AI agents are getting a more capable transaction framework through a collaboration between Amazon Web Services, Coinbase, and Stripe.
Amazon Bedrock AgentCore Payments is AWS’s new suite of features designed to let AI agents instantly access and pay for services like web content and APIs. Â
On the payments side, Stripe and Coinbase will each provide developers a wallet that can be funded with either stablecoins or fiat. AWS also said it is exploring support for AI agents to transact using virtual Visa and Mastercard rails.
The goal is to build an end-to-end ecosystem where developers can focus on building agents, rather than managing payment flows.
Removing Friction from Micropayments
This announcement follows closely on the heels of a similar effort from Google Cloud and blockchain ecosystem Solana, which recently launched a similar payments gateway.
Both approaches are targeting a long-standing friction point for AI agents: payments are still designed for humans. Today, if an agent operating in systems like ChatGPT or Claude needs to complete a transaction, it often has to go through account creation, authentication, or subscription flows built for people rather than automated systems.
The new frameworks aim to remove that friction, opening the door for AI agents to make small, frequent payments and even micropayments directly. One key difference is that AWS supports a broader mix of payment types, while Google Cloud’s initial version focuses primarily on stablecoin-based transactions.
The First Step Toward Agentic Commerce
These developments mark an early but important step toward a more automated commerce environment. Coinbase and Stripe continue to play central roles in shaping how these systems operate.
Both firms have contributed to emerging technical standards such as the x402 protocol (co-developed with Coinbase involvement) and the Machine Payments Protocol associated with Stripe-backed infrastructure projects. These efforts help establish common rules that make it easier for different agent systems and payment networks to interoperate.
That said, micropayments are only the starting point. AWS has suggested that as they systems mature, agents will likely move from transacting with each other to booking flights, reserving hotels, and making consumer purchases on behalf of users.


