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    <title><![CDATA[LinLog]]></title>
    <link>https://linlog.skepticats.com/</link>
    <description><![CDATA[Linux, Programming, and Computing in General]]></description>
    <lastBuildDate>2026-02-21T17:20:44+00:00</lastBuildDate>
    <managingEditor>pageer@skepticats.com (Peter Geer)</managingEditor>
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      <title><![CDATA[PayPal Debit Card Review]]></title>
      <link>https://linlog.skepticats.com/entries/2026/02/paypal-debit-card-review.php</link>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>I've had a PayPal account for a long time.&nbsp; For most of that time, I barely used it.&nbsp; But recently, I've been using it fairly regularly.&nbsp; Mostly, that's a choice of convenience - I can easily link credit cards to my PayPal account and then pay with them through PayPal rather than directly entering my card information in a bunch of different sites.&nbsp; This makes the checkout process a bit smoother and also adds a layer of indirection, and therefore control, to the payment process.&nbsp; (I've also had at least one dispute where PayPal was significantly more accommodating then my bank.)&nbsp;</p>
<p>What I hadn't done was set up a PayPal balance account.&nbsp; In other words, I didn't have money sitting "in PayPal", for lack of a better description.&nbsp; In fact, I didn't even have a bank account linked to PayPal, just credit cards.&nbsp; That changed this year.&nbsp; First, I needed to send someone money, so I actually had a reason to link a bank account.&nbsp; That opened the door.&nbsp; And then, I heard about the PayPal debit card.</p>
<p style="padding: 0 10px 0 10px; float: right;"><img src="https://www.paypalobjects.com/marketing/web23/us/en/ppe/debit/hero-size-mobile-up.jpg?quality=40&amp;width=300" alt="PayPal debit card" width="300" height="400" /></p>
<p>The last year or two, I've gotten into the credit card rewards game a bit.&nbsp; Not to a crazy extent, but I started actually paying some attention to the rewards structure on our cards and signing up for cards specifically to maximize the rewards.&nbsp; That leads me to occasionally look at cards that would fill in gaps in rewards categories.</p>
<p><strong>Important Note</strong>: For anyone who doesn't already realize this, you shouldn't be playing the credit card rewards game if you're carrying balances from month to month.&nbsp; And make no mistake - it <em>is</em> a game.&nbsp; While you can make a decent amount in credit card rewards, it's not going to be enough to change your financial situation.&nbsp; And if you're paying <em>any</em> interest, that's going to wipe out any gains, so you've already lost before you start.&nbsp; So if you're going to do this, have your financial house in order and view it as a recreational activity, not a money-making scheme.</p>
<p>This is where the PayPal debit card comes in.&nbsp; Normally, debit cards give you little to nothing in rewards.&nbsp; For example, my credit union has a program that will give you 1% back on debit card purchases, but only if you meet certain additional requirements.&nbsp; The PayPal debit card, however, has a superpower - it gets you 5% back on one category.</p>
<p>If you're not into the credit card game, this is very good.&nbsp; However, elevated rewards rates - especially as high as 5% - almost always come with a catch of some kind.&nbsp; In the case of the PayPal Debit Card, there are a few catches:</p>
<ol>
<li>You only earn rewards on <em>that one category</em>.&nbsp; So if your category is "groceries", you get 5% back at grocery stores, but that's it.&nbsp; You get zero on any other purchases.</li>
<li>Your rewards category <em>must</em> be set every month, and once it's set, it can't be changed until the next month.&nbsp; Nothing you buy before setting the category earns any points, even if you set the category later.</li>
<li>The rewards are capped at $1,000 in spending per month.&nbsp; So at most, you can make $50 per month, or $600 per year.</li>
</ol>
<p>The "choose your category every month" thing is not unique to PayPal, but it is slightly annoying.&nbsp; I set a calendar reminder for the first of each month, and they send you an email reminder as well, so it's not hard to remember.</p>
<p>The limit of $50 a month isn't fantastic, but it isn't unusual.&nbsp; Pretty much all of the 5% category cards I've seen have some form of limit - whether monthly, quarterly, or annually.&nbsp; The only exceptions I've seen are things like the Amazon Prime Visa, that give you 5% uncapped, but only at specific retailers.&nbsp; And if you're consistently spending more than $1,000 a month at just Amazon, you're either very well off or you have a serious spending problem (or both).</p>
<p>The rewards categories are pretty much the same ones that every other card company has.&nbsp; Currently the choices are groceries, gas, restaurants, clothing, and rideshare/public transit.&nbsp; If you're like me, you probably already have some cards with elevated rewards on most or all of these categories.&nbsp; However, if you're willing to do a little extra work, the PayPal debit card can help you elevate some of those categories.</p>
