Kite has launched its mainnet and introduced Kite Agent Passport, an identity and payment system designed for autonomous AI agents. The rollout moves Kite from testnet into production, with the company positioning its network as a payments and settlement layer for agent-driven transactions.
The launch brings together three core components: Kite Chain, Kite Agent Passport and the Agent Interface & Experience. Kite describes the system as infrastructure for AI agents that need to hold funds, make payments, access services and operate within rules set by users.
In simple terms, Kite is trying to solve a problem that becomes more important as AI agents move from answering questions to actually performing tasks. If an agent can book travel, call paid APIs, purchase goods or subscribe to services, it needs a way to pay without exposing a user’s full wallet, credit card or private credentials.
Why AI Agents Need Payment Infrastructure
Most payment systems were built for humans. A person logs in, approves a card payment, signs a wallet transaction or confirms a bank transfer. AI agents work differently. They may need to make many small payments inside a single workflow, such as paying for data, accessing a tool, booking a service or completing a purchase.
That creates a difficult tradeoff. Give an AI agent too much access and users risk losing control of their funds. Require approval for every small transaction and the agent stops being useful.
Kite Agent Passport is designed to sit between those extremes. Users can approve spending limits, time windows and allowed destinations in advance. The agent can then act within those rules, while the user retains control over what the agent is allowed to do. Kite’s documentation describes this as a system combining identity, authentication, delegation and on-chain payment processing.
Kite Agent Passport Gives Agents Controlled Spending Power
The most important part of the launch is Kite Agent Passport. It gives AI agents a programmable wallet and payment identity, but with guardrails controlled by the user. According to Kite, those guardrails can include budgets, spending limits and authorized destinations.
That matters because autonomous payments require more than just a wallet address. The system needs to know who the user is, which agent is acting on their behalf and which service provider is receiving payment. Kite’s documentation says the Passport model uses user IDs, agent IDs and service IDs to create a verifiable identity structure for transactions.
For users, the experience is meant to feel closer to granting controlled permission than handing over money directly. Kite’s quick start guide describes a session as a guardrail that can include a total budget, per-transaction limit, duration and permitted spending destinations.
Kite Chain Handles Stablecoin Settlement
Kite Chain acts as the settlement layer behind the system. Kite describes it as a high-throughput blockchain built for autonomous agent transactions, with deterministic finality, EVM compatibility, low fees and stablecoin-native settlement.
Stablecoin payments are central to the design. For AI agents, stablecoins can make small transactions more practical because they avoid the volatility of many crypto assets and can be used for predictable dollar-denominated payments.
Kite’s quick start guide says Passport accounts can be funded through card, debit, ACH or crypto transfer, with funds appearing as USDC in Passport when using its supported funding path. The guide also warns users to send funds only on Kite chain ID 2366, which is an important reminder that cross-chain mistakes can still lead to lost funds.
The x402 Connection Could Matter for Paid APIs
Kite also highlights compatibility with x402, a payment protocol designed around HTTP 402 payment flows. In practice, that means an AI agent could hit a paid service, negotiate payment, post the transaction on Kite Chain and receive the service response after payment is confirmed.
This is where agent payments could become more than a crypto niche. Many AI workflows depend on paid services, including data APIs, scraping tools, productivity software, research tools and commerce platforms. If agents can pay for those services automatically within user-approved limits, developers may be able to build more useful agent-based applications.
The challenge is adoption. Payment infrastructure only becomes powerful when developers, service providers and end users all have a reason to use it. Kite says the platform is already integrated with more than 90 service providers, covering use cases such as shopping, travel planning and automated agent workflows.
Backers and Early Commerce Integrations Add Weight
Kite said it has raised $35 million in funding led by PayPal Ventures and General Catalyst. The company also said pilot integrations with PayPal and Shopify are underway, which could extend the infrastructure into real-world commerce if those pilots develop into broader integrations.
That backing matters because AI payments will need trust from both crypto-native developers and mainstream commerce platforms. For merchants and service providers, the key question is not whether autonomous agents are interesting. It is whether agent payments can be safe, auditable, compliant and easy to integrate.
Kite’s broader pitch is that AI agents will become economic actors that need verified identities, programmable permissions and payment rails. Its whitepaper frames the problem as an infrastructure gap, arguing that agents already have stronger reasoning capabilities but remain constrained by payment systems built for human approval flows.
A Bet on the Agentic Economy
Kite’s launch arrives at a moment when the crypto industry is looking for practical blockchain use cases beyond trading and speculation. Agent payments are one of the more credible candidates because they involve high-frequency, small-value transactions that traditional payment rails may not handle efficiently.
Still, the model is early. Users will need to understand the risks of delegated authority, wallet funding, session approvals and chain-specific transfers. Developers will need reliable documentation and service coverage. Merchants will need confidence that payments are final, compliant and easy to reconcile.
If Kite can make those pieces work together, its mainnet and Agent Passport could become important infrastructure for AI-driven commerce. The launch is not just about giving agents wallets. It is about creating a system where agents can transact without removing humans from control.
This article is based on a press release issued by ChainWire.
Media Contact: yijing.shi@gokite.ai
Disclaimer: This is a press release article. AltcoinReporter does not endorse or guarantee the accuracy of the content provided by the issuing company. Readers should conduct their own research before making any investment decisions. Cryptocurrency investments carry significant risk.


















