Comparatif

PayPal vs Credit Card for International Purchases: Which Is Safer?

Compare PayPal and credit cards for international online shopping. Discover which offers better buyer protection, lower fees, and easier dispute resolution.

7 min de lecture
Mis à jour 1 mars 2026

When buying from international sellers, you'll often have to choose between PayPal and a direct credit card payment. Both protect you from fraud to some degree — but they work differently, and one is consistently stronger when things actually go wrong.

The Short Answer

Credit cards are safer for international purchases. They give you stronger legal protections, a longer dispute window, and more leverage against sellers who won't cooperate.

PayPal is useful as a secondary layer — especially when a seller doesn't accept credit cards directly. But it shouldn't be your only protection on anything you care about.

How PayPal Buyer Protection Works

PayPal's Buyer Protection covers you if:

  • An item you ordered never arrives
  • An item arrives significantly different from what was listed

Dispute window: 180 days from payment date

How to file: Resolution Center in your PayPal account → Open a dispute → Escalate to a claim if the seller doesn't resolve it within 20 days

Limitations:

  • PayPal makes the final call, not a neutral bank
  • Some categories are excluded (real estate, custom items, digital goods in some cases)
  • PayPal can and does close disputes in the seller's favor
  • No protection for "changed my mind" — only non-delivery or significantly not as described

How Credit Card Chargebacks Work

A chargeback is a forced transaction reversal backed by your card network (Visa/Mastercard/Amex) and federal law in the US (the Fair Credit Billing Act).

Dispute window: Up to 120 days from expected delivery
How to file: Call the number on your card or file online through your bank's portal
Process: Your bank investigates, issues provisional credit, and demands evidence from the merchant

Advantages over PayPal:

  • Your bank acts in your interest, not as an arbiter between you and the seller
  • Merchants fear chargebacks — too many can get them cut off from card networks entirely
  • Stronger legal backing
  • Can cover PayPal disputes that PayPal already closed

Can You Use Both?

Yes — and strategically, you should.

If you pay through PayPal with a credit card:

  1. Open a PayPal dispute first (easier and faster for small amounts)
  2. If PayPal closes the dispute against you, escalate to your credit card chargeback

Important caveat: some card issuers won't accept a chargeback if you already went through PayPal. Check with your bank first. Others allow it — especially if you can show PayPal's outcome was unfair.

Fees: PayPal vs Credit Card

PayPalCredit Card (no-fee card)
Foreign transaction fee2.5–4% (currency conversion)$0
Payment fee to you$0$0
Exchange ratePayPal's rate (worse)Card network rate (better)

PayPal's currency conversion is one of its biggest hidden costs. If you pay in a foreign currency through PayPal, you lose 2.5–4% to their conversion rate.

If you pay in your own currency through PayPal to avoid that, PayPal passes the conversion to the seller — but you lose some protection in the process.

The cleanest solution: use a no-foreign-transaction-fee credit card directly, without PayPal in the middle.

When PayPal Makes More Sense

  • The seller doesn't accept credit cards directly
  • You're buying from a new, unverified seller and want to keep your card details private
  • The purchase is under $50 and the PayPal process is faster

When Credit Card Makes More Sense

  • High-value purchases ($100+)
  • International sellers with no track record
  • Any situation where you might need to dispute later
  • Merchants based in countries with weaker consumer protections

The Safest Setup

  1. Use a no-foreign-transaction-fee credit card as your default for international purchases
  2. When forced to use PayPal, fund it with your no-fee credit card — not your bank account
  3. Keep all order confirmations and tracking information
  4. Know your dispute windows and don't let them expire

Bottom Line

For international online shopping, credit cards offer stronger, more legally-backed protection than PayPal. PayPal is convenient, but treat it as a first line of defense — not your only one.

If you pay with a credit card through PayPal, you have two layers of protection. That's the right setup for anything high-value or high-risk.

Avertissement : Les conditions, taux et offres des cartes de crédit changent fréquemment. Vérifiez toujours les conditions actuelles directement auprès de l'émetteur avant de faire une demande. Ce contenu est fourni à titre informatif uniquement et ne constitue pas un conseil financier.

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