Peer-to-Peer (P2P) Payment Services

April 01, 2020
Mobile devices, high-speed data communication, and online commerce are creating expectations that convenient, secure, real-time payment and banking capabilities should be available whenever and wherever they are needed.
—Jerome H. Powell, Chair, Fed Board of Governors

Introduction

Think of all the daily tasks we do with our smartphones. In addition to communicating through texts and calls, we can start a car, lock and unlock doors, and have immediate access to our finances. Smartphones have increasingly become part of our financial lives with the creation of smartphone bank applications (apps) that allow people to transfer money quickly, deposit checks without having to go to a bank, and check credit card and bank account balances immediately after a transfer of funds.

Transferring money within accounts, such as between your savings and checking accounts, is a feature that's been available for many years. Transferring money to friends and family that may have different banks? Now that's different. But it's becoming increasingly popular.

Splitting the bill for pizza or going in on a gift for a friend or coworker used to require withdrawing money from an automatic teller machine (ATM) or writing a check to someone. Constant connectivity to the internet has made the ability to use and send money faster than ever before.

Peer-to-peer (P2P) payment services allow users to link their bank accounts to an app that facilitates the digital transfer of money between two people, even if they each have accounts at different banks.

According to Bank of America's Trends in Consumer Mobility Report,2 36 percent of adults in the United States are using P2P services. eMarketer.com reports that in May 2018, 40.4 percent of mobile phone users conducted at least one P2P transaction that month (figure below).

Guess which generation has the most significant usage? Millennials (the generation born from 1981-96), who lead with 62 percent, have the most P2P payments usage.3

Graph: Growth of mobile phone P2P users in the U.S.: 64.4 million in 2017 (27%); 82.5 million in 2018 (35.1%); 96 million in 2019 (40.4%).

SOURCE: Cakebread, C. "Who's Using P2P Payments in the US?" eMarketer, December 5, 2018.

Mobile phone users can use P2P payment services through a variety of apps. Some P2P payment apps are offered through banks (making them bank-centric) as an additional service to account holders. P2P payment options that are not offered through bank apps are known as third-party apps. Third-party apps ask the user to authorize the app to gather information from their personal bank accounts from which money will be transferred. These apps have facilitated economic activity and helped lower transaction costs. While there are many benefits, there are some drawbacks as well.;

Using P2P Payment Services

Software programs are developed to manage the send-and-receive process with P2P payments. PayPal was the first P2P payment service, which is popularly used by eBay and other online retailers. To make or receive a payment, users create a PayPal account and link it to their bank account. Users can also pay with a credit or debit card through PayPal. People can transfer money digitally through this service instead of paying with a money order or check.4 These digital transfers are more efficient methods of payment because of the faster send-and-receive process.

A newer wave of P2P payment services are even faster because they are real-time payments. Real-time payments provide the payer (person making the payment) instant confirmation that money was transferred and the payee (person receiving the money) instant access to the funds as soon as the transfer is done. In the U.S. there are over 20 apps, and it is forecasted that P2P payments totaled about $17 billion in 2019.5

P2P Payment Apps: A Variety of Features

P2P payment apps have similarities and differences in their services, fee structures, and money access. A similarity between many of the apps is the convenience of linking to a bank account at no charge to the user for transferring or receiving payment. The ease of use is a draw for consumers to use the apps. Once initial setup is complete, users do not need each other's account information to make or receive real-time payment. Instead, they can use the email or phone number associated with an account. Each P2P payment service does set daily transfer limits.

The apps also have a type of digital wallet where money can be stored (stored value account) and a balance kept track of. The money stored in this type of account can be used as a form of payment with online retailers that accept it. As an alternative way to access the stored funds, some third-party apps offer a card that can be used to withdraw funds from a digital wallet. Although, it must be done using an in-network ATM to avoid a fee (see table below).6 If users do not get a separate card linked to the digital wallet, they can access money in their stored value account by transferring it to their linked bank account and then withdrawing it from an ATM with their bank's debit card.

Except for bank-centric apps, P2P payment services allow users to link a personal credit card as a source of funds, although there is a fee of at least 3 percent to do so for each transaction.7 If someone uses a credit card to pay another person through a P2P app, they need to do so carefully. Credit card companies are likely to see the transaction as a cash advance, which comes with a higher interest rate than when the credit card is used to purchase items at a retailer.

