PayPal relaunches in UK with credit cards, PayPal+ loyalty and fee-free global spending

Source Cryptopolitan

PayPal has stormed back into the UK market with a full suite of products meant to reshape how Brits pay; online and now, finally, in physical stores.

As of this morning, across the UK, customers can get their hands on a PayPal Debit Card, rack up rewards through a new PayPal+ loyalty program, and spend globally without paying PayPal’s infamous transaction fees.

The company is calling it a “smarter way to pay,” but what actually dropped today is a complete rebuild of their consumer experience.

This isn’t just a product refresh. It’s a full ecosystem. PayPal is now offering credit, debit, loyalty, and Buy Now Pay Later in one tight loop. The UK is the first country getting access to PayPal+, the company’s first loyalty scheme.

This means that PayPal customers can earn points every time they pay online or in person, no matter if they use their balance, a linked card, or the Buy Now Pay Later option.

Customers unlock 10x points using PayPal Debit Card

The new PayPal Debit Card is reportedly free and connects straight to your PayPal wallet, and when paired with PayPal+, customers earn 10 times the normal loyalty points on everyday spending.

Every 1,000 PayPal+ points equals £10 of spendable value at checkout when using PayPal online. And it stacks. Customers can combine these points with other loyalty programs, so they aren’t giving up rewards from supermarkets or travel apps, they’re adding to them.

Points are collected automatically and there are no redemption fees, hidden conditions, or expiry dates. The tiers are simple: everyone starts at Blue.

Rack up more points and you move to Gold, then Black. Each tier gives access to higher-value redemptions (up to 50% more) and even special VIP offers and experiences.

UK customers are first in line globally to use this system. That alone makes this a big play from PayPal, who clearly want their card in your physical wallet, not just your digital one. The card rolls out today in the PayPal app and is available for anyone with an account.

PayPal Credit expands into physical stores with real cards

The credit side of PayPal is getting serious too. Until now, PayPal Credit was online-only. Now, it’s adding both a virtual and physical card to let customers pay in stores just like any other credit card. Every PayPal Credit payment also earns PayPal+ points.

Even the Buy Now Pay Later option, called Pay in 3, qualifies for point accumulation. That means a shopper can break up a payment and still get rewarded for it.

This relaunch isn’t just about payments. It’s being rolled out alongside brand partnerships, starting with Live Nation UK.

PayPal+ customers will get early access to concerts and festivals, plus perks on-site. These are the kinds of things PayPal hopes will give the platform more daily relevance.

Backing it all is a £150 million product investment, which PayPal says is going toward reshaping their offering for British users.

They’ve already led online payments for over 20 years. Now, they’re going full omnichannel, embedding themselves in the rise of in-person AI-driven spending too.

“This is the start of an exciting new chapter for PayPal in the UK,” said Diego Scotti, General Manager of the Consumer Group.“We’ve flipped the script on loyalty.

That means no fees where others charge, a new debit card that delivers 10 times as many points, and more ways to get rewarded for everyday spend, including Buy Now Pay Later.”

Tamer El‑Emary, General Manager of PayPal UK, added: “We’ve listened to our customers and built products that rethink how people use PayPal every day. Now we want to bring everything they love about PayPal online to the high street.”

The smartest crypto minds already read our newsletter. Want in? Join them.

Disclaimer: For information purposes only. Past performance is not indicative of future results.
placeholder
Bitcoin CME gaps at $35,000, $27,000 and $21,000, which one gets filled first?Prioritize filling the $27,000 gap and even try higher.
Author  FXStreet
Aug 22, 2023
Prioritize filling the $27,000 gap and even try higher.
placeholder
Bitcoin ETF Inflows For 2025 Now Outpace 2024, Data ShowsUS Bitcoin spot exchange-traded funds (ETFs) have seen more inflows this year so far compared to the same point in 2024, according to data.
Author  Bitcoinist
Jul 16, Wed
US Bitcoin spot exchange-traded funds (ETFs) have seen more inflows this year so far compared to the same point in 2024, according to data.
placeholder
Gold Price Forecast: XAU/USD holds positive ground above $4,100 as Fed rate cut expectations riseGold price (XAU/USD) holds positive ground near $4,120 during the early Asian session on Tuesday. The precious metal edges higher after reaching a two-week high in the previous session, amid prospects for rate cuts by the US Federal Reserve (Fed) in December and a softer US Dollar (USD).
Author  FXStreet
Yesterday 02: 36
Gold price (XAU/USD) holds positive ground near $4,120 during the early Asian session on Tuesday. The precious metal edges higher after reaching a two-week high in the previous session, amid prospects for rate cuts by the US Federal Reserve (Fed) in December and a softer US Dollar (USD).
placeholder
Australian Dollar declines as US Dollar gains amid nearing government shutdown endThe Australian Dollar (AUD) weakens against the US Dollar (USD) on Wednesday, extending its losses for the second successive session. The AUD/USD pair declines as the US Dollar (USD) gains support from the ongoing process to reopen the United States (US) government.
Author  FXStreet
9 hours ago
The Australian Dollar (AUD) weakens against the US Dollar (USD) on Wednesday, extending its losses for the second successive session. The AUD/USD pair declines as the US Dollar (USD) gains support from the ongoing process to reopen the United States (US) government.
placeholder
USD/JPY tests 155 as Tokyo fix buying lifts pair – INGThe US Dollar (USD) recovered overnight after a brief dip on weaker ADP jobs data, with USD/JPY leading gains toward the key 155 resistance. Buying around the Tokyo fix and ongoing investment inflows into the US are keeping the pair supported, even as Japanese officials step up verbal warnings.
Author  FXStreet
1 hour ago
The US Dollar (USD) recovered overnight after a brief dip on weaker ADP jobs data, with USD/JPY leading gains toward the key 155 resistance. Buying around the Tokyo fix and ongoing investment inflows into the US are keeping the pair supported, even as Japanese officials step up verbal warnings.
goTop
quote