Visa is accelerating its move into agent-led commerce, announcing that secure, AI-initiated transactions have now been completed in live environments and unveiling new trust infrastructure designed to make such payments viable at scale. The updates signal a broader industry shift toward AI systems that can autonomously search, decide, and pay on behalf of consumers, without manual checkout.
According to Visa, hundreds of real transactions have already been processed by AI agents acting for users, using its Intelligent Commerce platform. The company says these pilots demonstrate that AI systems can move beyond recommendation and comparison tools to fully execute purchases, provided security and authentication challenges are addressed.
Visa expects agent-initiated commerce to reach mainstream use as early as 2026, arguing that consumer behaviour is already shifting in that direction. AI tools are increasingly embedded in shopping journeys, and the payments industry is now racing to ensure that autonomous transactions remain secure, authorised, and trusted by merchants.
A central concern is differentiation. From a merchant’s perspective, an AI shopping agent can look indistinguishable from a malicious bot. To tackle this, Visa has paired its payments infrastructure with new identity and authentication standards, including its Trusted Agent Protocol, which allows AI agents to prove they are acting with user consent.
To reinforce this at the network level, Visa has also announced a collaboration with Akamai. Akamai’s role is to help merchants identify legitimate AI agents at the edge of the internet, before transactions are blocked by fraud or bot-mitigation systems. The partnership aims to integrate payments trust signals directly into web security infrastructure.
Together, the two initiatives suggest that agentic commerce is emerging as an ecosystem challenge rather than a standalone payments feature. Authentication, consent, fraud prevention, and transaction authorisation must all work in tandem if AI-led checkout is to scale globally.
For Europe, the developments are likely to attract regulatory attention. Autonomous payments raise questions around liability, consumer protection, and compliance, particularly as the EU continues to debate digital identity frameworks and the future of payments sovereignty.
Visa says further global pilots are planned, including in Europe, over the coming year. While many technical details remain undisclosed, the direction is clear: AI agents are moving closer to becoming first-class economic actors, and the payments industry is laying the groundwork to support them.
