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If you have a long-forgotten PayPal account sign in before 16 December to avoid a fee. Photograph: Thomas White/Reuters
If you have a long-forgotten PayPal account sign in before 16 December to avoid a fee. Photograph: Thomas White/Reuters

PayPal introduces new fee for dormant accounts

This article is more than 3 years old

Users must sign in before next week’s deadline to prevent being charged £9 a year

PayPal is to introduce a £9 “inactivity” fee for anyone whose account has been dormant for at least a year, but still has some money left in it.

From 16 December, the annual fee will be charged, or the entire balance, if less.

PayPal says it will consider the account to be inactive if the user hasn’t sent, received or withdrawn money, or logged in for a year or more. Importantly, that means users can avoid the fee simply by logging in.

The move is aimed at those who might have signed up to PayPal years ago – because they wanted to try out eBay or similar – but soon gave up.

The fee won’t be applied to those who have a zero balance, where there is a credit or debit card linked to the account. PayPal says will only take the fee from the balance and not from a linked card or a bank account.

The company says it will warn inactive customers in advance when the fee is set to be charged. But check your email address and phone numbers are the same as when you opened the account.

And be aware of scammers trying to use this as a way to gain logins. Customers unsure of an email warning them about the new fee are advised not to click on the link, but to open a new page, and sign in separately.

Customers who don’t have money in their PayPal accounts won’t be charged, no matter how long their accounts have sat dormant.

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