Skip to main content

PayPal’s Honey has lost millions of users over shady practices

PayPal's Honey.
PayPal

What occurs when a popular money-saving service harms its key stakeholders? Naturally, there is a rapid decline in users. This is the situation with PayPal’s Honey.

PayPal’s Honey, once a popular Chrome browser extension that promised to save users money by finding coupon codes, lost approximately 3 million users, dropping from 20 million to 17 million. This decline followed a viral exposé video released in December 2024, which revealed several deceptive practices.

Recommended Videos

The controversy centered on two main issues: First, Honey was replacing affiliate links from content creators with its own, effectively “stealing” commissions. Second, instead of finding the best coupon codes as promised, Honey was allegedly collaborating with retailers to hide better discounts in favor of retailer-preferred codes.

PayPal acquired Honey for around $4 billion in 2020, making this scandal especially significant for the payment giant. In direct response to the controversy, Google updated its Chrome extension policies in March 2025 to restrict how browser extensions can utilize affiliate codes. The new policies require transparency and explicitly prohibit extensions from injecting affiliate links without providing a tangible benefit to users.

The fallout from the scandal has led to multiple class action lawsuits, including one filed by content creators Sam Denby of Wendover Productions and Ali Spagnola, as well as another by the technology review outlet GamersNexus.

In January, Honey’s Chrome browser extension unexpectedly vanished. During that period, attempts to access the extension on the Chrome Web Store resulted in an error page stating, “This item is not available.” The extension has since been restored and is now available for new downloads.

If you’re not yet comfortable using the Honey Chrome extension, there are several alternatives available. Capital One Shopping, formerly known as Wikibuy, is one of the main competitors to Honey. It offers similar features such as automatically applying coupon codes, tracking prices, and comparing prices across different retailers. Another option is Rakuten (formerly Ebates), which not only applies coupons automatically but also provides cashback on purchases that can be transferred to your account within 24 to 48 hours. Other alternatives include RetailMeNot and Shopper.com, among others.

Bryan M. Wolfe
Bryan M. Wolfe has over a decade of experience as a technology writer. He writes about mobile.
The 9950X3D is king, but the 9950X is great for non-gamers
The Ryzen 9 9950X between someone's fingertips.

AMD's Ryzen 9950X3D is inarguably the king of all CPUs in mid-2025. It's tied with the 9800X3D as best for gaming and it's competitive with some of the top productivity CPUs, like the Intel Core Ultra 285K and the AMD Ryzen 9950X. But if you aren't gaming, can you get away with just using the 9950X instead? It's certainly a lot cheaper.

Let's take a look at those these two top AMD chips compare.
Pricing and availability
AMD launched the Ryzen 9 9950X in August 2024 alongside the rest of the mainstream Ryzen 9000 series. It started at $649, but has since come down to around $550 at most retailers. It's still widely available, despite all the frenzies interest in the new 9950X3D.

Read more
MediaTek’s Kompanio Ultra chip pits Chromebooks against Copilot PCs
MediaTek Kompanio Ultra representation on a laptop.

MediaTek has today launched a new silicon for Chrome OS devices, one that puts it roughly in the same performance league as the Copilot+ PCs hawked by Windows ecosystem players. The latest from MediaTek is the Kompanio Ultra, a top-of-the-line processor that takes an all-big-core approach to deliver flagship performance. 

The big bet behind all that firepower? AI, of course. To that end, the chip is touted to deliver 50 TOPS of AI processing power. For perspective, Qualcomm’s top-end Snapdragon X Elite silicon maxes out at 45 TOPS, and similar is the baseline that Microsoft has set for processors supplied by AMD and Intel for Copilot+ machines. 

Read more
This could be the last laptop you ever need to buy
Framework laptop

Framework might not be a name you've heard of but it could soon be far more common as the company is about to release its modular laptop that could last you a lifetime.

Alright, any laptop laasting that long is a stretch, but the idea is that this will last you far longer than the usual update cycle.

Read more