Why does seller need to pay echeque fee?

Hi, this is my first time to sell an item by echeque payment from buyer.

 

The payment has been cleared but i need to pay echeque fee about $4.95. The price of the item was $180. Its about 3% of whole lot.

 

why do i need to pay that? and can i cacel the item and refund the money to buyer because of that reason?

 

Thanks.

The basic PayPal charge is 2.4% of the total sale including postage plus 30c. This is for instant payments through PayPal and PayPal eCheques.

 

There's a table of fees on the PayPal site

https://www.paypal.com/au/webapps/mpp/paypal-fees

 

Can you cancel the transaction because of the PayPal fee? No.

All sellers have to pay a Paypal fee regardless of whether paid as cash echeque if they receive payment through Paypal.  2.5% + .30 on $180 by my reckoning is $4.80 not sure what the extra 15c is for (postage maybe).  If you have Paypal as an accepted form of payment you will always have to pay their fees.

As sportandplay said in their post above, the basic fee for a Paypal sale transaction is a flat fee of $0.30 plus 2.4% of the entire invoice total.

Therefore, if the total sale price including postage came to $180, the Paypal fee payable by the seller would be exactly $4.62.

As the OP states that Paypal charged them a fee of $4.95, the total price would have been slightly more than $180 - $13.75 more, in fact, which I presume relates to the cost of postage (which also attracts a fee as it is part of the total amount transferred).

Ergo, if the OP was charged $4.95 by Paypal, the total invoice amount must have been precisely $193.75 of which they will have received $188.80.


@cq_tech wrote:

As sportandplay said in their post above, the basic fee for a Paypal sale transaction is a flat fee of $0.30 plus 2.4% of the entire invoice total.

Therefore, if the total sale price including postage came to $180, the Paypal fee payable by the seller would be exactly $4.62.

As the OP states that Paypal charged them a fee of $4.95, the total price would have been slightly more than $180 - $13.75 more, in fact, which I presume relates to the cost of postage (which also attracts a fee as it is part of the total amount transferred).

Ergo, if the OP was charged $4.95 by Paypal, the total invoice amount must have been precisely $193.75 of which they will have received $188.80.


 Holy Cow CQ. Thats way to much math for a Saturday morning. 😛