Digital Wallets
Wallet Bank-centric Fees Stored value
PayPal No. Publicly held company; NASDAQ: PYPL. $9.2 billion revenue reported for full year 2015. Send P2P using debit/credit card: 2.9% plus $0.30 USD. Free if using bank account (ACH). Yes.
Venmo No. Acquired by PayPal in 2014. Send P2P using credit card: 3%. Free if using debit/prepaid/bank account (ACH). Yes.
ClearXchange (Zelle) Yes. ClearXChange (an Early Warning company) is owned by Bank of America, BB&T, Capital One, Chase, PNC, U.S. Bank, and Wells Fargo. None for P2P. Yes.
Popmoney Yes. Service provided by Fiserv, integrated into over 1,000 Fls. Send P2P using debit/bank account (ACH): $0.95. Credit cards not accepted. No.
Snapcash No. Built on top of Square Cash. None. Debit cards only. No.
Facebook (Meta) Messenger No. None. Debit cards only. No.
Google Pay No. Send P2P using debit/credit cards: 2.9% plus $0.30 USD. Free if using bank account (ACH). Yes.
Square Cash No. Send P2P using credit cards: 3%. Free if using debit/prepaid/bank accepted (ACH). No. Funds come directly from bank account, sent directly to bank account tied to debit card.
Square Cash No. Only works between iPhone/iPad/Apple Watch owners. Send P2P using credit cards: 3%. Free if using debit. Yes. Payments sent to/stored on virtual debit card. Stored funds can be used in Apple Pay transactions.
Grilli, L. P2P—A Comprehensive Look at Person-to-Person Payments. Payments Review, January 12, 2017.

Alternative Payment Services Facilitate Economic Activity

Before P2P services, a simple task such as paying the rent required a series of time-consuming steps, such as finding your checkbook, writing a check, finding an envelope, filling the envelope, finding a stamp, addressing the envelope, and then walking to the mailbox and off it goes. This is followed by waiting for the landlord to deposit the check, waiting for the check to clear, and, a few days later, seeing that the money was withdrawn from your account.

The transaction costs—costs associated with buying or selling a good, service, or financial asset—are not always monetary. In the case of writing the rent check, it is time and resources spent on the payer sending the check and the landlord going to the bank and depositing the check. There is also the time spent waiting for the funds to transfer out of one account and into the other.

We can consider opportunity cost in the above example since there is likely something else that one would rather do than write and mail a check. The payer would also have to pay close attention to their checking account to be sure the funds remained available until the check cleared. With P2P payment services, transaction costs are significantly lowered, and money is transferred and available almost immediately: These particular transactions are those that cannot be paid by credit or debit.

Because P2P services provide a much faster alternative to payment methods that take more time and resources, they facilitate economic activity. Banks offer these faster payment services because they want to provide a wide variety of options for customers to access their funds. These lower transaction costs benefit consumers. And the faster people have access to their money, the quicker they can either save it or buy goods and services.

A few businesses are also seeing the benefits of offering customers P2P payment options. Credit and debit card payments have transaction costs for businesses of up to 3 percent of a sale, and businesses have to wait some time for the funds to clear and be transferred from the card companies to their accounts. Cash payments have lower transaction costs, and final settlements occur in real time, which is a benefit over most credit transactions. With P2P services, digital wallets offer the benefit of real-time payments to businesses at a price of up to 2.9 percent and $0.30 per transaction.8 While not a free payment option, it does allow businesses to receive payments quickly and have funds available to efficiently cover operating costs.

P2P payment services also facilitate economic activity through contractors and freelancers. These workers could always invoice an individual or a business and then wait for a check. But, in a world of "the quicker, the better," payments to contractors and freelancers can be made immediately once their work is completed. Workers can rely on having their earnings more quickly in order to pay their bills. Business owners who hire contractors and freelancers report that some advantages of these payment services are not having to mail a check or pay to reorder checks through their banks. They have also reported increased access to a bigger network of freelancers.9

Careful Use Is Recommended

P2P payment services, in most cases, do not come with the same protections as other bank payment services such as debit and credit cards.10 For example, some payment service users have mistakenly sent money to the wrong person. This happens when a user misspells an email or enters a phone number incorrectly. Zelle has a very clearly written disclosure that states the user is solely responsible for entering the correct information. The company also consistently advertises that its service should be used only with trusted individuals.

Some banks that provide the P2P payment service for their customers also make it clear that they are not liable for refunding money that was sent to the incorrect recipient because of user error. Venmo states that it may not be able to help if the recipient refuses to return the funds. Scammers know this and may try to get you to send money using a P2P payment service, and, unfortunately, there is no law in place that requires the P2P payment service to help recover the funds.

Conclusion

Speed, convenience, and efficiency are what many customers look for in any service. P2P payment services can provide all three when it comes to sending money digitally. As with any technology that uses personal information, it requires careful use, including reading the privacy policies carefully and not falling prey to any scam. Making P2P payment services more accessible and safer for all users seems like it can provide many possibilities in the future.

About the Author
Headshot of Andrea Caceres- Santamaria, Econ Ed Staff
Andrea Caceres-Santamaria

Andrea Caceres-Santamaria is a senior economic education specialist at the St. Louis Fed.

Headshot of Andrea Caceres- Santamaria, Econ Ed Staff
Andrea Caceres-Santamaria

Andrea Caceres-Santamaria is a senior economic education specialist at the St. Louis Fed.

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These essays from our education specialists cover economic and personal finance basics. Special versions are available for classroom use. Views expressed are not necessarily those of the St. Louis Fed or Federal Reserve System.


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