MMomoCalc

PayPal (PYPL) share price in Kenya

1 share of PayPal = KSh5,497.78 (about $42.49).

$42.49 US close 0.31%
Closing price 2026-06-15, updated daily after the US market close · converted at today's mid-market USD/KES rate. Indicative, not an executable broker quote.

How many PayPal shares?

1 share of PayPal (PYPL) =
KSh5,497.78
$42.49 · 1 PYPL = KSh5,497.78 ($42.49)

Closing price converted at today's mid-market USD/KES rate. Indicative — not an executable broker quote.

PayPal 30-day trend

Range: KSh5,336.04KSh5,847.13 4.3% (17d)

Daily closing price over the last 17 trading days (USD basis), shown in KES at the current rate.

How to buy PayPal in Kenya

In Kenya, you buy US stocks through local platforms — Hisa and Ndovu — funded directly with M-Pesa. The big Nigerian-built apps do not operate in Kenya, so use the Kenyan platforms below; fractional shares let you start small.

PlatformWhat it offersMinFundingFractional
HisaUS, Kenyan (NSE) & global stocks plus ETFs
M-Pesa funding is the key Kenyan advantage — no dollar account needed to start.
low — fractional, from a few hundred shillingsM-Pesa, card or bank transfer
NdovuUS stocks, ETFs, bonds and money-market funds
Regulated by Kenya's Capital Markets Authority (CMA); goal/portfolio focused.
from around $10M-Pesa, card or bank transfer

We may earn a commission if you sign up through some of these links, at no extra cost to you. We rank platforms by genuine fit for the use case — never by commission — and fees and minimums change, so check each app for current terms.

Not investment advice. This page is for information only and is not a recommendation to buy or sell PayPal or any security. MomoCalc is not a licensed financial adviser, broker or dealer.

About PayPal (PYPL)

digital payments

PayPal is a digital-payments company running PayPal, Venmo and online checkout for millions of merchants.

Why African investors hold it. A value-and-turnaround fintech holding, in dollars.

Dividends. PayPal pays no dividend.

PayPal as a hedge against a weaker KES

Holding PayPal means holding a US-dollar asset. When the KES falls against the dollar, the KES value of your shares rises even if the US share price is flat — so the position works partly as protection against local-currency depreciation, on top of any gain in the stock itself.

The shilling is more managed and tends to depreciate gradually rather than in sudden jumps, so the hedge works as a slow, steady tailwind for Kenyan holders of dollar assets.

That is exactly the link between this page and the exchange rate: the KES price here is the $42.49-style US close times the live USD/KES rate. If you expect the KES to weaken, watch that rate alongside the share price.

PayPal in other currencies

Frequently asked questions

What is the PayPal share price in KES today?
One PayPal (PYPL) share is about KSh5,497.78 today — the $42.49 US closing price converted at the live mid-market USD/KES rate. The US price updates after each market close; the KES figure moves with the exchange rate through the day.
How much is 1 share of PayPal in KES?
About KSh5,497.78 for a whole share. Every platform below sells fractional shares, so you can invest a fixed KES amount — say KSh2,748.89 for half a share — rather than buying a whole one.
How do I buy PayPal in Kenya?
In Kenya, you buy US stocks through local platforms — Hisa and Ndovu — funded directly with M-Pesa. The big Nigerian-built apps do not operate in Kenya, so use the Kenyan platforms below; fractional shares let you start small. Compare the platforms below on minimums, funding method and fees in the app before you start.
Can I buy PayPal from Kenya?
Yes. Residents of Kenya can legally buy US-listed shares like PayPal through the regulated investing platforms listed here, which hold the stock via licensed US broker partners. You buy in your local currency or US dollars and can sell back the same way.
Does PayPal pay dividends?
PayPal pays no dividend.
Is PayPal a good hedge against the KES falling?
PayPal is a US-dollar asset, so when the KES weakens against the dollar, the KES value of your holding rises even if the US share price is unchanged. The shilling is more managed and tends to depreciate gradually rather than in sudden jumps, so the hedge works as a slow, steady tailwind for Kenyan holders of dollar assets. It is not risk-free: the share price itself can fall, and you take on US-market and single-stock risk. This is information, not investment advice.

US closing prices via Marketstack (end-of-day), verified June 2026; local values are the USD close converted at the live USD/KES mid-market rate this site already tracks. Prices are indicative and delayed, not real-time or executable quotes. For information only — not investment advice.