Updated 1 hour ago
OpenAI and Visa Partner to Let AI Agents Make Purchases

Agentic Commerce

OpenAI and Visa Partner to Let AI Agents Make Purchases

OpenAI and Visa announced a partnership enabling AI agents to make purchases on behalf of users through ChatGPT, marking the most significant infrastructure play yet for autonomous AI‑driven commerce.

AI Agents Get a Credit Card

OpenAI and Visa announced a partnership on June 10 that will let AI agents make purchases on behalf of users through ChatGPT and other OpenAI platforms. The integration connects Visa's global payment network directly into OpenAI's ecosystem, allowing developers and merchants to accept agent‑initiated transactions with the same security infrastructure that powers Visa's 300 billion annual transactions, according to Bloomberg.

In practical terms, a user could tell ChatGPT to order paper towels or pay a recurring bill — and the AI agent would handle the transaction within user‑defined guardrails. The move marks the most significant infrastructure commitment yet to agentic commerce, where AI agents move from discovery and recommendation to completing purchases autonomously.

How the Payment Infrastructure Works

The partnership is built on Visa Intelligent Commerce, a program launched in April 2025 that opens Visa's network rails to developers building AI agents for commerce. Transactions use tokenized Visa credentials — replacing sensitive card data with secure network tokens bound to specific agents and use cases — with real‑time authorization and continuous fraud monitoring, according to Visa.

Each agent‑initiated transaction operates within clearly defined user permissions: spending limits, merchant category restrictions, and required approval thresholds. This means an agent can be told "only buy groceries under $50 at these three stores" — and the payment infrastructure enforces those rules at the network level, not just the application level.

  • Tokenized credentials Sensitive card data replaced with network tokens bound to specific agents and use cases
  • Spending limits Per‑transaction and per‑category caps set by the user before the agent acts
  • Merchant restrictions Agents can be restricted to approved merchant categories or specific retailers
  • Real‑time auth Every transaction authorized in real time with Visa's existing fraud monitoring

Codex Integration and Enterprise Workflows

Beyond consumer purchases, the partnership also explores enterprise applications built on Codex, OpenAI's coding agent, according to PYMNTS. The companies intend to embed payment primitives and trusted agent identity signals into developer‑focused experiences — meaning Codex could eventually handle procurement, invoicing, reconciliation, and payment execution within automated business workflows.

"By integrating with Visa Intelligent Commerce, we're building the infrastructure for secure, transparent, and user‑controlled agentic transactions, helping people do more with AI agents while maintaining confidence that payments are being handled safely and securely," Marco Mahrus, OpenAI's Head of Partnerships for Commerce, said in a statement to.3

From Instant Checkout to Network‑Level Integration

The Visa partnership represents a more ambitious approach than OpenAI's earlier payment experiments. In March 2026, OpenAI discontinued Instant Checkout, a simpler ChatGPT payment feature, after just six months, shifting instead to working with retailers on dedicated apps within ChatGPT, according to Finextra.

"AI will transform commerce more profoundly than the internet or mobile technology ever did. As AI agents become active participants in the economy, Visa's focus is to ensure transactions are trusted, secure, and seamless," Jack Forestell, Visa's Chief Product and Strategy Officer, said in the 2.

"AI will transform commerce more profoundly than the internet or mobile technology ever did. As AI agents become active participants in the economy, Visa's focus is to ensure transactions are trusted, secure, and seamless."

Jack Forestell - Chief Product and Strategy Officer, Visa

The Competitive Landscape: Everyone Wants Agent Payments

Visa and OpenAI are not alone in pursuing agentic commerce. Mastercard launched its own agentic AI payments tools in October 2025. Stripe partnered with OpenAI on ChatGPT payments in September 2025. Both Visa and Mastercard have been recruiting banks across the UK and Europe for AI payments trials, as the financial infrastructure layer races to be the rails on which autonomous AI agents run.

"The organizations that succeed in agentic commerce will not simply deliver smarter AI. They will deliver confidence," Forestell added in the 2. The emphasis on trust and security infrastructure — rather than just AI capability — signals that payments companies see their existing networks as a moat against pure‑play AI competitors who might otherwise commoditize the transaction layer.

What This Means for AI Builders

For developers building AI agents, the Visa-OpenAI partnership provides a clear path to monetization: agents that can discover, recommend, and now pay for products create a complete commerce loop. The developer tooling angle — embedding payment primitives into Codex — suggests OpenAI sees agentic commerce as a platform feature, not just a consumer convenience.

The partnership also raises the bar for agent security. With Visa's network‑level enforcement of spending limits and merchant restrictions, developers get a built‑in compliance layer — but also lose some flexibility compared to building custom payment flows. The tradeoff is clear: faster time‑to‑market for agentic commerce features, but within Visa's controlled infrastructure. For startups building AI shopping agents, this partnership may define the default payment stack for the next generation of commerce applications.

Sources

  1. 1.Bloomberg(bloomberg.com)
  2. 2.Visa(corporate.visa.com)
  3. 3.PYMNTS(pymnts.com)
  4. 4.Finextra(finextra.com)

Share this article

PostShare

More on This Story

Related News