Visa is rolling out a new service called Intelligent Commerce Connect to help AI “agents” make payments on behalf of consumers and businesses. The network aims to enable software agents to shop, subscribe, and pay in the background while still using Visa’s existing security and dispute systems.
What Intelligent Commerce Connect Does
Visa’s new platform gives AI agents a way to access stored payment credentials and initiate card payments without the user having to manually check out each time. The idea is that an AI assistant could compare prices, choose a merchant, and complete a purchase using the card details it can securely tap into.
Users would still set rules and limits, such as spending caps or approved merchants, while Visa’s rails handle authorization and risk checks.
The system is meant to plug into digital wallets, banking apps, and other fintech services that already rely on Visa. That means an AI agent inside a bank app or super app could schedule bill payments, renew subscriptions, or top up services within a framework that card issuers already understand.
For merchants, payments should look like standard card transactions, even though an AI agent sits between the customer and the checkout page.
How Visa Envisions AI Agent Payments
Visa’s pitch is that many future payments will not start with a person clicking “pay,” but with software acting under standing instructions. An energy‑monitoring agent might switch providers and pay the new bill, or a travel bot might book flights and hotels within budget limits. Intelligent Commerce Connect gives those agents a way to authenticate, pay, and pass along the data issuers and merchants need for fraud checks and receipts.
At the same time, Visa is framing the product as a way to keep trust in the system as more decisions move to automation. The company expects issuers to keep control over risk rules, while cardholders can review and revoke agent permissions if they see charges they do not like. That structure aims to prevent AI agents from bypassing the consumer protections that come with traditional card payments.
Visa’s move reflects a broader trend where large payment networks, banks, and tech firms are racing to define how AI‑driven commerce will work. By launching Intelligent Commerce Connect early, Visa is trying to anchor that activity within its existing card network rather than letting alternative rails dominate.
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