Mastercard Launches Agent Pay for AI, Plans to Record AI Agent Payment Authorizations on Polygon

By: WEEX|2026/06/11 01:00:33
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In June, according to Foresight News, Mastercard announced a new payment protocol called Agent Pay for AI, designed to help AI agents complete small payments more easily, such as paying per request to access website data.

According to the disclosed information, the protocol will record the permissions granted by humans to AI agents on a blockchain, helping ensure that agents operate within the scope of their authorization. In the first phase, the related permission information will be stored on Polygon, an Ethereum-based network.

Based on the public description, the core idea is not simply to “let AI make payments.” Instead, the product aims to make the authorization process verifiable: who granted permission, what level of permission was granted, and whether the AI agent acted according to those instructions.

For AI agents, paying for APIs, data, or services on a per-use basis requires solving three issues at the same time: identity, authorization, and payment. Mastercard’s decision to record authorizations on-chain suggests that its entry point is closer to permission management and execution records before payment, rather than simply offering a crypto settlement channel.

The first group of participants and supporters spans payment processors, custodians, exchanges, cloud service providers, public chains, and developer infrastructure. The list includes Aave Labs, Adyen, Alchemy, Anchorage Digital, Ant International, Coinbase, MoonPay, OKX, Polygon, RippleX, Solana Foundation, and Stripe.

At this stage, Mastercard has not yet disclosed the protocol’s commercial scale, fee structure, priority developer or merchant access, or the specific role each participant will play. It remains unclear whether these partners are involved in direct integrations, pilot programs, or broader ecosystem support.

In the current market environment, AI agent payments are moving from concept to infrastructure competition. Recently, the industry has seen multiple approaches around API pay-per-use models, agent wallets, stablecoin micropayments, and authorization controls.

With Mastercard entering the space, competition between traditional card networks, crypto payment networks, public chains, and developer protocols may become more direct. The key question is who controls the layer of agent identity, payment access, and compliance risk management.


Why It Matters

This development matters because a global payment network is formally entering the race to capture AI agent payment flows.

Previously, the market discussion focused more on whether stablecoins, on-chain micropayments, or developer protocols could support agent-to-agent commerce. Mastercard is now combining card network infrastructure, merchant networks, and on-chain authorization mechanisms, suggesting that AI payments are no longer only a crypto-native experiment. They are beginning to extend into broader payment infrastructure.

Another key point is that Polygon was selected as the initial network for recording authorizations. The current disclosure emphasizes “authorization on-chain,” not large-scale on-chain settlement. Therefore, the market should not immediately interpret this as direct transaction volume migration or proof that payment scale has already arrived.

The real impact will depend on whether merchants later integrate the protocol, whether stablecoin or fiat settlement interfaces are introduced, and whether Mastercard connects the system to its broader merchant acceptance network.


WEEX View

The core market debate is not whether AI can make payments. The real question is who becomes the main gateway for agent payments.

If Mastercard is only recording authorization proofs on Polygon, this looks more like an identity and permission firewall built around the card network. But if Mastercard later bundles merchant acceptance, clearing and settlement, risk control, and chargeback responsibility into the same system, on-chain protocols, stablecoin payment gateways, and exchange fiat channels could be pushed further back into the infrastructure layer.

For front-line CEX businesses, the sensitive point is whether payment flows bypass trading accounts and move directly into a closed loop of AI wallets, service providers, and stablecoin settlement. If that loop becomes functional, exchanges may receive more demand for market making, custody, fiat conversion, and cross-platform liquidity support, but less control over the user entry point.

Another layer of conflict is that the participant list is large, but the depth of each role remains unclear. Payment companies care most about who controls the merchant side. Public chains compete over where authorization records and settlement flows are captured. Exchanges and custodians compete over where agent assets ultimately settle. Traditional institutions care about whether the framework can put Old Money’s automated payment needs into a compliant wrapper.

If Mastercard later clearly supports stablecoin settlement, spending limits, and enterprise-level audit controls, AI agent payments could expand from developer micropayments into more standardized B2B service procurement. On the other hand, if this remains a consortium-style pilot without real merchants or sustainable transaction density, the sector may stay in the infrastructure narrative stage in the short term.

The next things to watch are not the partnership names, but three concrete indicators. First, whether Mastercard discloses the actual settlement assets and clearing path, which will determine whether blockchain is being used as a record layer or a funding layer. Second, whether real API marketplaces, data service providers, or SaaS platforms integrate the protocol, which will determine whether liquidity has recurring demand. Third, whether the system expands across chains or networks, especially whether it later adds Solana, Ethereum mainnet, or permissioned chains beyond Polygon.

For the market, once a payment protocol touches fees, risk-control responsibility, and merchant underwriting, the room for pure narrative arbitrage quickly narrows. The winning solution will not necessarily be the loudest story, but the one that can actually connect authorization, settlement, compliance, and merchant acceptance.


Timeline

  • April 21, 2026: a16z summarized AI agent infrastructure trends, mentioning x402, MPP, stablecoin settlement, agent identity, and authorization control.
  • May 5, 2026: Google Cloud and Solana Foundation launched Pay.sh, supporting on-chain pay-per-use micropayments for AI agents making API calls.
  • May 26, 2026: Alipay released AI wallet and Token Pay, saying its AI Payment system had completed 300 million AI agent payments.
  • Recently: Mastercard launched Agent Pay for AI, with plans to record AI agent permissions on Polygon for AI agent micropayment use cases.

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