setSenderBatchId(uniqid()) ->setEmailSubject("You have a payment"); // #### Sender Item // Please note that if you are using single payout with sync mode, you can only pass one Item in the request $senderItem1 = new \PayPal\Api\PayoutItem(); $senderItem1->setRecipientType('Email') ->setNote('Thanks you.') ->setReceiver('shirt-supplier-one@gmail.com') ->setSenderItemId("item_1" . uniqid()) ->setAmount(new \PayPal\Api\Currency('{ "value":"0.99", "currency":"USD" }')); // #### Sender Item 2 // There are many different ways of assigning values in PayPal SDK. Here is another way where you could directly inject json string. $senderItem2 = new \PayPal\Api\PayoutItem( '{ "recipient_type": "EMAIL", "amount": { "value": 0.90, "currency": "USD" }, "receiver": "shirt-supplier-two@mail.com", "note": "Thank you.", "sender_item_id": "item_2" }' ); // #### Sender Item 3 // One more way of assigning values in constructor when creating instance of PayPalModel object. Injecting array. $senderItem3 = new \PayPal\Api\PayoutItem( array( "recipient_type" => "EMAIL", "receiver" => "shirt-supplier-three@mail.com", "note" => "Thank you.", "sender_item_id" => uniqid(), "amount" => array( "value" => "0.90", "currency" => "USD" ) ) ); $payouts->setSenderBatchHeader($senderBatchHeader) ->addItem($senderItem1)->addItem($senderItem2)->addItem($senderItem3); // For Sample Purposes Only. $request = clone $payouts; // ### Create Payout try { $output = $payouts->create(null, $apiContext); } catch (Exception $ex) { ResultPrinter::printError("Created Batch Payout", "Payout", null, $request, $ex); exit(1); } ResultPrinter::printResult("Created Batch Payout", "Payout", $output->getBatchHeader()->getPayoutBatchId(), $request, $output); return $output;