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Google + PayPal could practically replace your bank account now

Set up PayPal once, and it becomes fully integrated into your Google accounts.

Gordon Gottsegen CNET contributor
Gordon Gottsegen is a tech writer who has experience working at publications like Wired. He loves testing out new gadgets and complaining about them. He is the ghost of all failed Kickstarters.
Gordon Gottsegen
PayPal Logo.

PayPal gets fully integrated into the Google ecosystem.

Ted Soqui/Corbis

Over the past few months, the combination of Google and PayPal have become a go-to service whenever you're paying for something. Buying something in a store? You can use PayPal via Google Pay. Owe your friends money? You can use Venmo (which is owned by PayPal). Paying for Google services? That's PayPal territory, too. As far as Google's concerned, it's essentially another bank account.

As of today, it only takes one PayPal log-in to link your account to Google services like Google Play, YouTube, Gmail, Google Store and Google Pay. PayPal announced this new feature in a press release (via TheStreet). PayPal says that people who add their PayPal account to any one of Google's services will be able to pay across the whole Google ecosystem. 

Google does caveat that the Google-PayPal combo only works in places where "PayPal is offered as a payment method," but we're not sure why the company is hedging -- unless some of Google's services still don't support Google's own payment methods.

TheStreet also reports that PayPal is testing a Venmo debit card, which makes the online payment service even more like a traditional bank.