February 04, 2026

Agentic payments: the next frontier in digital commerce

  • Payment Trends
  • Digital Payments
avatar.png
Bruno da Silva Oliveira
Global Head of Data & Agentic Commerce

Share to

Agentic payments_header.jpg

As autonomous AI moves from insight to action, commerce is entering a new phase. To help merchants navigate this shift, Getnet has published its Agentic Commerce Strategy whitepaper, outlining how businesses of all sizes can benefit from agentic commerce and payments. This blog builds on that vision, focusing specifically on agentic payments and what merchants need to understand as this new model takes shape.

As digital payments mature and proliferate, the next frontier is coming into view: agentic payments. The technology – in which AI agents initiate, manage and optimise transactions on behalf of users - is poised to reshape how consumers buy and how merchants operate.

 

Agentic payments are already gaining momentum. Consumers increasingly expect invisible, seamless experiences and merchants must match this with reduced friction and improved customer lifetime value. According to McKinsey, agentic commerce could unlock $3–5 trillion in global economic value by 2030, as AI moves from supporting transactions to orchestrating them end-to-end.

 

With greater autonomy certainly comes more opportunity, but merchants have a greater responsibility too. Below, we explain what agentic payments are, why they matter, and what risks merchants must manage as we move into a new era. heavyweight payment sponsors underscoring their importance. 

 

 

What are agentic payments?

 

Agentic payments refer to transactions initiated and managed by autonomous systems - AI agents - rather than a user manually approving each action.

 

Instead of approving every transaction individually, users define intent, limits and conditions in advance, allowing agents to act autonomously within those boundaries.

 

This could include:

 

  • An AI agent that automatically pays a mobile bill once usage thresholds are detected (for example, your data allowance drops below 10GB and the agent automatically tops it up)
  • A shopping agent that compares retailers, assembles carts, and completes checkout on a consumer’s behalf
  • A procurement bot that pays suppliers when certain conditions (e.g., delivery confirmed) are met
  • A subscription manager that cancels or renews services based on usage

 

Each of these use cases shift payments from reactive to proactive, reducing the number of touchpoints and enabling smoother financial experiences. They also align closely with the broader rise of agentic commerce, in which AI becomes the primary interface between consumers and merchants.

 

Agentic payments offer a myriad of powerful benefits, but introduce new expectations around trust, visibility and control.

 

 

What are the benefits of agentic payments?

 

 

Reduced friction through autonomous transactions

 

Even with one-click or tokenised payments, friction still exists. This can take the form of authenticating your identity, updating expired card details, or even remembering to pay at all.

 

With agentic payments, customers approve once and let an agent handle recurring or conditional payments. This means that manual steps disappear, reducing declines because the agent can update credentials automatically, retry transactions intelligently, and time payments for optimal success, leading to fewer failed payments and faster checkouts.

 

Smarter financial operations

 

Payments can now happen automatically when certain conditions are met - like a delivery or inventory update - without anyone needing to step in.

 

AI can batch transactions, reduce processing fees, or optimise the payment operation for a truly personalised financial experience. For instance, an AI agent may group low-value transactions to minimise fees, shift payments to times of day with lower risk scores, or optimise timing around a user’s cash flow patterns.

 

Enhanced customer experience

 

Agentic payments enhance experience from discovery to post-purchase. Consumers will benefit from fewer declined transactions, easier management of subscription and proactive billing aligned to specific context (such as having redundant subscriptions flagged and removed).

 

When paired with autonomous agentic commerce, agents can assemble baskets, negotiate prices, and complete checkout, all while respecting user preferences. For instance, delivery timing can be optimised to the customer’s schedule without manual intervention via an integrated personal calendar.

What are the risks of agentic commerce for merchants?

 

Despite the benefits of agentic payments, they arrive with risks that require careful design and governance. These include:

 

Loss of control (and a potential erosion of trust)

 

If transactions happen without sufficient visibility or consent, customer trust may erode quickly.

 

Consider being charged for a subscription that you’ve forgotten about, or a lack of clear audit trails explaining why a purchase occurred. Both would be frustrating and require strong controls and mechanisms to define boundaries.

 

Fraud and error exposure

 

Agentic payments can create new vectors for fraud, including spoofed delivery confirmations triggering supplier payments or compromised agent credentials leading to unauthorised spend.

 

Fraud models built around human behaviour will begin to fall short. Merchants will need agent-level identity (KYA: Know Your Agent) or cryptographically signed mandates, that link intent, cart, and payment across users, merchants, and payment networks.

 

Regulatory and compliance considerations

 

Agentic payments pose new questions for regulators. For instance, how should consent be captured and renewed? What constitutes a valid ‘intent to pay’? And who is accountable when an agent makes an error?

 

Governments and networks are beginning to respond, with early signals of a regulatory and technical stack emerging.

 

Misaligned agents

 

AI agents only create real value when designed around a clear business problem, with a repeatable process and measurable impact. Without this purpose-led structure, autonomy can become unpredictable, inefficient or costly for merchants. 

 

Poorly designed agents may trigger payments too frequently, misinterpret rules, or act outside customer expectations, creating operational and reputational risk.

 

 

Where Getnet fits 

 

As agentic payments become more prevalent, the role of payments shifts from the final step in a transaction to a critical point of execution, control and trust. 

 

This is where providers like Getnet play a pivotal role.

Getnet’s focus is on enabling agent-initiated payments to happen securely and reliably, so merchants can participate in agentic commerce without added complexity or risk.

 

Within this, Getnet is working on the payment foundations that allow intelligent agents to move from decision-making to execution. This includes ensuring that payments initiated by agents are securely authorised, clearly linked to user intent and executed without exposing sensitive payment data. Rather than building consumer-facing agents, Getnet concentrates on the infrastructure that allows autonomous transactions to operate in real commercial environments.

 

A key priority is trust and traceability. Agentic payments require visibility into which agent is acting, on whose behalf and under what permissions. Getnet is developing capabilities that connect agent identity, authorisation and payment execution into a controlled and auditable flow, helping merchants maintain confidence as autonomy increases

 

These capabilities ensure that agentic payments are not only seamless and efficient but also secure, transparent and trustworthy.

 

 

Creating agentic payments that are smart and trustworthy

 

At Agentic payments promise major benefits: reduced friction, enhanced customer experience, and smarter financial operations. But they also require robust governance, consent mechanisms, explainability, and risk frameworks that treat agents as first-class actors in the payment flow.

 

While these are formidable challenges to overcome, AI will soon mediate the purchasing journey, creating seamless, autonomous experiences that truly benefit the end user.

 

Understanding agentic payments today is an important step towards preparing for a future where intelligent agents play an increasingly active role across the full commerce lifecycle.

 

To learn more about Getnet’s value proposition for agentic commerce, please read the whipepaper. 

Read our latest whitepaper.

Latest posts