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Last updated: June 26, 2026
Add the Venmo button to your Checkout integration.
client-id to your sandbox client ID.<!-- Set up a container element for the button -->
<div id="paypal-button-container"></div>
<!-- Include the PayPal JavaScript SDK. Replace `YOUR_CLIENT_ID` with your client ID.-->
<!-- Note that `enable-funding=venmo` is added as a query parameter -->
<script src="https://www.paypal.com/sdk/js?client-id=YOUR_CLIENT_ID&enable-funding=venmo"></script>
<script>
// Render the Venmo button into #paypal-button-container
paypal.Buttons().render('#paypal-button-container')
</script>Note: Venmo is available in the US only. To simulate the Venmo button in the PayPal sandbox, add the buyer-country=US parameter to your JS SDK code.
Pay with Venmo is a mobile experience, so ensure you have the Venmo iOS or Android app installed. You can test this feature on an iOS Safari or Android Chrome browser.
In the sandbox environment, you can test your integration without moving any money. For more information on testing Venmo, see Test Venmo in sandbox.
Venmo isn't displayed as a payment option in Checkout integrations by default. Add enable-funding=venmo as a query parameter to your JavaScript SDK <script> to display Venmo as a payment option.
If you have an existing vertical button stack, an additional Venmo button renders under the stack. Make sure you leave enough room on your page for the Venmo button.
If you have a confirmation page or a notification to the user that shows the funding source that was used, use an onClick handler to display Venmo in the confirmation notification.
let fundingSource
paypal.Buttons({
onClick: (data) => {
// fundingSource = "venmo"
fundingSource = data.fundingSource
// Use this value to determine what funding source was used to pay
// Update your confirmation pages and notifications from "PayPal" to "Venmo"
},
})