How to Use Venmo for Your Small Businesses
Venmo Business Profiles have similar fees and protections as PayPal, Square, and other popular small business payment processing services.
Prior to 2021, Venmo was intended for payments between friends and did not have any protections or terms around business-related payments.
Starting in 2022, however, the company has launched a feature called “Business Profiles,” which allows users to send and receive business payments.
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How to Use Venmo for Your Small Businesses
That said, Venmo is still by far the least flexible payments app when it comes to buyer protection, merchant protection, and chargebacks — especially if you accidentally use the consumer version of the app.
This post will explain exactly how to avoid those issues when using Venmo for business:
Venmo has come a long way since its 2009 launch in New York as an app for splitting the bill at restaurants.
PayPal acquired Venmo in 2013, and has since grown the app to over 65 million users. Since adding business features, 2 million merchants now use the Venmo Business service and extra features like direct deposit and debit cards.
Venmo personal accounts are free if money is sent “from a linked bank account, debit card, or your Venmo account,” but there are fees for certain Venmo features.
US for-profit businesses can use Venmo to receive money from customers and pay business profiles. After creating a primary Venmo account, in order to accept business-related payments from customers and keep these payments separate from personal ones, all you’ll have to do is create a business profile.
Yes, Venmo is safe for business. Like other payment processors, Venmo uses encryption to protect and store information and monitors activity to avoid unauthorized transactions. It is equally safe for consumers because:
Generally speaking, it is no more risky to use Venmo to accept payments than any Point of Sale or other payment processing option; having been trusted for $159 Billion total payment volume in 2020, you can be confident in using Venmo for business.
Nonetheless, Venmo terms of service heavily emphasize the following:
For more information on this term of use, read the User Agreement and the section below on security.
Creating a Venmo business profile is free and there are no monthly fees. Also, unlike transfers between personal accounts, payments made by customers to a business profile funded by a credit card are exempt from a 3% fee. However, after your first month, Venmo does charge business profiles a fee of 1.9% + $0.10 per transaction with customers.
Venmo accepts debit, credit (American Express, Discover, Mastercard, and Visa), and prepaid cards.
Venmo’s payment limits are as follows:
| Overall Combined Sending Limit: $6,999.99 | Person-to-Person Payments | Authorized Merchant Payments | Venmo Mastercard Debit Card Purchases |
|---|---|---|---|
| Maximum Weekly Spending: | $4,999.99 | $6,999.99 | $6,999.99 ($3,000.00 per merchant; $400.00 daily cash back) |
| Per Transaction Limit: | $4,999.99 | $2,999.99 | $2,999.99 |
The following chart details some of the positives and negatives of using Venmo for business:
Pros
Venmo for business is targeted primarily towards small sole proprietor businesses, including side gigs and registered businesses, but it is also used by large corporations like Hulu, Uber, and Abercrombie & Fitch.
Examples of users who commonly use Venmo for small business include:
There are many alternatives to Venmo that could be more appropriate for your business. To help you consider your options, the following are the most prominent competitors to Venmo:
Since PayPal owns Venmo and the two have many similarities, you may be wondering why you should choose one over the other. To help you compare the two, the following table details their most notable differences for business users:
| Feature | Venmo Business | PayPal Business |
|---|---|---|
| Merchant commercial transaction fees | 1.90% + $0.10 | 2.90% + $0.30* |
| Customer credit card fees | None | None |
| Withdrawal limit (per transaction) | $2,999.99 | $25,000.00* |
| Non-profit use | No | Yes |
| International use | No | Yes |
The main difference between Venmo and Paypal for business is that Venmo is intended for smaller ticket items and more casual payments, while PayPal is intended for larger ticket items like invoicing.
Both can be used, but customers in the street at e.g. a food cart are much more likely to have Venmo than PayPal — so having Venmo available alongside PayPal and/or your credit card swiper of choice is key.
Venmo has lower overall fees. For smaller ticket items, the fees in aggregate can be around half what you get from PayPal.
Setting up a Venmo business profile can be done in four easy steps:
For more information on how to create a Venmo business profile, see the Business Profiles section of their website.
Visit the following webpages to learn all the ways you can use Venmo for business:
Once you’re all set up, make sure you direct buyers to your business profile to make payments; do not have them use your e-mail address or phone number as it will direct payments to your personal rather than business account.
If you want to use your business profile to make a business-related payment, simply link your desired payment method to your business profile and proceed using that profile. Note that you must set up the business profile “as a registered business” in order to link the payment method only to your business profile; if you register as a sole proprietor, any payment method linked to your business profile will also be linked to your personal profile.
For tax purposes, record and report all income received through personal and business Venmo accounts as you would any similar business-related transaction.
As for keeping personal and business funds separate, transferring past earnings through Venmo is easy. Simply perform a balance transfer of the prior amounts received from your personal account to your business account using the “Transfer Balance” menu option. Once that is done, if you ensure that all future payments are processed through your business profile, everything should be organized and correctly allocated moving forward.
As per Internal Revenue Service (IRS) regulations, Venmo and other payment processors are required to report the total payment volume your business account receives if, in a calendar year, it is at or above:
If your business meets these thresholds, it will receive a Form 1099-K; if it does not meet these thresholds, a Form 1099-K will not be issued.
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