
PayPal and Venmo Users Get First Dibs on Perplexity’s Comet Browser
PayPal is giving its customers something usually reserved for insiders: early access. Venmo users are included too. Both groups can skip the waitlist and step into Perplexity’s new Comet browser. The deal comes with a free year of Perplexity Pro—normally $200—making it one of PayPal’s boldest offers in years. For users, it’s a fast pass into the AI-driven browsing era. For Perplexity, it’s another swing at redefining how people use the web.
Why This Feels Familiar
This isn’t PayPal’s first headline-making rollout. When it launched One Touch checkout, it rewired online shopping by cutting clicks. Adding Venmo Pay to retail sites made peer-to-peer payments a shopping tool. Each move brought a new habit into the mainstream. Now PayPal is betting Comet could be the next big habit—changing not how we pay, but how we search and interact online.
What Makes Comet Different
Unlike Chrome, Safari, or Firefox, Comet doesn’t drown users in links. It’s built around direct, answer-focused search powered by AI. Features include a built-in assistant, product comparison tools, and stripped-down search designed for clarity. Perplexity calls it a mix of personal assistant and personal shopper. That might sound lofty, but big claims aren’t unusual in tech. Google once pitched its own engine as simply “organizing the world’s information.” Today, that phrase feels like understatement.
The big difference here is that PayPal users—millions of everyday consumers—will get to stress test Comet in real life, not just a handful of beta testers or analysts. That’s a faster road to feedback and adoption than most startups could dream of.
Perplexity’s $34.5 Billion Bid for Chrome
The timing of Comet’s rollout is striking. In August 2025, Perplexity made an unsolicited, all-cash bid of $34.5 billion for Google’s Chrome browser. The move raised eyebrows across the tech sector. Analysts immediately questioned its chances, since Chrome is central to Google’s business and isn’t on the market. But the offer came with some surprising details.
Why the Bid Was Made
Google is currently facing an antitrust lawsuit accusing it of monopolizing online advertising. One theoretical outcome could be the forced sale of Chrome. Perplexity’s offer leaned on that possibility. At the same time, the company wanted to show its ambition in the AI era. Launching Comet alongside a bid for Chrome signals an attempt to control not just answers but the platform where questions are asked. As CNN reported, it’s as much a symbolic challenge to Big Tech dominance as it is a financial proposal.
Key Details of the Offer
- Amount: $34.5 billion in cash.
- Commitment to Users: Keep Google as the default search engine and honor service agreements for 100 months.
- Investor Backing: Perplexity said major venture funds agreed to support the transaction.
Why Analysts Dismissed It
Industry watchers called the offer a long shot. Chrome is too important to Google’s ecosystem, and analysts argue the bid undervalued Chrome by tens of billions—some peg its worth closer to $100 billion. Even if regulators forced a sale, appeals could drag on for years. Many believe the bid was as much about publicity as acquisition, a way for Perplexity to put itself on the same stage as Google, Apple, and Amazon.
The Subscription Hub Angle
The free Comet trial dovetails neatly with PayPal’s new subscription hub. Users can now track and manage recurring charges in one place—streaming, cloud storage, gym memberships, the works. For years, subscription creep has left consumers guessing what’s hitting their bank accounts. With this hub, PayPal is offering a single dashboard for control. It’s a move reminiscent of Apple Wallet consolidating payments, or Amazon’s Subscribe & Save bundling purchases for convenience.
The Cash-Back Hook
To drive adoption, PayPal is dangling $50 cash back to U.S. customers who link and pay for three subscriptions in the hub. With only 12,000 rewards available, speed matters. Beyond the perk, it’s a clever way to lock more users into PayPal’s ecosystem, turning subscription management into another reason to keep the app open.
What the Leaders Are Saying
Diego Scotti, General Manager of PayPal’s Consumer Group, highlighted the customer-driven angle: “It’s exciting to deliver offers and tools that our customers request most, meeting their needs and helping them manage their financial lives with greater simplicity, added convenience, and even more rewards.”
Ryan Foutty, VP of Business at Perplexity, emphasized Comet’s dual role: “The Comet browser is like a personal shopper and personal assistant all in one. In conjunction with Perplexity Pro, we’re equipping PayPal and Venmo customers with accurate AI that’s useful throughout their daily lives.”
These statements may sound polished, but they underscore something real: Perplexity is betting that Comet, coupled with bold moves like the Chrome bid, will establish it as a household name. PayPal, meanwhile, is hitching its wagon to the AI wave while reinforcing its role as more than just a payments company.
The Bigger Picture
For PayPal, this partnership isn’t about short-term perks. It’s about making its app indispensable. Over its 25 years, PayPal has shifted from powering eBay sales to running merchant services to building Venmo into a cultural phenomenon. Now it’s positioning itself as the hub for subscriptions and digital services. By giving users early access to Comet, PayPal isn’t just offering a benefit—it’s signaling that the app will continue to be the place where finance and technology intersect.
For Perplexity, the stakes are just as high. The Chrome bid may not succeed, but it has already succeeded in one way: getting people to talk about Perplexity in the same breath as Google. Pair that with a mass rollout of Comet through PayPal and Venmo, and the company suddenly looks less like a startup and more like a challenger brand with global ambitions.
My Thoughts
This partnership is more than a giveaway. It’s a strategic dance. PayPal adds stickiness to its app, Perplexity gains distribution at scale, and users get perks that feel more like a reward than a test. The Chrome bid shows Perplexity isn’t afraid to take swings—even against giants. Whether those swings connect or not, they keep the company in the headlines. For now, PayPal and Venmo customers reap the benefits: free AI tools, cash back, and a front-row seat to one of tech’s more daring battles.