Agentic Payments Won’t Stay Small for Long, Says World Product Engineer

Agentic Payments: If there is one trend quietly taking over the crypto industry, it is agentic payments. The idea of small, autonomous software agents participating in commerce and paying for users is steadily growing and evolving.

This is evident in the rapid rise of the x402 payments standard. In March alone, it processed over 36 million transactions, up sharply from just 10 million in January 2026. The growth is not just fast—it’s compounding.

This momentum is only accelerating, according to Paolo D’Amico, Senior Product Engineer at Tools for Humanity, the Sam Altman-cofounded project behind World, which recently partnered with Coinbase to launch AgentKit.

Paolo explains, “For World, we saw it as a natural next step of what the project was already doing with proof of human. With agents now participating in e-commerce and overall online interactions, the internet needs a way to reason about uniqueness, fairness and access at the human level.”

The Rise of Agentic Payments

From Mastercard and Visa to Coinbase, Stripe, and Polygon, there is hardly a major company today that isn’t working on payments infrastructure.

The scale is already visible: over 40,000 on-chain AI agents are executing transactions, while protocols like x402 have processed more than 100 million payments in just a few months.

Today, these agentic commerce is largely concentrated around digital services. This includes API access, compute, data, and SaaS tools rather than physical goods.

“I believe in the near-term dinner reservations, concert tickets, travel bookings and other online shopping activities will get increasingly executed through agents,” D’Amico says. “Agents will become a general purpose interface for everyday computing tasks.”

At the same time, he is clear that World’s AgentKit is just the beginning.

“Much more than a particular use case, the overall shift is extremely interesting to me. It’s not only about supporting agentic interactions, but about anchoring those interactions to human intent. If I am a restaurant owner, I want to make it as easy as possible for guests to book reservations, but I want to prevent hoarding, re-selling and abuse overall. Beyond AgentKit, we are looking into broader improvements focused on agents at the protocol level, in the next generation of World ID. For example, I am passionate about discovering the right way to empower agents to demonstrate human intent responsibly and securely.

All of this being said, I am personally very excited about my agent booking my travel reservations. I could spend an inordinate amount of time optimizing travel.

Also read: Coinbase x402 Developers on Agentic Commerce

Agentic Payments to Surpass Human Transactions?

Interestingly, many industry leaders, including Jeremy Allaire of Circle, are starting to ask what happens to human transactions as agents take over. Some believe agent-driven activity could soon rival, or even surpass, human volumes.

That shift is already visible. AI agents have executed over 140 million transactions, with an average value of just $0.31 per payment, showing how deeply microtransactions dominate this space .

Paolo D’Amico agrees this shift is real:

“Yes, I think that’s possible, particularly in some categories… Where a human before could only perform a number of these tasks sequentially, they’ll now be able to deploy multiple agents to perform them.”

But he also flags what could slow things down:

“The limiting factors will be primarily around the infrastructure… We will need infrastructure that supports payments, permissions, policy enforcement… If the infrastructure doesn’t mature fast enough, platforms will start blocking agents.”

Also Read: Crypto Market Report Q1

Can AI Agents Ever Handle Billions?

Interestingly, as it a payment payments have evolved as AI agents have continued to be used by people. They have got there has come important and the critical revelation that these Agentic payments are being used only by only for micro level transaction.

AI agents are driving 2.5+ billion microtransactions per day. Across a $46 trillion annual payment flow (stablecoins)

Right now, most agent-driven activity is small—micropayments, low-risk actions.

But That’s not a limitation. It’s a phase, according to Paolo.

Asked whether Agentic payments would ever handle high-value transactions, he says, “I think it will take some time, but I do see that happening. Micro-payments are a natural first step for payments —  they’re  a great way to drive adoption of standards, and to overall grow support across the internet from platforms, merchants and agent tools.

As adoption increases, and particularly other parts of the agentic stack develop, this will become feasible. For example, it’s reasonable to expect a higher degree of trust to perform high-value transactions. This is something where factors like identity come into play. It’s analogous to how high-value transactions occur in the offline world today, there are different requirements and different risk modeling for high-value transactions.

What’s Next

To close, the trajectory from here is becoming clearer. Paolo D’Amico sees three shifts defining the rest of the year:

“First, I think we’ll break out of the demo and proof-of-concept stage to real workflows… and move into production use.”

In other words, this stops being experimental and starts becoming infrastructure.

“Second, I think we’ll see significant developments in the infrastructure realm… new standards, adaptations of existing systems… and broader adoption across internet tooling.”

The rails are still being built, but they’re catching up quickly. And finally, the shift that may matter the most:

“The conversation will shift from capability… to whether an agent should do it, or under which conditions.”

By the end of the year, agentic commerce may no longer feel like a novelty. It may start to look like something much more familiar.

 

Why trust CoinGape: CoinGape has covered the cryptocurrency industry since 2017, aiming to provide informative insights to our readers. Our journalists and analysts bring years of experience in market analysis and blockchain technology to ensure factual accuracy and balanced reporting. By following our Editorial Policy, our writers verify every source, fact-check each story, rely on reputable sources, and attribute quotes and media correctly. We also follow a rigorous Review Methodology when evaluating exchanges and tools. From emerging blockchain projects and coin launches to industry events and technical developments, we cover all facets of the digital asset space with unwavering commitment to timely, relevant information.

Investment disclaimer: The content reflects the author’s personal views and current market conditions. Please conduct your own research before investing in cryptocurrencies, as neither the author nor the publication is responsible for any financial losses.

Ad Disclosure: This site may feature sponsored content and affiliate links. All advertisements are clearly labeled, and ad partners have no influence over our editorial content.

Source: https://coingape.com/block-of-fame/opinion/agentic-payments-wont-stay-small-for-long-says-tools-for-humanitys-paolo-damico/