A program designed to help Black-owned businesses has landed PayPal in a $30 million settlement with the Department of Justice.
PayPal will waive $30 million in processing fees for $1 billion in small business transactions as part of a new settlement with the DOJ signed on May 12. The agreement resolves allegations related to the company’s 2020 program for Black-owned businesses, though the exact nature of the DOJ’s claims remains unclear from publicly available information.
The settlement requires PayPal to provide fee waivers for approximately $1 billion worth of transactions processed by small businesses. That is not a fine. It is a mandated redistribution of value — a company giving up revenue it would have otherwise collected.
What We Know
The DOJ’s investigation focused on a 2020 program PayPal launched to support Black-owned businesses. Such programs became common after the racial justice protests of 2020, with major corporations announcing initiatives to address systemic inequities. PayPal was among them.

The DOJ’s interest suggests the program may have run afoul of civil rights laws or federal contracting rules. Companies that implement race-based programs must navigate a complex legal landscape, particularly after recent Supreme Court decisions restricting affirmative action and race-conscious policies.
PayPal’s settlement amount — $30 million in waived fees — is significant. But it is not a penalty paid to the government. It is a commitment to redirect future revenue. That structure suggests the DOJ was focused on remediation rather than punishment.
The Broader Context
The settlement comes as the Trump administration has aggressively targeted corporate diversity, equity, and inclusion programs. The DOJ has launched multiple investigations into companies’ race-based initiatives, arguing that they may violate anti-discrimination laws.
PayPal is not the first company to reach such a settlement. But the $30 million figure makes this one of the larger agreements of its kind.
The company has not admitted wrongdoing. In typical settlement language, the agreement likely includes a denial of liability. But the financial commitment is real. And the message to other corporations is clear: race-based business programs are under federal scrutiny.
The Bottom Line
PayPal has reached a $30 million settlement with the Department of Justice over a 2020 program for Black-owned businesses. The company will waive processing fees for approximately $1 billion in small business transactions. The exact allegations remain unclear, but the settlement adds to a growing list of corporate DEI programs targeted by the Trump administration’s DOJ.
PayPal has not admitted wrongdoing. But it is paying — or rather, forgoing — $30 million. And for other companies watching, the calculus has just changed.