<p>In my case, two of my biggest categories are groceries and restaurants.&nbsp; To cover those, I have two cards:</p>
<ol>
<li>The AAA Daily Advantage, which pays 5% on groceries and 3% on gas, with an annual cap of $500 in rewards on those two categories combined.</li>
<li>The Chase Freedom Unlimited, which pays 3% on restaurants.</li>
</ol>
<p>My main issue with this setup is the annual cap on the AAA card.&nbsp; If applied only to groceries, that $500 rewards cap comes to $10,000 per year in spend, and I know for a fact that I average a bit more than that on groceries and gas combined.&nbsp; This past year, I correctly forecasted that I would hit that limit and drop back down to 1% on that card in October, which leaves me with a few thousand dollars of grocery spend without elevated rewards.&nbsp; Of course, I can just put it on my flat 2% catch-all card, but where's the fun in that?&nbsp; With the PayPal Debit Card, I have something to fill in that blank couple of months and continue to get 5% on groceries.&nbsp; And after the new year, when my rewards counter reset on the AAA card, switched the PayPal Debit to restaurants and am getting 5% there instead.</p>
<p>The points redemption for your cash-back is pretty simple.&nbsp; Of course, they offer the option to "shop with points" and similar, but you can also just opt for plain-old cash back.&nbsp; You request the redemption through PayPal app and it gets deposited to your PayPal deposit account.&nbsp; It seems that you can redeem points as soon as they hit your account, which is nice.&nbsp;&nbsp;</p>
<p>One "gotcha" that I discovered early in using this card was the method of funding your balance account.&nbsp; I initially funded it from my linked bank account, which just uses ACH transactions.&nbsp; That works fine, obviously, but it generally takes at least a couple of days to go through.&nbsp; I was thrown off because the first time I did that, it was credited more or less immediately.&nbsp; But that didn't happen the next time, so I guess that must just be an initial funding thing.&nbsp; So instead, I took their recommendation to link another debit card to my balance account.&nbsp; I actually used the debit card for the same checking account at my credit union that I had linked, so the money comes from the same place.&nbsp; The difference is that the debit card transactions clear almost immediately.&nbsp; I tested that in grocery store one day, when I literally added funds to my PayPal account while I was standing in line and then spent them a couple of minutes later.&nbsp; It worked just fine.</p>
<p>Of course, manually reloading your balance account is tedious and annoying, so who wants to do that?&nbsp; That's why PayPal also has auto-reload features.&nbsp; I have two of these turned on:&nbsp;</p>
<ol>
<li>An automatic timed transfer.&nbsp; The amount and time frame are configurable, within some parameters.&nbsp; I do a token $25 every Monday.</li>
<li>Reload when your balance drops below a given threshold.&nbsp; You can set the threshold wherever you want, but the reload amount has to be&nbsp;<em>at least</em> as large as the threshold amount.&nbsp; I have both my threshold and reload amount set at $100.</li>
</ol>
<p>As far as the card loading, I have two goals.&nbsp; First, I want to have enough money in my account to cover anything I would reasonably buy with it, but no more.&nbsp; Second, I want to have 12 reloads per month.&nbsp; Why?&nbsp; Because I can use them to get extra rewards, of course!&nbsp; I tested it and discovered that the PayPal balance account reloads count for the rewards program I'm enrolled with at my credit union.&nbsp; The program gives you an elevated interest rate on your savings account, currently 5% on the first $10,000 (compared to the normal 0.03%), provided you meet certain criteria.&nbsp; Those include direct deposit, e-statements, and at least 12 debit card transactions on your linked checking account.&nbsp; So by manually triggering a few extra transfers each month, I'm able to unlock an extra $500 in interest.&nbsp; Not bad.</p>
<p>It's been about 3 months and so far I'm pretty happy with the PayPal debit card.&nbsp; Even though it's not a credit card, it fits nicely into my rewards care lineup.&nbsp; It's easy to use and the category picking isn't too annoying.&nbsp; I'm definitely going to keep it around.</p>]]></description>
      <author><![CDATA[pageer@skepticats.com (Peter Geer)]]></author>
      <pubDate>Sat, 21 Feb 2026 17:20:44 +0000</pubDate>
      <category><![CDATA[Personal Finance]]></category>
      <guid isPermalink="true">https://linlog.skepticats.com/entries/2026/02/paypal-debit-card-review.php</guid>
      <comments>https://linlog.skepticats.com/entries/2026/02/21_1220/comments/</comments>
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