×
Google’s AP2 protocol enables secure AI agent payments with cryptographic proof
Written by
Published on
Join our daily newsletter for breaking news, product launches and deals, research breakdowns, and other industry-leading AI coverage
Join Now

Google introduced the Agent Payments Protocol (AP2) on Tuesday, a standardization framework designed to enable AI agents to authorize and complete purchases while maintaining accountability and audit trails. The protocol addresses a fundamental challenge in AI-driven commerce: proving that automated transactions carry the same legitimacy as human-initiated purchases, with backing from over 60 companies including American Express, Mastercard, PayPal, and Coinbase.

How it works: AP2 uses cryptographically signed “mandates” that create tamper-evident records for each transaction phase.

  • An intent mandate captures when a user requests an item, followed by a cart mandate that approves the final purchase basket.
  • A third payment mandate signals to networks that an AI agent executed the order, creating a non-repudiable trail for fraud investigations and dispute resolution.
  • The system works across different scenarios, from monitoring price thresholds to coordinating complex travel bookings with preset budgets.

Beyond traditional payments: While initially focused on card networks, AP2 was built to be payment-agnostic and already includes cryptocurrency integration.

  • Google released an extension linking the protocol to the x402 crypto standard, developed with Coinbase, MetaMask, and the Ethereum Foundation.
  • Future iterations will include real-time bank transfers and stablecoin support, bridging traditional card networks with instant payment systems.
  • Coinbase published an explainer positioning the integration as a way to unify AI commerce with decentralized payments.

The competitive landscape: Major payment companies are simultaneously developing their own AI commerce solutions, highlighting industry-wide momentum.

  • Mastercard is rolling out Agent Pay globally as part of a toolkit for agent-ready checkout flows.
  • Visa opened its MCP server and released a no-code Agent Acceptance Toolkit for developers to integrate agents with Visa APIs.
  • PayPal partnered with Perplexity in May to power “Buy With Pro” service, embedding agent-led purchases directly in browsers.

Why this matters: AP2’s biggest contribution is shifting proof of purchase from inference to verifiable, signed intent, giving merchants and issuers uniform handling of agent-driven requests.

  • Each mandate documents what users authorized, what merchants promised, and what networks processed, potentially reducing false disputes.
  • For risk teams, the protocol provides accountability that could help cut fraud without adding friction to legitimate transactions.
  • The approach eliminates the need for merchants to negotiate bespoke integrations with different AI platforms.

The adoption test: Success hinges on developer uptake and merchant economics, with regulatory acceptance as the final hurdle.

  • Google released full specifications, sample flows, and reference code on GitHub to lower barriers for pilot programs.
  • Merchants will adopt if AP2 reduces fraud losses, prevents false declines, or increases conversion rates through richer agent-to-agent interactions.
  • If mandates gain recognition as sufficient proof of authority, AI-driven transactions can scale through existing payment infrastructure without requiring custom agreements.
Google Unveils a Payment Protocol for AI-Driven Commerce

Recent News

Two top San Francisco art schools embrace AI with new leadership roles

Art schools are picking sides in an increasingly polarized creative debate.

Grok on! Musk’s AI tops ARC-AGI leaderboard, beating ChatGPT and Gemini

The benchmark tests both problem-solving power and computational efficiency, not just raw intelligence.