Charts
DataOn-chain
VIP
Market Cap
API
Rankings
CoinOSNew
CoinClaw
Language
  • 简体中文
  • 繁体中文
  • English
Leader in global market data applications, committed to providing valuable information more efficiently.

Features

  • Real-time Data
  • Special Features
  • AI Grid

Services

  • News
  • Open Data(API)
  • Institutional Services

Downloads

  • Desktop
  • Android
  • iOS

Contact Us

  • Chat Room
  • Business Email
  • Official Email
  • Official Verification

Join Community

  • Telegram
  • Twitter
  • Discord

© Copyright 2013-2026. All rights reserved.

简体繁體English
|Legacy

Crypto rails are becoming the default payment layer for AI agents, report says

CN
coindesk
Follow
31 minutes ago
AI summarizes in 5 seconds.


What to know : AI agents settled more than $73 million across 176 million blockchain transactions over the past year, according to Keyrock, though that remains a tiny fraction of the global payments market. Coinbase, Stripe, Google and Visa are building competing infrastructure for machine-to-machine payments as software agents increasingly buy data, computing power and digital services autonomously. Nearly all agent payments currently settle in USDC, highlighting both Circle’s growing importance in crypto payments and the risks of relying heavily on a single stablecoin issuer.

Artificial intelligence (AI) agents autonomously spending money online is still a tiny market, but some of the world's largest tech, payments and crypto firms are already racing to build the infrastructure for it, Keyrock said in a new report.

The crypto trading and investment firm estimated that AI agents settled over $73 million across roughly 176 million transactions on blockchain rails between May 2025 and April 2026.

The volumes remain negligible compared to traditional finance (TradFi). Visa, for example, alone processes $14.5 trillion annually. But the significance lies less in the headline U.S. dollar value and more in how quickly the infrastructure stack is forming, the report argued. Global firms such as Coinbase (COIN), Stripe, Google (GOOG) and Visa (V) all rolled out competing systems for machine-to-machine payments.

The broader idea behind agentic payments is that software increasingly consumes digital services autonomously rather than through human-managed subscriptions and accounts. An AI trading agent, for example, could continuously purchase market data, cloud computing or AI-generated analysis in tiny increments throughout the day without a human authorizing each payment manually.

That potential is driving ambitious forecasts how big the agentic payment sector could grow. Gartner projects AI agents could intermediate $15 trillion in purchases by 2028, while McKinsey estimated retail agentic commerce could reach $3 trillion-$5 trillion by 2030, according to the Keyrock report.

Those projections imply growth rates even faster than stablecoins experienced during their breakout years, the report said, but said the pace of infrastructure deployment already signals the market is moving beyond its experimentation phase.

Coinbase's x402 protocol has emerged as one of the leading crypto-native systems. The protocol allows AI agents to pay directly with USDC for services such as blockchain analytics or cloud infrastructure without creating accounts or subscriptions.

Stripe, with its Tempo blockchain, launched a competing framework called Machine Payments Protocol (MPP), while Google introduced AP2, a system focused on delegated spending authorization for AI agents. Visa has extended its card network with tokenized credentials designed for AI-driven commerce.

Crypto rails and stablecoins are emerging as the preferred settlement layer, and the economics help explain why.

Some 76% of agent transactions fall below the 30 cent fixed-fee floor common in card payments, according to the report. Most payments ranged between one and 10 cents, making traditional rails impractical for automated software agents buying data, AI inference or API access. Meanwhile, stablecoin settlement on some blockchains like Base and Tempo costs fractions of a cent.

Currently, 98.6% of machine payments settle in USDC, the stablecoin issued by Circle (CRCL). That solidifies Circle’s position in crypto payments, but also introduces risk of concentration, creating dependency on a single issuer.

Regulation could be a source of constraint for the growth. MiCA in Europe, the U.S. GENIUS Act and the EU AI Act are all expected to take effect around mid-2026, yet none of them directly address autonomous machine-to-machine transactions or questions around liability and agent identity, the report noted.

免责声明:本文章仅代表作者个人观点,不代表本平台的立场和观点。本文章仅供信息分享,不构成对任何人的任何投资建议。用户与作者之间的任何争议,与本平台无关。如网页中刊载的文章或图片涉及侵权,请提供相关的权利证明和身份证明发送邮件到support@aicoin.com,本平台相关工作人员将会进行核查。

|
|
APP
Windows
Mac
Share To

X

Telegram

Facebook

Reddit

CopyLink

|
|
APP
Windows
Mac
Share To

X

Telegram

Facebook

Reddit

CopyLink

Selected Articles by coindesk

16 hours ago
Bitcoin heads higher as President Trump announces Iran peace agreement
18 hours ago
Bitcoin is ready to beat stocks and bonds again after underperformance against Wall Street
23 hours ago
Crypto trader sees Hyperliquid, AI tokens leading next altcoin rally
View More

Table of Contents

|
|
APP
Windows
Mac
Share To

X

Telegram

Facebook

Reddit

CopyLink

Related Articles

avatar
avatarbitcoin.com
1 hour ago
HYPE Brothers Wax, ETH Brothers Wane – Week In Review
avatar
avatarbitcoin.com
4 hours ago
Libra Trust Prepares to Distribute Controversial Crypto Millions to Argentine Companies
avatar
avatarbitcoin.com
5 hours ago
MiCA Decoded: Comparing MiCA (EU) to VARA (Dubai) and MAS (Singapore)
avatar
avatarbitcoin.com
6 hours ago
Is Crypto a Security? The 2026 Guide to US Digital Asset Law (Part One)
APP
Windows
Mac

X

Telegram

Facebook

Reddit

CopyLink