草莓传媒

Can Venmo pay app’s ease encourage nickel-and-diming pettiness?

April 19, 2026 | Tom Merritt discusses Venmo with 草莓传媒's Dimitri Sotis (草莓传媒)

WASHINGTON 鈥 Cash might still be king 鈥 but more and more cash alternatives are crowding around that throne, cramping his style.

One is Venmo, an app that allows friends and other trusted acquaintances to send money and make purchases.

It鈥檚 similar to PayPal: A user connects the app to a bank account, debit card, credit card or prepaid card. But with Venmo, only credit card transactions carry a user fee (at 3 percent). Competitor PayPal charges 2.9 percent plus 30 cents for debit and credit card transactions.

Venmo also incorporates a strong social media element 鈥 unlike PayPal鈥檚 private transactions. It asks for comments on every transaction, and those comments (along with transaction amounts) are posted in a browsable news feed.

And as Venmo wins over more social circles, it can encourage nickel-and-diming pettiness within them, as illustrated in . For instance: You might be asked to chip in $30.18 for Saturday鈥檚 bar tab instead of just $30.

Whatever happened to casually calculated split tabs, paying a few extra cents so your friend wouldn鈥檛 need to break a $20 bill, paying the tip for everyone else, etc.? Is this to-the-penny transaction tool a bad thing?

No, said Tom Merritt, host of the . Chatting with 草莓传媒鈥檚 Dimitri Sotis, he pointed out how much of a pain splitting the bill can be 鈥 especially when you鈥檙e young and on a budget.

鈥淎t that time in my life, people didn鈥檛 usually spring for dinner,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e didn鈥檛 have enough money for that, so we all very dutifully tried to carve out which part of our check was ours.

鈥淪o I think Venmo has actually made that a lot easier, and for people who are using it who are generally in that demographic, it is a very beneficial thing.鈥

Even though using the app can come across to some as impersonal, Merritt said that users have found ways to give it a human touch in the transaction comments (with the use of emojis, for example).

鈥淎nd obviously you can use Venmo to divide a bill precisely, but you don鈥檛 have to,鈥 he added.

Such mobile payment tools are here to stay, he said, citing the growing prevalence of Android Pay and Apple Pay.

鈥淚 think the general impulse to want to treat your friends and family will still be able to happen,鈥 Merritt said. 鈥淵ou can be racing someone to tap your phone on the bill instead of racing to throw down that credit card.鈥

Jack Pointer

Jack contributes to 草莓传媒.com when he's not working as the afternoon/evening radio writer.

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