PayPal promised to change its terms and conditions to make them more clear and customer-friendly after speaking with the European Commission and state consumer agencies.
In May 2023, the German Environment Agency and the European Commission launched a discourse through the Consumer Protection Cooperation Network (CPC).
The network believed that the company’s terms and conditions were unfair to customers and unduly complex.
In order to better comply with the Unfair Contract Terms Directive, PayPal agreed to address the concerns brought forth by consumer protection authorities and modify the problematic sections of its User Agreement.
However, by making these agreements, PayPal will align its business practices with EU consumer law standards.
PayPal Commitments
PayPal consented to revise and clarify a number of provisions in its User Agreement for Customers, including:
- Clarify which clauses apply to consumers and which apply to businesses only.
- Remove the provisions which require consumers to check the compliance with the law (for example, wording such as ‘to the extent permitted by law’).
- Make it clear that consumers are not liable for damage not caused by their fault or that could not have foreseen.
- Remove the provisions which impose on consumers the obligation to verify the information themselves (such as stating that PayPal cannot guarantee the accuracy of the information).
- Ensure that consumers understand that they can benefit from the law of their country of residence in case of a dispute.
- Remove terms which cannot understand by consumers without further explanations or without verification by consumers, such as ‘merchantability’ or ‘non-infringement’.
Users will receive notice of the changes through a Policy Update on February 21, 2024, and the changes will formally go into effect on May 28, 2024.
To read our blog on “For PayPal & Stripe, you will hear a good news, IT Minister,” click here.