Your Venmo limit comes down to one thing: whether you’ve verified your identity. Unverified accounts can move $299.99 a week. Verified accounts can move up to $60,000 a week. That split runs through everything below, from sending and receiving to bank transfers, the debit card, business and teen profiles, and crypto. Here’s how each one works, how to verify, and what to do when you hit a cap.
Venmo limits at a glance
| Limit type | Unverified | Verified personal |
|---|---|---|
| Weekly sending (combined) | $299.99 | $60,000 |
| Person-to-person, per transaction | within $299.99 | about $4,999.99 |
| Standard bank transfer | $999.99 a week | $19,999.99 a week ($5,000 per transfer) |
| Instant transfer (per transaction) | not available | $10,000 to a debit card, $50,000 to a bank |
| Receiving | Unlimited | Unlimited |
Business and teen profiles work differently. Those are covered further down.
How much can you send on Venmo per week?
If you’ve verified your identity, you can send up to $60,000 a week. If you haven’t, you’re capped at $299.99 a week, according to Venmo’s personal profile limits. A single payment to another person is usually limited to about $4,999.99, even though your weekly ceiling is much higher. The $299.99 unverified cap counts every payment together, so a handful of small ones can use it up fast.
What counts toward your $60,000 weekly limit?
The $60,000 is a combined weekly figure. It covers your person-to-person payments and your payments to authorized merchants together, so spending at businesses and paying friends draw from the same pool. Bank transfers, instant transfers, and crypto purchases have their own separate limits and don’t count against the $60,000. If a payment is declined even though you’re under $60,000, you may have hit the per-transaction person-to-person cap instead.
Does Venmo have a daily sending limit?
For most payments, there’s no fixed daily limit. What governs your spending is the weekly cap, either $299.99 or $60,000 depending on verification. Two card actions are the exception. ATM withdrawals max out at $1,000 a day, and Venmo Debit Card purchases at $3,000 a day. Both are covered below.
Is there a monthly Venmo limit?
No, Venmo doesn’t set a separate monthly limit. All the main caps run on a rolling 7-day window, not a calendar month, so there’s no “resets on the 1st” date to track. If you’re searching for a monthly figure, the weekly limit is the one that actually applies.
How much can you receive on Venmo?
There’s no limit on receiving money. Verified or not, anyone can pay you and you’ll receive it. Want the full walkthrough? See our guide to receiving money on Venmo. Venmo does watch accounts for unusual activity, so a large or unexpected deposit can trigger a routine review to satisfy financial regulations.
What are Venmo’s bank transfer limits?
You’ve got two ways to move money to your bank, and each has its own cap. A standard transfer takes 1 to 3 business days, costs nothing, and is limited to $999.99 a week if you’re unverified or $19,999.99 a week if you’re verified, with a $5,000 ceiling per transfer. Those figures come from Venmo’s bank transfer limits. An instant transfer lands in about 30 minutes and tops out at $10,000 per transaction to a debit card or $50,000 per transaction to a bank account. It costs 1.75% per transfer, with a floor of 25 cents and a cap of $25.
What are the Venmo Debit Card limits?
The Venmo Debit Card has four limits to keep track of. You can pull $1,000 a day across ATMs, over-the-counter withdrawals, and cash back combined, and that resets at 12:00 AM CST. On purchases, you’re capped at $2,999.99 per transaction, $3,000 a day, and $7,000 a week, with no more than 30 transactions a day.
What are Venmo’s business profile limits?
Business profiles get higher ceilings than personal ones. Once verified, a business profile can send and receive up to $25,000 a week, while an unverified one sits at $2,499.99 a week, per Venmo’s business limits. Bank transfers for a verified business profile reach $49,999.99 a week, and instant transfers follow the same $10,000 debit and $50,000 bank per-transaction caps as personal accounts.
What are Venmo teen account limits?
A Venmo Teen Account runs on its own lower limits, set under the parent or guardian’s profile rather than the standard personal caps, and they’re split by activity. Person-to-person payments are capped at $2,000 a week. Teen Venmo Debit Card purchases run up to $3,000 a day and $7,000 a week, while ATM withdrawals on that card top out at $400 a day, per Venmo’s teen account limits. One thing for parents to know: money you send to your teen counts toward your own weekly person-to-person limit.
What are Venmo’s crypto limits?
A verified personal account can buy up to $20,000 of crypto a week, covering Bitcoin, Ethereum, and the other coins Venmo supports. Selling and holding works on a yearly figure instead: $50,000 a year. These caps only apply to verified accounts, and they sit apart from your everyday payment limits.
How long do Venmo limits last?
Venmo runs on a rolling 7-day window, not a calendar week. Each payment counts against your limit for exactly one week from the moment you send it. Say you pay someone Monday at 11:00 AM. That payment stops counting against your limit at 11:01 AM the following Monday. You can see what you have left in the app under Settings, then Payment Limits.
How do you verify your identity on Venmo?
Verifying is what lifts you from $299.99 to the full $60,000 a week, and it only takes a few minutes.
- Open Venmo and tap the Me tab, then the Settings gear.
- Tap Identity Verification.
- Enter your legal name, date of birth, address, and the last four digits of your Social Security Number.
- Submit and wait for confirmation.
Verification is usually instant, but if Venmo needs to double-check, it can take up to a couple of business days and may ask for a photo of your ID. Once you’re verified, your higher limits and features (the Venmo Debit Card, direct deposit, crypto) unlock automatically.
How do you increase your Venmo limit?
The big jump comes from verifying your identity using the steps above, which lifts you from $299.99 to $60,000 a week. Need more headroom than the personal cap? Upgrade to a business profile for the $25,000 weekly business cap. And if a hold or review has dropped your limit, clearing it is as simple as answering Venmo’s request for information.
What happens when you hit your Venmo limit?
When you reach a cap, Venmo declines the payment and tells you you’ve hit your limit. You have two options. Wait for the rolling window to free up: since limits reset payment-by-payment over 7 days, some room returns as your older payments age out. Or, if you’re unverified, verify your identity to jump to the much higher cap right away. Venmo doesn’t offer a one-time “raise my limit for today” request, so verification is the real fix.
Why is my Venmo limit lower than expected?
Usually it’s one of three things. You haven’t verified yet, so you’re stuck at $299.99 until you do. A review or hold is active, which can temporarily shrink your limit until you sort it out. Or Venmo has adjusted your limit on its own, based on your account history and debit card activity, which it can do at its discretion.
Venmo vs Cash App limits
The two apps don’t draw the line in the same place. A verified Venmo account sends up to $60,000 a week, while Cash App’s ceiling is lower and tied to verification. If you bounce between both, here’s how to move money between Venmo and Cash App. And if you’re weighing your options when funds are short, see how to borrow money from Venmo.
Key takeaways
- Unverified accounts get $299.99 a week combined. Verified personal accounts get up to $60,000 a week.
- Verify under Me > Settings > Identity Verification (name, DOB, last 4 of SSN) to unlock the higher cap. It’s usually instant.
- Limits run on a rolling 7-day window — there’s no monthly limit.
- The $60,000 is combined (people + merchants); bank transfers, instant transfers, and crypto have separate caps.
- Hit a cap? Wait for the window to free up, or verify to raise it.








