conversion is also needed, PayPal adds a further 3–4% spread, pushing total fees toward 7–8% of the sale on a standard checkout transaction.
How do you calculate PayPal fees in reverse?
Gross = (Desired Net + Fixed Fee) ÷ (1 − Percentage Rate). To net exactly $100 after standard US checkout fees: ($100 + $0.49) ÷ (1 − 0.0349) = $104.13. Switch to Reverse mode in this calculator and it handles any region, method, and surcharge combination automatically.
What is the cheapest way to receive money through PayPal?
For in-person sales, QR code payments at roughly 2.29% + $0.09 are the cheapest standard option. For invoices and large payments, Pay by Bank at approximately 1.0% capped at $25 is the lowest-cost method — especially powerful for invoices above $2,500 where percentage-based fees would otherwise cost significantly more.
Does PayPal refund fees when a transaction is refunded?
PayPal generally does not return the fixed per-transaction fee when you issue a refund. The policy on the percentage portion has changed over time — always confirm the current refund fee policy in your account before counting on a full fee reversal. This matters most for sellers with high return rates on lower-priced items where the fixed fee is a significant share of the sale.
What is PayPal’s chargeback fee in 2026?
PayPal charges a flat $20 fee when a US buyer disputes a transaction through their card issuer, regardless of whether the dispute is resolved in the seller’s favor. Sellers covered by PayPal Seller Protection may have the fee waived if the dispute is resolved in their favor. This fee stacks on top of the lost transaction amount itself.
📋 Methodology

How This Calculator’s Fee Logic Works

Base rates by region and payment method are sourced from PayPal’s official US, UK, and international merchant fee pages, verified June 2026. Standard mode calculates: fee = (gross × totalPct) + fixed, net = gross − fee. Reverse mode solves algebraically: gross = (desired_net + fixed) ÷ (1 − totalPct). International and currency conversion surcharges stack additively on the base percentage. Pay by Bank applies a cap of $25. The method comparison feature recalculates the same transaction amount under the QR code rate to show the potential saving vs. standard checkout.

All fee rates are directly editable via the Custom Rate Override toggle — no code changes needed if PayPal updates pricing or you have a negotiated merchant rate. The underlying rate object in the JavaScript stores all defaults in one place for straightforward future maintenance.

This is a free educational reference tool. Results are planning estimates — not guaranteed fee calculations. Actual PayPal fees depend on your account type, transaction history, negotiated merchant rates, and currency. Always verify current rates at your PayPal account dashboard. Not affiliated with or endorsed by PayPal, Inc.

Built and reviewed by R.K., Creator & Business Economics Analyst · Ultimate Info Guide

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Related Tools

⚠️ Disclaimer This PayPal Fee Calculator is a free educational reference tool. Estimates are based on PayPal’s published 2026 standard rates for US Goods and Services transactions (3.49% + $0.49 standard checkout). Actual fees vary by account type, transaction history, payment method, negotiated rates, and currency. PayPal does not typically refund the fixed fee on refunds. Chargeback fees ($20) apply regardless of dispute outcome. Always verify current rates in your PayPal account dashboard or at paypal.com/us/business/paypal-business-fees before making pricing or business decisions. Not affiliated with or endorsed by PayPal, Inc. Not financial or business advice.

💡 Note on Accuracy: PayPal updates its fee structure frequently and uses different rates depending on how the customer pays. We built this PayPal Fee Calculator using the latest standard commercial rates published on the official PayPal Merchant Fees page. Always check your merchant dashboard for your specific account tier rates.

How PayPal Goods and Services Fees Actually Work

If you sell products online or freelance, PayPal is often the easiest way to get paid. Customers trust the brand, and checkout is seamless. But that convenience comes at a steep cost to you as the business owner.

PayPal’s fee structure is notoriously complex because it changes based on how the transaction is processed. If a customer pays you as a commercial transaction (known as “Goods and Services”), you will be hit with a blended rate: a percentage of the total, plus a fixed flat fee.

