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Venmo Just Got Its Biggest Redesign Since 2021, And PayPal Wants A Buyer

Published May 12, 2026
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Summary:
  • Venmo is rolling out its biggest redesign in four years, with the full update finishing by fall.
  • PayPal is restructuring to spin Venmo off as a standalone unit, a move widely viewed as prep for a sale.
  • Stripe has reportedly expressed interest in buying PayPal outright.

The most interesting thing about Venmo's new app is not the design. It is the timing.

What Is Changing

Venmo started rolling out a full redesign this week, the company's biggest refresh since 2021, with the rollout set to finish by fall.

The feed is getting bigger images, more reaction options, and new "Pay Again" and "Say Thanks" buttons, while a new "Give a Shoutout" button lets users back up local businesses they like.

The Groups bill-splitting feature now supports up to 30 people, which is the closest Venmo has come to a true group payments product.

Two new tabs are landing over the next few months, with "Send" putting frequent contacts up front and adding scheduled payments, and "Money" handling spending, Teen Accounts, and Crypto.

A new Rewards tab pulls all the cash-back offers into one place, including the Stash program that gives users up to 5% back when they shop with their favorite brands.

If you want the deals and rumors moving fintech, Market Briefs is your five-minute morning read and it comes with a free investing masterclass when you sign up.

Why The Timing Matters

PayPal owns Venmo, and PayPal is also restructuring to spin Venmo off as a separate business unit, a move widely viewed as prep for a sale.

Stripe has reportedly shown interest in buying PayPal outright, which would put Venmo in play either way.

A cleaner Venmo makes the asset easier to spin off, sell, or both, since a redesign right before a possible sale is not a coincidence - it is how you stage the house.

What Venmo Says It Is Doing

Venmo SVP Alexis Sowa said the redesign came out of a year of user research, with the biggest finding being that most users have no idea what the app already does.

That is a problem for any peer-to-peer payments app, since the value of the network depends on how often people open it.

The new feed pushes users toward more frequent use, with reactions, business shoutouts, and repeat payments designed to keep the app open longer.

The model Venmo is chasing sits somewhere between a payment app and a social feed, similar to European app Revolut, which already does group bill-splitting and in-app chat.

Smaller U.S. apps like Verse and Daylight have leaned into the same idea, which means Venmo is racing to keep up with a feed-first style its own users already expect.

Worth Noting

The product story is real, but the business story sitting next to it is louder.

Venmo is dressing up, PayPal is opening the door, and Stripe is at the curb.

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