Be aware of scammers. PayPal transfer selling is a well-known scam technique. Scammers typically promise to send you a PayPal transfer for only 10% or less of the actual amount they claim they will transfer. In 99.99% of cases, you end up being scammed, as they never deliver the promised funds. This scam isn’t limited to PayPal—it also appears with Cash App transfers, Zelle transfers, Western Union transfers, and similar methods.
Furthermore, you will never find anyone willing to use escrow for such transfers they sell.
If you try to perform a PayPal transfer yourself you need to have a hacked PayPal log with valid cookies, you must ensure that your residential SOCKS proxy is as close as possible to the target PayPal user’s IP address. You will also need a PayPal business account (used to collect money) and a website. The process involves buying items with the hacked PayPal accounts from this website and transferring funds to your PayPal business account. The website and business account are necessary because most PayPal users do not maintain funds in their PayPal accounts; instead, they only link their bank or card information, which cannot be used for friend and family transfers.
Another viable alternative method — if you only have access to PayPal business account drops and not to hacked PayPal logs—is to simplify your approach by purchasing ads on platforms such as Facebook, Snapchat, TikTok, and others. In this method, you advertise your website linked to your PayPal drop ( your PayPal business account), collect the orders, and then never deliver the product. This tactic works better because PayPal will receive the chargeback requests only after approximately 30 days. Additionally, the product you promote through social ads should be highly attention-grabbing—similar to an AI robot that sold for 5K in Japan, but in your store you sells for like $70.