For U.S. Domestic Transactions, the standard rates are:

  • PayPal Digital Checkout (Standard): 3.49% + $0.49
  • Standard Credit/Debit Card Payments: 2.99% + $0.49
  • Invoicing: 3.49% + $0.49

Because these rates are higher than many competitors, using a PayPal Fee Calculator is an absolute necessity before pricing your products. If you sell a $10 item, that $0.49 fixed fee instantly wipes out nearly 5% of your gross revenue before the percentage fee even kicks in.

Using a Reverse PayPal Fee Calculator (Gross Up Tool)

Here is a classic problem freelancers run into: You do a job for a client, and you agree your take-home pay should be exactly $1,000. You send a PayPal invoice for $1,000.

The client pays it, but when you look at your PayPal balance, you only have $964.61. PayPal kept $35.39 in fees. You are now short on your rent or project budget.

To avoid this, you need to use a Reverse PayPal Fee Calculator. This is sometimes called “grossing up” an invoice. Instead of guessing how much extra to charge, you calculate exactly what the gross invoice needs to be so that, after PayPal takes its 3.49% + $0.49 cut, you receive your target net amount.

The Reverse Calculation Math

You cannot simply add 3.49% to your invoice. If you add 3.49% to $1,000 (which is $1,034.90), PayPal will take their cut out of that higher number, and you will still be short.

The exact formula looks like this:

Invoice Amount = (Target Net + $0.49) / (1 – 0.0349)

If you use the tool at the top of this page and switch it to the “Reverse” tab, you will see that to receive exactly $1,000, you must send an invoice for $1,036.67.

The Hidden Costs: PayPal International and Currency Fees

If you thought the domestic fees were high, selling internationally through PayPal requires you to watch your margins like a hawk. When money crosses borders or changes currencies, PayPal acts as the bank, and they charge massive premiums for it.

If you have international clients, you must account for these two surcharges in our calculator:

1. The International Commercial Surcharge (+1.5%)

If you are a U.S. merchant and you receive a payment from an account outside the U.S. (even if they pay in US Dollars), PayPal adds a 1.5% cross-border fee. Your standard 3.49% rate just jumped to 4.99% + fixed fee.

2. The Currency Conversion Fee (+4.0%)

This is where PayPal makes a lot of its money. If a client in Europe pays you in Euros (€), and PayPal converts it into USD to deposit into your account, they charge a currency conversion spread. For commercial transactions, this is usually an agonizing 4.0% above the base exchange rate.

If a transaction triggers both the international fee and the currency conversion, you could be losing roughly 9% of your total invoice to processing costs.

Transaction Type (U.S. Merchant)Typical PayPal Fee Rate
U.S. Customer (USD)3.49% + $0.49
UK Customer (pays in USD)4.99% + $0.49
UK Customer (pays in GBP)~8.99% + fixed fee (includes conversion)

Step-by-Step PayPal Fee Examples

Let’s look at how these numbers play out on two very different types of transactions.

Example A: Selling a Small Digital Product

You sell a custom spreadsheet template for $15.00 via standard PayPal checkout.

  • Percentage Fee: $15.00 × 0.0349 = $0.52
  • Fixed Fee: $0.49
  • Total PayPal Fee: $0.52 + $0.49 = $1.01
  • Your Net Payout: $15.00 – $1.01 = $13.99

Here, your effective fee rate is a painful 6.7% because the fixed $0.49 fee makes up such a large portion of a small ticket item.

Example B: Invoicing a Large Project

You invoice a client for $2,500 for a marketing campaign.

  • Percentage Fee: $2,500 × 0.0349 = $87.25
  • Fixed Fee: $0.49
  • Total PayPal Fee: $87.25 + $0.49 = $87.74
  • Your Net Payout: $2,500 – $87.74 = $2,412.26

Losing nearly $90 on a single transaction is why many freelancers ask high-ticket clients to pay via bank transfer instead.

PayPal vs. Stripe: Which is Cheaper?

This is the most common question online sellers ask. The answer comes down to your transaction type.

