It was a eBay item that he sold and I have so many email accounts that this auction endded up with my personal paypal email address he paid to. He paid with a credit card and as you see I don't want to accept and upgrade my personal account since I already have a buisness account So this is a Personal paypal account that he paid a credit card to from eBay. Is there anyway he can cancel this payment from his paypal account? Or are the only options he will see is Status: Unclaimed +1 props to anyone that can answer my question correctly
If the payment is unclaimed for I believe 7 days the payment will automatically be refunded to the buyer.
Can you not also accept it and immediately refund it? I know if I do that with paypal.co.uk then the fees are refunded too.
I can't refund it since I haven't accept it. If I try to accept it, they make me upgrade the account automatically
Can you not click on that deny button to reject the payment? I know I have refused payments before. But I have a premier account.
This is strange. When I was using my Personal Account, I could DENY the payment. You cannot do not need to upgrade to a Premier Account because a personal account can accept up to 5 credit card payments a year.
Ah yes, if you get payment through eBay you need a Premier or Business account whether or not the other party sends payment through existing funds or paypal.
Yup, I just reliazed its against polices to sell with a Personal paypal account, since it says that in the polices But how can they ALLOW YOU to enter a personal paypal account email address then. On Digital Items they limit it to premier and buisness. Its retarted, so many people use personal paypal accounts on eBay
I supposed they expect you to upgrade if you are doing eBay. Actually if I am not wrong, you can have a personal account if you are a 'buyer' on eBay since that is what the personal account is for. Once you become a seller, you need to upgrade. I supposed that you can use other means of payment other than Paypal on eBay if you make the necessary arrangement with the buyer especially if both parties are in the same state or country.