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Jacinto Dieujuste

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Aug 2, 2024, 10:48:38 AM8/2/24
to rodilingnig

I am new to the paypal. I am having problem how to link my bank account to netflix as they required credit card or debit card which it is usa but i am from canada so how that work when i click on netflix and need put paypal but they still want credit card or debit so how that work so can you explain how?

It sounds like you need to link your bank account to your PayPal account and then set up your Netflix account. You can add your bank account by logging into your PayPal account, click on profile, click Bank Accounts under Financial Information (If you do not see this step, Follow the instructions below), click Add, enter requested information and then click Continue, review the information and click Add Bank Account.

How about the fact that paypal seems to keep not fixing my account when i had mine linked to pay through my bank account all was fine till this month then all of a sudden it changes to my credit card i did nothing to change it and you guys at paypal blamed it on me when i did nothing to change it and its still not fixed yet even though you guys keep saying it is.

I have already linked my bank account to Paypal and it is verified. Everytime I try to set up the free trial with Netflix it asks for my Credit Card or Debit card info. I don't have a credit card linked to my Paypal account. My nephew has his Netflix fees coming out of his bank account and I want to do the same. I just can't get it to ask me to set it up using my bank account instead of a credit card.

I signed up for netflix using my paypal account however it keeps asking me for a crdit card. I dont have one because I only use debit and I cant afford any more debt. lol. 8 bucks a month is affordable. why doesnt netflix add a call my cellphone feature when setting this up and just get the account number and allow us to pay that way. I dont think a prepaid card would be wise considering it costs 4.99 to use once per transaction. if thats th case, netflix just wants to rip us off.... is that the case? I hate th fact paypal and netflix havent made a "partner" payment option whereas netflix is so big and everything.

how do i set up my debit. i have everything confirmed but still it asks me for credit card.......... if it doesnt work im afraid it will charge me in a month for a netflix account i cant even use.... my friend has hers set up and im just wondering why my debit wouldnt work ....

I have already linked 2 of my Bank Accounts to my Paypal profile & there is enough money to pay the monthly fees for my Netflix membership of $8/month. How will Netflix receive their $8 per. month--Will it be taken of the balance in my Paypal account or will it be charged to the card they are demanding I provide them with?

When I called "Kristi"/"Christy" over at Netflix she could not tell me how I would be charged for the monthly fee. She said all they receive is an email from Paypal saying that the money will be given to Netflix. This correspondence never explains how.

I do not want the monthly fee coming from my Debit card. I want the monthly fee to be taken out of the balance on my Paypal account. She told me my question is for the people at Paypal. So, Will it be taken of the monthly fee to maintain my Netflix account ($8 per month) be taken from my Paypal account or will it be charged to the Debit card they are demanding I provide them with?

First of all, I am sorry you are having so much trouble getting Netflix set up. I did go directly to the Netflix.com website and went through the sign-up/check-out flow and was able to select PayPal as a payment method. I was then directed to sign into my PayPal account. I do know that Netflix requires an instant payment which would require a credit card to be linked to your PayPal account. When you add a credit card to your PayPal account this does not mean you have to use the credit card as the funding source.

I am very glad to hear this. & yes, it is a complicated process but I think Netflix should be made aware of how payment will work. This seems to be a common question & I do not know why no one explains this to them.

do you offer access to Netflix in your listing? If so do you use your own account? Pay for another account? Make them sign in with THEIR account? I have a Netflix account myself and a ROKU I can hook up -- I just today got my first inquiry about Netflix in the unit. I'm wondering how others do it.

I have an additional device account, one for guests. If a guest doesn't have their own account, they can request me to set up access to ours as a guest viewer. Although after 2 years and many bookings, I have had only 2 requests for me to set them up. Most have their own account these days.

We have a guest account for Netflix and Hulu and an old iPhone with nothing else on it signed in for guests to cast to the tv, via google chrome-cast. Old fashioned but does the job at low cost. (We have no tv service.)

Hi Emilia, I'll just be starting to offer Netflix for my guest this coming month and thinking of the same set-up as yours (guest will have access to my account, but with a different user profile). I'd like to ask if you had any instances where your guests have messed with the other profiles on your Netflix account. If yes, what did you do? Or if not, what have you done to prevent this.

@Jose-Feliciano0, just this week I noticed the Grinch was watched on my specific Netflix profile and there were two young children staying in one of my Airbnbs at that time. It doesn't bother me and doesn't happen often. No one has ever messed with my settings or anything like that. I would say it is more frustrating when they log out of my account and into their own. I have to check every time I am turning over the space for a new guest that Netflix is correctly logged into the right account. I would never give my password to a guest so if they get logged out it would require me going over to the apartment to log them back in (luckily, no one has asked me to do that.)

Hi Jose, So I'm a little behind on this thread & I've been looking into all this stuff with Netflix & if you offer up your own account could the guest potentially mess with the other accounts on it. Anyway, their is a way you can lock your other profiles so they would only have access to the one you want them to have..

I have a "guest profile" for Netflix/Hulu/Amazon but it is still my account. The account requires a password to be modified in any way, including ordering movies that are not included in the subscription so there's no way guests could change or charge anything.

The only issue I had once was someone signed in on their own account, then messaged me claiming that someone was watching stuff on their account after they checked out. We didn't have any guests during the time they claimed this was happening and we had logged them out anyways, so I think they had left their account logged in elsewhere.

@Kelly1126 I have the Netflix account that allows for streaming on 4 devices at once. I just leave the account signed in. Same with Amazon: I'm actually not sure how many people can log in at once, but there has never been a conflict, maybe because Amazon Prime is pretty poor in Canada and there isn't much to watch. Some people choose to use their own account, but I do provide mine also so they can use it if they want.

We have Smart TVs and/or Roku's so that guests can access their own accounts. We remind them to sign out when they leave. We've also been using YouTubeTV instead of cable TV in some properties. So far, so good. The savings are great. Good luck with whatever you decide!

I don't have a Netflix account and never have done. I have a Gmail address which I have never used for public communication. Suddenly I started getting email to this Gmail address from Netflix - not a "Welcome to Netflix" email or one requesting address verification, but what looked like a monthly promo for an existing account. This was addressed to someone with a different real name, with that name not similar in any way to the Gmail name.

After a few of these messages I decided to investigate by going to Netflix and trying to log in with that email address. Using the "forgotten password" option I was able to get a password reset email, change the password and log in. The account appeared to be from Brazil, with some watch history but no other personal details stored and no payment information.

Soon the emails from Netflix started to ask me to update payment information. I didn't, of course, and then they changed to "your account will be suspended" and then "your account has been suspended". The "come back to Netflix" emails are still coming in occasionally.

I don't see how this could possibly be a phishing attempt - I carefully checked that I was on the real Netflix site, used a throwaway password not used on any other sites, and did not enter any of my personal information. I also checked the headers of the emails carefully and they were sent by Netflix. So is this just a mistake on somebody's part, mistyping an email address (although it's surprising that Netflix accepted it with no verification), or something more sinister?

(Note that the above steps don't include any "password reset" step for Jim to access the account; that's because the email from Netflix includes authenticated links that won't ask for it. The attacker wants the victim to click on the email links instead of visiting Netflix manually, this is what enables "Eve" to log back in to the account in step 7. Or, since Netflix emails authenticated links, possibly "Eve" already has one.)

The above situation is partially caused by Netflix (understandably) not recognizing Gmail's "dots don't matter" feature where email sent to [email protected] and to [email protected] end up in the same account. That doesn't really matter in your case (given that if this is how you're trying to be scammed, step 1 was skipped entirely), however.

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