Currently, Stripe’s standard U.S. domestic rate is 2.9% + $0.30. PayPal’s standard commercial rate is 3.49% + $0.49. In almost every domestic scenario, Stripe is mathematically cheaper for the merchant. However, PayPal boasts higher conversion rates for e-commerce stores because customers can check out in one click without hunting for their credit card.

If you want to run your exact numbers to see the difference, open our Stripe Fee Calculator in a new tab and compare the net payouts directly.

Tax Deductions: Are PayPal Fees a Write-Off?

If you are sick to your stomach looking at how much you pay in processing fees, here is the silver lining: PayPal fees are 100% tax-deductible as a business expense.

According to the IRS, merchant processing costs are a necessary cost of doing business. If you are a freelancer, sole proprietor, or LLC, you will list these total fees on your Schedule C at tax time. Doing so lowers your taxable net income, which reduces both your income tax and your self-employment tax.

Typically, PayPal will send you a Form 1099-K at the end of the year summarizing your gross sales. You must report this gross number to the IRS, and then manually deduct the fees. If you are trying to estimate your quarterly estimated taxes or figure out your end-of-year burden, plug your numbers into our 1099 Tax Calculator or our Freelance Tax Calculator.

How to Avoid or Lower PayPal Fees

You probably can’t escape PayPal entirely, but you can optimize how you use it to protect your margins.

1. Never Use “Friends and Family” for Business

It is tempting to ask clients to send money via the “Friends and Family” option because it charges zero fees. Do not do this. It violates PayPal’s Terms of Service. If they catch you using personal transfers for commercial goods, they can permanently ban your account and hold your funds for 180 days. Furthermore, your buyer loses all purchase protection.

2. Use PayPal Micropayments for Small Items

If you sell low-cost items (usually under $10), the standard $0.49 fixed fee will destroy your profits. PayPal offers a special “Micropayments” tier you can apply for. The rate is typically 5.0% + $0.05. The percentage is higher, but the much lower fixed fee saves you massive amounts of money on cheap items.

3. Bill Large Invoices via ACH/Bank Transfer

If you are billing a client $5,000, do not let them pay with a credit card via PayPal. Ask them to pay via direct bank transfer, ACH, or check. While PayPal does offer some bank transfer options, moving large B2B payments off the platform entirely is the best way to keep that $150+ fee in your own pocket.

PayPal Fee Calculator FAQs

Who pays the PayPal fee: the buyer or the seller?
In a commercial “Goods and Services” transaction, the seller always pays the PayPal fee. It is automatically deducted from the total amount sent by the buyer before it hits your balance. If you want the buyer to cover it, you must use a Reverse Fee Calculator to gross up the initial invoice.
Are PayPal fees refunded if I refund a buyer?
No. Just like Stripe, PayPal updated their policy and no longer returns processing fees when you issue a refund to a customer. You will be out the original 3.49% + $0.49.
Is it legal to add a surcharge for PayPal payments?
Passing the fee directly to the customer as a “PayPal Surcharge” is often against local laws in many U.S. states and countries (like the UK/EU). It can also violate merchant agreements. It is generally safer and legally sound to simply raise your base prices to account for processing overhead.
How do I change my PayPal rate to Micropayments?
You cannot toggle Micropayments on and off yourself in your dashboard. You must contact PayPal customer support directly and request that your account be converted to the Micropayments pricing tier (ideal if your average transaction is under $10).
Is this PayPal calculator accurate for 2026?
Yes, we default to the current U.S. standard commercial rates. Because PayPal has dozens of different pricing tiers (QR codes, charity rates, virtual terminals), we also made the fields editable so you can input your exact custom rate if you have one.
Financial Disclaimer: The information and calculations provided on this page are for educational and estimation purposes only. Payment processing fees are subject to change by PayPal at any time based on location, account type, currency, and specific merchant agreements. We are not affiliated with, endorsed by, or sponsored by PayPal Holdings, Inc. Always consult a certified public accountant (CPA) or review your official merchant processing agreement for exact tax reporting. For more information, please review our site disclaimer and privacy policy.

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