Make sure the payment is 'gifted' or whatever it's called now. It's then free.
But, yes, it all goes smoothly with your logged email address.
Indeed; although be aware that the implications go beyond the fee so you need to be mindful of payment type depending on who you're dealing with.
A "goods and services" payment costs the seller money and adds buyer protection; which can be abused through false claims of damage / failure to arrive. As such I'd never entertain this idea as a seller unless I trusted the buyer (so avoid on sales on FB, Gumtree etc).
A "gift" is fee-free for all concerned but carries none of the above risk to the seller, so this is my default choice as a seller or buyer if I'm paying someone I trust. Should also be viable if the payment is being made at the time the item is collected.
As long as Paypal doesn't twig that you're diddling them out of their fee.
Yup - although IME they don't / can't really police it. I suspect as long as you don't hand it to them on a plate (say with lots of gift payments for the same amount with notes stating explicity that it was for a purchase) they're not going to bother.
Indeed. People think it's jolly trying to dodge the fee but it's fraud by false representation. Not worth risking a criminal record of that nature just to save a few shekels.
Does any precident exist for PP pusuing users for this? I suspect they're more concerned with the enormous revenue they must generate from purchases through businesses / more managed platforms (such as
ebay) rather than a few folks dodging fees on a handful of private purchases. I can't imagine identifying / proving such transactions would be particularly easy or cost-effective, either..
Further I suspect that since the gift is analagous to a bank transfer (no fees, no "protection" for any of the parties involved) they're probably happy to tacitly allow this as a low-footprint service on their platform, knowing that doing so probably retains account holders who generate fees on purchases they make through business sellers, and - if poked - might otherwise choose alternative methods of payment.
Were Paypal to start heavily enforcing the use of the "correct" payment method it would likely lose them revenue as users jumped ship since there are many alternatives and Paypal no longer holds the monopoly on ebay payments or buyer protection...