The news: PayPal rolled out Transaction Graph Insights & Measurement at CES, giving advertisers and merchants a clearer, cross-merchant view of how people actually shop and purchase.
- Transaction Graph Insights offers an interactive analytics layer that maps cross-merchant and cross-surface behavior, helping brands turn observed shopping patterns into practical recommendations.
- Transaction Graph Measurement serves as PayPal’s first-party measurement suite, supporting attribution, incremental reach, and performance reporting tied directly to confirmed transactions. A Measurement Partnership Program allows advertisers to validate results with independent partners such as Kantar, LiveRamp, Experian, iSpot, AppsFlyer, and TransUnion.
Powered by PayPal’s transaction graph—spanning over 430 million consumer accounts and millions of merchants—the product connects search, shopping, sharing, and payment activity. Using verified purchase and consumer data, PayPal says it helps advertisers spot high-intent shoppers sooner, gauge category share, and measure actual sales lift rather than modeled outcomes.
PayPal is pitching the product as a full view of the customer journey rather than fragmented, single-platform snapshots. It’s now live for US advertisers, with UK and Germany launches ahead—part of PayPal’s broader move into advertising measurement and commerce intelligence.
Why it matters: PayPal’s firmly established position in day-to-day commerce gives it—and other popular payment platforms—a wealth of advertising data to tap into.
- Three-quarters of US SMBs accept PayPal, per Verizon, About three-quarters of US SMBs accept PayPal, per Verizon, making it the most widely used digital payment method. That reach gives PayPal exceptional visibility into real purchase behavior, supporting its claim that it measures outcomes more accurately than platforms limited to clicks or impressions.
- 47% of US digital buyers used PayPal in the past 30 days, with adoption steady across age groups, per EMARKETER and Bizrate. That cross-generational reach supports PayPal’s claim that its transaction graph represents broad commerce, not niche wallet use.