New Haven Register (New Haven, CT)

Venmo to be officially available for teenagers, although many use it already

- By Ken Sweet AP BUSINESS WRITER

NEW YORK — Teenagers will officially be allowed to open a Venmo account with their parent’s permission, the company said Monday, expanding the popular social payments app to an age demographi­c that is likely to embrace it almost immediatel­y.

Using Venmo won’t necessaril­y be new to a good number of teens — parents often set up accounts for their children through their own accounts, which is a violation of Venmo’s terms of service. There have been guides on the Internet for some time showing parents how to create a child’s account without Venmo penalizing them.

Venmo has been a popular way to send money to individual­s for years, and now has more than 90 million users. The product for teens comes at a time when other social apps are being watched closely by politician­s and regulators. The state of Montana banned TikTok last week and other states are considerin­g a ban as well.

Opening up Venmo to teenagers will be a significan­t expansion of Venmo’s market. Company executives in March estimated that a Venmo account for teenagers could create 25 million potential new customers. The company estimated that 9 million teenagers were using Venmo through their parents.

The Venmo Teen Account will be available for 13- to 17-yearolds and comes with a debit card as well. Parents will be able to monitor transactio­ns, adjust privacy settings as well as move money to their teenager. Parents will also be able to lock and unlock the debit card and see who the teenager is sending money to and receiving it from.

Withdrawal­s from ATMs using the debit card will have a $400 daily limit and users will need to withdraw money from participat­ing ATMs or incur a $2.50 fee. Otherwise there are no fees attached to creating or maintainin­g the account.

Parents will be able to monitor up to five Venmo accounts for teenagers.

Banks have been creating children’s bank account products for decades, but with the rise in e-commerce and financial technology companies, a basic checking account for a teenager no longer suffices.

Venmo acknowledg­ed that opening the service to teenagers was done in response to frequent requests from users over the years, a nod to the fact that teenagers were likely using the service already. The mainstream accounts provide the teenagers more security and identity verificati­on, and also give them access to the debit card.

Chase offers its Chase First Banking product which can be opened for children as young as six years old as well as a high school checking product. Both products come with a debit card and ways for parents to monitor spending on the account. The high school checking also gives access to Zelle, the bank’s own peer-to-peer payment service, as well as credit monitoring services.

 ?? Mark Humphrey/Associated Press ?? Andrew Addison holds up a sign advertisin­g that he takes Venmo for payment at his corner drink stand in May 2022, in Nolensvill­e, Tenn.
Mark Humphrey/Associated Press Andrew Addison holds up a sign advertisin­g that he takes Venmo for payment at his corner drink stand in May 2022, in Nolensvill­e, Tenn.

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