Are you a buyer looking for information on paying for an item? Read our article: Paying for items
When you sell on eBay, we’ll automatically add the ways your buyers can pay at checkout.
Your buyers will be able to pay safely and securely with credit card, debit card, Apple Pay, Google Pay, or PayPal and complete their entire transaction on eBay, with the option to save and store their payment information for future use. When your buyer pays with any of these payment methods, both you and the buyer are covered by the eBay Money Back Guarantee.
Depending on the category, and on the country you’re selling in, you may also choose to accept the following additional payment methods:
- Cheques
- Postal orders
- Payment on collection, including cash
- In the UK, payment on collection is only available in limited categories
You can't ask buyers to use a payment method that isn't allowed on eBay or to use a payment method that isn't included in your listing.
For more information, see our Payment methods policy.
How to accept additional payment methods
You can choose to accept additional payment methods when creating your listing. Simply go to the Payment options section in the listing form and select the payment options you wish to accept. If you're accepting a payment through the post – cheques or postal orders, for example – make sure your address is up to date - opens in new window or tab.
Seller protections and other terms
Our seller protections, including the eBay Money Back Guarantee and similar buyer protection programmes, don’t cover offline payment methods that are completed outside of eBay, such as cash, cheques, bank-to-bank transfers or deposits, and money orders. This means eBay can’t offer assistance if payment disputes, such as chargebacks, are raised in connection with offline payment methods.
You should never accept overpayments from buyers, especially if the buyer asks you to repay the overpayment. Requests like this are often part of a cashier's cheque scam.