Alchemy AgentCard enables Visa payments in AI agent trading

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Alchemy AgentCard enables Visa payments in AI agent trading

TL;DR

  • Powered by Alchemy, AgentCard positions itself as a virtual card and identity layer for AI agents.
  • The product allows agents to make purchases online, while users set limits and monitor spending.
  • The launch combines cryptocurrency-style programmable payments with the more familiar rails of card networks.
  • The bigger story is the race to determine how autonomous software agents will pay for goods, services and digital infrastructure.

AI agents get a checkout layer

AgentCard, Alchemy’s AI-powered agent payments product, is entering one of the weirder but increasingly practical corners of digital commerce: letting autonomous software pay for things online. The product presents itself as a virtual card layer for agents, giving them the ability to make purchases while users set spending limits and track activity in real time.

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The idea sounds futuristic, but the problem is immediate. AI agents can now search, schedule, book and execute tasks in digital services. The missing piece is payment. If an agent can compare flights, renew a software subscription, or purchase cloud credits, they still need a secure way to complete transactions without handing over unrestricted access to a human’s financial accounts.

Why cards still matter

Crypto payment standards such as x402 are gaining popularity because they enable software to directly pay for online resources, especially in machine-to-machine environments. However, the broader Internet still relies heavily on cards, merchant categories, fraud controls, and familiar checkout systems. AgentCard sits at this intersection: it capitalizes on programmable finance while giving agents payment credentials that can work in regular online commerce.

This matters because the agent economy will not replace existing payments. More likely, it will start with connecting autonomous agents to rail services already accepted by vendors. For many companies, a virtual card with user-defined limits is easier to understand than a completely up-to-date cryptocurrency payment flow.

The controls are the product

The most significant feature is not simply how much an agent can spend. The idea is that the agent can spend money in a controlled box. AgentCard highlights spending limits, real-time tracking, and the ability to limit how and where you exploit your card. These checks are necessary because autonomous payments create a up-to-date version of an elderly problem: convenience is only useful if users can trust the system not to run away with their money.

Crypto infrastructure can also play a role here. Wallet-based identity, programmable rules, and payment standards can give developers more granular control over what an agent can do. The challenge is to turn these controls into a product that is actually understandable to everyday users and businesses.

A up-to-date payment race is beginning

AgentCard is part of a broader effort by payment networks, crypto infrastructure companies and artificial intelligence companies to define agent commerce. Visa is working on shrewd commerce, Mastercard has its own agent payments efforts, and cryptocurrency developers are trying to enable low-friction machine payments for APIs, content, and software services.

For Alchemy, the opportunity is to create the infrastructure for this up-to-date layer. If AI agents become regular business entities, they will need identities, wallets, spending rules, payment credentials, and developer tools. AgentCard is an early attempt to combine these elements into something practical. The question now is whether users will trust agents enough to let them spend money, and whether sellers will welcome the up-to-date class of automated buyers.

This article was written by the News Desk and edited by Samuel Rae.

This report is based on information from Alchemy. On Alchemy

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