Venmo soon will allow users to transfer their Bitcoin, Ethereum, Litecoin, and Bitcoin Cash to outside walletsas well as to other users of the popular payment app.

The feature will roll out starting in May, according to a statement from PayPal, which acquired Venmo in 2013. Users can also transfer crypto to their PayPal wallets, which released a similar ability for users in 2022.

Crypto transfers on Venmo will be irreversible, just like crypto transactions more broadlya function of cryptocurrencys use of blockchains, or immutable public ledgers.

Were excited to connect Venmos customers to the community, other wallets and exchanges, and we intend to continue to roll out additional crypto products and services in the year ahead, PayPal said in its statement.

The announcement from PayPal is one of the first drips of crypto updates from the payments giant since February, when it was reported that the publicly traded company was pausing work on its own stablecoin after reports that Paxos, its partner in the effort, was under investigation from the New York Department of Financial Services, a key player among U.S. cryptocurrency regulators.

At the time, a spokesperson for PayPay told Fortune that the company was exploring a stablecoin and that if and when the payments giant moves forward, it will work closely with relevant regulators. 

Before the onset of Crypto Winter and the recent regulatory crackdown on the industry, PayPal was one of the more public crypto boosters among legacy fintech firms. 

In October 2020, the company announced that U.S. users of PayPal would be able to buy, hold, and sell Bitcoin, Ethereum, Bitcoin Cash and Litecoin. One year later, the payments giant expanded the feature to Venmo customers.

Amid the crypto bull market of 2021, PayPal continued to build out crypto offerings. It let users pay merchants with cryptocurrency, partnered with Coinbase to allow those with PayPal-linked debit cards and bank accounts to buy tokens on the exchange, and it expanded its crypto service beyond the U.S. to other countries, including the U.K.

After the collapse of several prominent crypto firms in 2022, PayPal noticeably rolled back its public rhetoric on cryptocurrencies. In February, longtime CEO Dan Schulman announced his intention to step down at the end of 2023.


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