The NFL has never been just about football. It’s a cultural platform, an emotional engine, and increasingly, a marketplace of shared experiences—from tailgates and watch parties to international travel and digital fandom.
PayPal’s Ben Volk shares thoughts around their NFL partnership.
PayPal
Now PayPal is betting that all of those moments—especially the messy, everyday exchanges of money between fans—represent the next frontier in financial services.
With its new designation as the NFL’s official peer-to-peer payments partner, PayPal isn’t just buying logo placement. It’s positioning itself at the center of what might be called the fan-to-fan economy.
“We look for opportunities that are ripe for us to deliver on our value proposition and really deliver customer value,” said Ben Volk, SVP and General Manager at PayPal.
That framing is important. This is less about traditional sponsorship awareness—and more about embedding PayPal into behavior that already exists.
Think about how fans actually experience the NFL:
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Splitting the cost of tickets
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Pooling money for tailgates
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Settling up after watch parties
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Coordinating travel for away games
“We believe we can really make those moments seamless for fans,” Volk said, pointing to the massive volume of money already moving informally across the fan ecosystem.
In other words, PayPal isn’t trying to create a new behavior—it’s trying to own the infrastructure behind an existing one.
Tracie Rodburg NFL SVP Partnerships
NFL
“We are constantly focused on what’s best for our fans. NFL fans use PayPal and Venmo. They send each other money for tickets, tailgates and more. It’s a part of their gameday routine. PayPal as a peer-to-peer payments partner makes perfect sense,” Tracie Rodburg, NFL Senior Vice President of Global Sponsorships.
What makes this partnership especially interesting is scale.
The NFL isn’t just America’s league anymore. It’s a global media and live-event platform expanding rapidly into Europe and beyond. That creates a new kind of economic layer—fans coordinating experiences across borders.
For PayPal, that’s the unlock.
“One of the things that gets us really excited is the NFL’s international reach,” Volk said. “We have a global money movement network as the NFL expands into Europe, that’s where we can really differentiate.”
This is where PayPal’s core strength—its global network—intersects with the NFL’s growth strategy.
And it highlights a broader trend:
The most valuable sponsorships today aren’t media plays. They’re infrastructure plays.
Financial services brands have historically struggled to create emotional resonance. PayPal may be an exception—and this partnership could accelerate that.
























































































































































