PayPal said it’s allowing people to receive their stimulus checks through its namesake service and testing it on Venmo.

At Zelle, a person-to-person payment app supported by Bank of America Corp., JPMorgan Chase & Co. and others, users have been sending money to loved ones for prescriptions and groceries, said Meghan Fintland, a spokeswoman. Some are buying items in bulk for the whole neighborhood, and then using Zelle to collect payments. Others are sending cash gifts to relatives for their birthdays.

“People don’t want to handle cash, especially at this time, so they are looking to mobile payments as the best alternatives,” Fintland said.

That said, the coronavirus shutdown has hurt some types of mobile payment services and forced others to adjust.

Toast Inc., which makes management systems for restaurants, laid off half its staff in April. Earlier this week, Grubhub Inc. pulled its 2020 guidance, largely because of the acute situation in New York, where many restaurants have closed. Companies that serve ride-sharing companies, like Stripe Inc. and Adyen NV, may also suffer as usage declines.

The industry’s established players are also facing new competition. In March, portable-reader heavyweight Square Inc. rolled out ways for its restaurant owners to offer pickup and delivery options.

“We’ve seen so many folks pivoting to online to keep their businesses going,” said Katie Dally, a Square spokeswoman. Independent booksellers and other businesses are offering pickup and delivery too, she said.

As more people embrace contactless technology and get used to paying that way, consumer behavior is going to change for good, experts say.

The rush delivery service at supermarket chain Safeway hit 670,000 weekly active U.S. mobile users the week of March 29, up from fewer than 50,000 in the week of March 1, according to the analytics platform App Annie. Amazon Prime Now’s Android and iPhone active user base grew 60%, according to App Annie.

“It’s behavior that’s going to stick after stay at home ends,” said Jordan McKee, an analyst at 451 Research. “There will be muscle memory about paying, and consumers will use it going around their daily life.”