In a move that’s caught many by surprise, Google Wallet will soon no longer allow users in the United States to pay using their linked PayPal accounts. According to a now-deleted Google Help Center page archived on the Wayback Machine, Google plans to halt support for PayPal payments on June 13, 2025. On that date, any PayPal accounts currently connected to Wallet will be automatically unlinked and purged from the app’s payment options.
While Google had earlier disabled the ability to add new PayPal accounts as of April 11, 2025, existing users still had until mid-June to rely on PayPal for contactless and in-app payments. Now, however, users who have long relied on the convenience of PayPal-linked transactions will need to manually input alternative payment methods—such as credit cards, debit cards, or bank accounts—to continue making seamless purchases through Google Wallet.
PayPal first partnered with what was then called Android Pay back in 2017, allowing users to skip manually entering card information by simply linking their PayPal credentials to the digital wallet. Over the years, this integration became a convenient staple for many, especially those who preferred storing their balances and payment history in one familiar platform. By adding PayPal to Wallet, users effectively treated their PayPal balance like a debit card—no need to carry a separate PayPal-branded card or juggle multiple accounts.
However, as of April 11, 2025, Google quietly disabled the ability to add any new PayPal accounts in the U.S. At the time, no formal explanation was provided beyond a brief notice on Google’s support page. Now we know the decision appears final: come June 13, all existing PayPal linkages will be terminated, and users won’t be able to relink those accounts afterward.
For the roughly two months between April 11 and June 13, any U.S. user with a PayPal account already linked to Google Wallet could continue using it—until the cutoff date. On June 13, however, Wallet will automatically remove all linked PayPal accounts. Affected users are being urged to add another payment method to avoid any disruption, including replacing PayPal-linked recurring payments by updating billing information directly on merchant websites.
Once PayPal is removed, Google Wallet will no longer display PayPal transaction history; instead, users will have to log into PayPal’s own app or website to view past purchases and balances. While this may not pose a major issue for one-time buyers, those with subscriptions or ongoing payments via PayPal-linked Wallet may find themselves scrambling to switch payment details in the coming weeks.
Interestingly, tokens associated with PayPal-branded debit cards will survive this change. In other words, if you have a PayPal Debit Mastercard connected directly to Google Wallet (as opposed to linking the underlying PayPal account), you’ll still be able to use that card for Wallet transactions even after June 13.
Neither Google nor PayPal has publicly detailed the precise reason for ending this integration, but there are hints suggesting PayPal might be steering the change. Google’s FAQ cryptically states, “To deliver smart, flexible, and more rewarding ways to pay, PayPal constantly improves their offerings,” and directs users to an email sent by PayPal for more information—implying PayPal initiated or at least endorsed the shift.
In Europe, PayPal has been beefing up its own tap-to-pay functionality, most notably rolling out native contactless payments on iPhones in Germany. By enabling users to tap their phones directly in the PayPal app for in-store transactions, PayPal reduces its dependency on third-party wallets like Google’s. Android Authority notes that German users will still be able to link PayPal to Google Wallet, but U.S. users will see their integration end entirely.
This broader strategic pivot suggests PayPal may prefer to keep customers within its own ecosystem rather than funnel payment volume through Google. As PayPal rolls out new features—such as the recent ability for groups to pool money together—tightening control over user experience becomes more crucial. By steering U.S. users toward PayPal’s own native features, PayPal is likely aiming to strengthen its brand’s grip on everyday transactions.
One of the more pressing concerns for Wallet users is the fate of subscriptions and recurring charges billed through a linked PayPal account. From June 13 onward, any subscription that relies on a PayPal account created within Google Wallet will fail. If merchants continue billing the now-unlinked PayPal account, payments will bounce, potentially leading to service interruptions or late fees.
Google’s recommendation is straightforward: navigate to each service provider’s billing settings and replace the PayPal method with an alternative payment form. While it’s not uncommon for digital wallets and payment services to sunset specific features, the relatively short notice—from April till mid-June—leaves little room for procrastination. Users with multiple subscriptions (streaming services, software renewals, recurring deliveries) would do well to audit their recurring payments list immediately to avoid unwanted disruptions.
The PayPal integration was part of Google Wallet’s evolution from Android Pay into a broader mobile wallet ecosystem. When Android Pay first launched PayPal support in 2017, the move was praised as a win-win: Google benefited from tapping into PayPal’s vast user base, while PayPal gained another convenient way for customers to pay in stores and within apps. Over time, however, Google has steadily expanded Wallet’s native support for hundreds of banks, cards, and digital passes, lessening reliance on outside platforms.
In recent months, Google has also been bundling loyalty programs, peer-to-peer payment options, and transit cards into Wallet—part of a broader push to make it the central hub for everything from boarding passes to gift cards. Phasing out PayPal support may be part of a plan to ensure consistent, streamlined features across Wallet without depending on third-party integrations that can prove limiting or unpredictable.
On PayPal’s side, the company has been busy enhancing its mobile offerings. Tap-to-pay on iPhone in Germany, for example, signals PayPal’s willingness to go head-to-head with Apple Pay, Samsung Pay, and Google Wallet. As PayPal’s feature set grows—think buy-now-pay-later options, instant transfers to bank accounts, and group money pooling—the incentive to drive users to its standalone application becomes clear.
For U.S.-based Google Wallet users, the immediate next step is simple: check Wallet’s payment settings and add a new credit card, debit card, or link a bank account directly if PayPal was your primary method. If you rely on a PayPal Debit Mastercard instead of linking the PayPal account itself, no action is required—those cards remain fully functional in Wallet even after June 13.
Should you wish to continue using PayPal for contactless in-store payments, you can switch to PayPal’s native tap-to-pay feature (currently rolling out in various regions) or use the PayPal Debit Mastercard in Wallet. Either way, by summer’s end, PayPal’s role in Google Wallet will be as a familiar face in the crowd of card options—no longer the backbone of Wallet’s payment ease.
For businesses that have encouraged customers to pay via PayPal through Google Wallet (e.g., small retailers, food trucks, local vendors), the change means updating point-of-sale literature and online instructions. Redirecting buyers to alternative Wallet payment methods—or to PayPal’s own mobile payment features—will be vital in avoiding confusion at checkout.
While U.S. users are losing PayPal integration, Germany remains an exception. There, PayPal’s integration with Google Wallet lives on—likely because PayPal’s native app now natively supports tap-to-pay, making the integration beneficial for German customers. It’s possible that geographic differences in digital payment adoption and existing banking partnerships influence Google and PayPal’s arrangement in each market.
Looking farther forward, other markets could see similar changes depending on local payment habits and regulatory environments. In countries where PayPal’s own NFC-based system gains traction, Google Wallet might likewise phase out PayPal. Conversely, in regions where PayPal’s presence remains largely digital or web-based, the integration could persist longer.
With June 13, 2025, looming on the horizon, U.S. Google Wallet users must act fast. The sunsetting of PayPal integration marks both the end of a convenient era and the beginning of a more consolidated payment experience—one where Wallet increasingly handles everything natively. Whether you see this as an inconvenience or a gentle push to explore Wallet’s broader feature set, the change underscores how rapidly the digital payments landscape continues to shift.
As Google focuses on streamlining Wallet’s offerings and PayPal sharpens its own mobile payment tools, users will benefit from more choices but must also remain vigilant. In the coming weeks, update your Wallet settings, confirm recurring payments are rerouted, and prepare for a future where multiple wallets and payment apps coexist—and sometimes compete—to win your tap.
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