Forget what you think you know about how crypto will go mainstream. It probably won’t happen through people choosing to pay with Bitcoin at a coffee shop. It’s going to happen because AI agents need to spend money, and they literally cannot use banks.
That was the message from senior executives at PayPal and Google Cloud speaking at Consensus Miami on Thursday. Their argument was simple, logical, and hard to dismiss: AI agents are about to handle a massive share of online commerce, but they can’t open bank accounts, they can’t get credit cards, and they can’t pass identity verification. The only payment system that works for machines is crypto.
Richard Widmann, Google Cloud’s global head of Web3 strategy, told the audience that blockchain provides a machine-readable framework that’s naturally suited to autonomous transactions. Traditional financial infrastructure was built for humans. Crypto was built for code. And as AI takes over more of the internet’s commercial activity, the payment rails need to match.
Google Launches a New Payments Protocol With 120 Partners
Google isn’t just talking about this future. It’s building the infrastructure for it.
The company announced the Agentic Payments Protocol (AP2), an open standard designed specifically for AI agent transactions. Google has donated AP2 to the FIDO Foundation, the same organisation that manages the passwordless authentication standards used by Apple, Microsoft, and Google across billions of devices.
More than 120 partners have already signed on, including PayPal. The protocol is designed to let AI agents discover products, negotiate terms, and complete payments without human involvement, all using crypto rails.
AP2 isn’t the only protocol in the race. Coinbase’s x402 (which powers Amazon’s AI agent payments), OpenAI and Stripe’s ACP, and Virtuals’ on-chain ACP are all competing to become the standard checkout infrastructure for agentic commerce. Consensus Miami 2026 was the first major crypto conference to dedicate an entire programming track to the topic, which tells you how seriously the industry is taking it.
PayPal Sees AI Agents as Its Next Big Channel
May Zabaneh, PayPal’s senior vice president and general manager of crypto, framed the shift in terms PayPal knows well. The company evolved from offline payments to online, then online to mobile. Each transition opened a massive new market. Zabaneh said AI agents represent the next channel in that evolution.
Her weapon of choice? PYUSD, PayPal’s own stablecoin. Zabaneh described it as “a very natural programmable layer for payments,” particularly as commerce trends toward globalisation, AI-native experiences, and tokenised assets.
The data she shared was striking. A recent PayPal survey found that 95% of merchants already see AI agent traffic on their websites. But only 20% have machine-readable catalogues that allow AI agents to actually browse, compare, and purchase products. That gap between AI traffic and merchant readiness is the opportunity PayPal is targeting.
Think about what that means in practice. Your AI assistant might soon handle everything from comparing insurance quotes to ordering groceries to booking travel. But right now, most merchants’ websites are built for human eyes, not machine processing. The companies that bridge that gap first, by making their platforms AI-readable and crypto-payable, will capture a disproportionate share of the next wave of commerce.
Why Banks Can’t Compete Here
The core argument from both Google and PayPal comes down to a structural limitation that traditional finance simply can’t fix quickly enough.
Banks require identity verification for every account. You need a name, an address, a tax ID, and in most cases a physical presence to pass KYC (Know Your Customer) checks. AI agents don’t have any of those things. They’re software. They can’t walk into a bank branch. They can’t upload a passport photo. They can’t sign a signature card.
Credit card networks have the same problem. They’re built around the assumption that a human is authorising each transaction. AI agents operating autonomously, making hundreds or thousands of micro-transactions per hour, don’t fit that model.
Crypto solves both problems. A stablecoin wallet can be created programmatically. Payments can be authorised by code rather than human approval. Transactions settle in milliseconds. And the cost per transaction is low enough to support the kind of high-frequency micropayments that AI agents need to make.
This isn’t a philosophical argument about decentralisation or financial freedom. It’s a practical engineering problem. AI agents need to spend money. Banks can’t give them accounts. Crypto can. The logic is that straightforward.
The Protocol Race Is Heating Up
What makes this moment interesting is that multiple competing standards are racing to become the default payment layer for AI commerce.
Google’s AP2 has the advantage of the FIDO Foundation’s credibility, 120 partners, and Google’s distribution. Coinbase’s x402 has a head start with 169 million transactions already processed and Amazon as its most prominent customer. OpenAI and Stripe’s ACP brings the most recognisable AI brand together with the most trusted payments company among developers. And on-chain native protocols like Virtuals’ ACP target the decentralised end of the market.
It’s possible that multiple standards coexist, much like how Visa and Mastercard both thrive in traditional payments. But the stakes are enormous. Whoever establishes the dominant payment protocol for AI agents effectively becomes the Visa of the machine economy.
For the crypto industry, the competition itself is the win. Every protocol in this race uses stablecoins as the settlement layer. Every standard runs on blockchain infrastructure. Regardless of which protocol wins, crypto wins.
What This Means for You
You might not notice this shift right away. AI agent commerce will start behind the scenes, with software buying API access, data feeds, and computational resources from other software. These are invisible transactions that happen in the background of services you already use.
But over time, the impact will become visible. Your AI travel assistant will book flights and hotels, paying with stablecoins. Your AI financial adviser will rebalance your portfolio, executing trades through crypto rails. Your AI shopping assistant will compare prices across dozens of merchants, negotiate deals, and complete purchases, all using programmable money.
PayPal’s data suggests this future is closer than most people think. If 95% of merchants already see AI agent traffic, the infrastructure needs to be ready now, not in five years. The companies building that infrastructure, Google, PayPal, Amazon, Coinbase, and Stripe, are collectively worth trillions of dollars. Their commitment to crypto payment rails is the strongest adoption signal the industry has ever received.
FAQ
Why can’t AI agents use regular bank accounts?
Banks require identity verification (name, address, tax ID, physical presence) that AI agents can’t provide because they’re software, not people. Credit card networks face the same limitation. Crypto wallets can be created programmatically and payments can be authorised by code, making blockchain the only viable payment system for autonomous AI transactions.
What is Google’s Agentic Payments Protocol (AP2)?
AP2 is an open payment standard designed for AI agent transactions, launched by Google and donated to the FIDO Foundation. It has more than 120 partners including PayPal. The protocol lets AI agents discover products, negotiate terms, and complete payments using crypto rails without human involvement.
How does this affect regular consumers?
Initially, AI agent commerce will happen behind the scenes in machine-to-machine transactions. Over time, consumers will interact with AI assistants that handle shopping, travel booking, financial management, and other tasks, paying for services using stablecoins through protocols like AP2 and x402. PayPal’s survey found that 95% of merchants already see AI agent traffic on their websites.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. Cryptocurrency investments carry significant risk. Always conduct your own research before making any investment decisions.

















