Amazon Pay vs PayPal

March 17, 2025 | Author: Sandeep Sharma
5
Amazon Pay
Amazon Pay allows Amazon customers login and pay on your website with their stored account information on Amazon.com. Login and Pay with Amazon can help you add new customers, increase sales and turn casual browsers into buyers. It’s fast, easy and trusted — leverage the Amazon brand to grow your business.
37
PayPal
PayPal is an international e-commerce business allowing payments and money transfers to be made through the Internet. Online money transfers serve as electronic alternatives to paying with traditional paper methods, such as cheques and money orders. PayPal is the faster, safer way to send money, make an online payment, receive money or set up a merchant account.

Amazon Pay and PayPal are both dazzlingly clever ways to move money around the internet without ever having to handle anything as archaic as cash or, heaven forbid, a check. They both let you buy things with a single click, making it almost too easy to spend money you don’t have on things you don’t need. They also promise to protect you from fraud, unauthorized transactions and the consequences of your own questionable purchasing decisions. Merchants love them, shoppers rely on them and neither of them will ever quite explain why sending money across the world is still slower than a sneeze.

Amazon Pay, being Amazon’s brainchild, exists largely to keep you within Amazon’s ever-expanding gravitational pull. It was launched in 2007, possibly as a result of someone at Amazon thinking, “Why should PayPal have all the fun?” It’s great if you already live inside Amazon’s ecosystem, but if you don’t, you might find yourself feeling like an uninvited guest at a rather exclusive club. It doesn’t do peer-to-peer payments, because Amazon is less interested in you splitting the bill for pizza and more interested in you buying five more items with "Only 3 left in stock!" warnings.

PayPal, on the other hand, has been around since 1998 and started life as a convenient way for people on eBay to buy and sell things like haunted dolls and suspiciously cheap electronics. It grew up, left eBay and now works with practically every online store on the planet. Unlike Amazon Pay, it lets you send money to friends, family and that guy who keeps winning your online poker games. It also operates in over 200 countries, meaning that wherever you are in the world, you can still experience the deep existential dread of seeing your PayPal balance after a night of “just browsing.”

See also: Top 10 Payment Processing platforms
Author: Sandeep Sharma
Sandeep is a marketing expert with a wealth of knowledge in various domains: customer relationship management, social media management, advertising, search engine optimization, website building, Sandeep has established himself as a multifaceted professional. He honed his skills while working at Salesforce and Hubspot, where he gained invaluable insights into the industry. Now, as the proud owner of a small advertising consulting agency, Sandeep continues to provide innovative and effective strategies to businesses, helping them thrive in the competitive landscape of digital marketing. You can contact Sandeep via email [email protected]