Bank Card Payment vs. Stablecoin Payment: Which is More Suitable for AI Agents?
Author: Jack Simison
Compiled by: ChainCatcher
Last Friday, I discussed with a maintainer of OpenClaw at a barbecue party about which payment rails agents should use. The debate lasted about 30 seconds, and he bluntly asserted:
"As long as it's not cryptocurrency, anything goes."
This is not without reason. Previously, after the Moltbook incident and a series of token launches flooded the forums, the OpenClaw Discord community had completely banned any mention of cryptocurrency. Every serious discussion about agent architecture eventually ties back to some token code. Therefore, banning the topic is a reasonable response.
This negative association has led serious non-crypto developers to view "cryptocurrency" as a burden rather than infrastructure. If you launch an AI product in 2026, the last thing you want is for your payment layer to be burdened by speculation.
However, this reflexive rejection obscures an important fact: stablecoins are not speculative tokens. They have no so-called "launch events" and will not go to zero. They serve as a measure of value, allowing settlement without banks, transfer without wire transfers, and each transaction costs only a fraction of a cent.
Peter Steinberger decided to integrate OpenClaw with CreditClaw (a virtual card solution supported by Stripe), which immediately drew criticism from the crypto community. In 2026, many believe that relying on traditional card infrastructure is a step backward, accusing him of being misguided in his construction direction. But he is right for his use case.
Why Choosing Cards is the Right Choice
Steinberger's choice of cards is correct because cards have obvious advantages.
When an agent acts as a proxy for humans, executing tasks that humans want to do but are unwilling to do themselves, card payment rails are indeed the right choice.
The card network is designed with a clear purpose: to allow people to spend their own money. Users open accounts with issuing banks, which provide cards and offer credit limits or deduct balances. The card network routes transactions between the issuing bank and the merchant's acquiring bank. The network and issuing banks are responsible for executing policies, rules, and final settlements. Notably, they use network tokenization technology to replace the original card number with merchant-specific tokens. These tokens serve as secure substitutes for the underlying cards, preventing the tokens from being used elsewhere (which is very helpful for agent control).
These networks are deeply optimized for buyer protection. Chargebacks, fraud reversals, and dispute resolution mechanisms have been refined over decades and operate on a large scale globally. If an agent books a flight and the airline goes bankrupt, the buyer has recourse. If a stolen card is used for shopping, the issuing bank can reverse the fraudulent transaction. If a consumer buys a laptop online but never receives it, they can dispute the charge and recover their funds. This layer of security is fundamental to the operation of the card system.
Another advantage is merchant acceptance. Visa and Mastercard are accepted at over 150 million locations worldwide. In contrast, the acceptance of stablecoins is minimal, primarily limited to crypto-native merchants and specialized payment processors. For any agent performing tasks in the existing economic system (such as booking travel, ordering office supplies, paying SaaS bills, purchasing software licenses), cards are clearly the winner.
Finally, there are consumer incentives: card networks hold a psychological and economic leverage that stablecoins currently lack—consumer rewards. In the U.S. and other mature markets, the "top-of-wallet" status is earned through cash back, airline miles, and loyalty points. These rewards are funded by high interchange fees (typically $0.30 + 2-3%), making this payment rail very expensive. In reality, the card system is "bribing" users to use them instead of other alternatives, especially in high-value transactions.
Recently, some protocols have directly extended the existing structure to support AI agents. The Agent Commerce Protocol (ACP) from Stripe and OpenAI, Visa's Trusted Agent Protocol (TAP), and Mastercard's Agent Pay are all extensions of the card ecosystem aimed at making (agent) automated transactions trustworthy.
ACP focuses on enabling agents to transact through existing merchant payment processes by integrating authentication, authorization, and payment execution into a standardized, merchant- and payment provider-verifiable protocol.
Visa's TAP is a framework designed to work with its Visa Token Service (VTS), allowing merchants to verify that the purchase was initiated by an authorized AI agent representing the user.
Mastercard's Agent Pay also utilizes tokenization and programmable spending controls, allowing issuing banks to bind payment tokens to transaction limits, permission windows, and defined preset usage policies, ensuring that agents do not exceed their limits or intentions.
In practice, these approaches tend to converge on a single model: AI agents use tokenized card credentials for transactions, while the protocol layer verifies the agent's identity and authorization/permissions. Spending limits, permission windows, and other policy controls are enforced by issuing banks, which can directly bind these rules to payment credentials. The result is a system where agents can operate autonomously while still being subject to the same issuing bank controls that manage cards today.
Thus, "just use cards" is the right advice for most agency tasks. If your agent is doing what humans would do, then use the infrastructure humans use.
Cognitive Gap: Tasks Humans Will Never Do
However, agents are not just faster humans. They are a different type of economic participant, which changes what transactions are feasible.
Humans would not fill out a payment form for an API call worth $0.003 because the friction cost exceeds its value. Humans would not approve 1,000 microtransactions per hour. Humans would not continuously rebalance a position every 30 seconds. The reason these transactions do not occur in human commerce is not that they are technically impossible, but because no human is willing to bother.
Agents eliminate this friction. The cognitive burden is reduced to zero. However, eliminating human friction does not equate to eliminating economic friction.
Card rails have a fixed cost floor: about $0.30-$0.50 per transaction, plus 2-3% interchange fees. This floor exists because every layer of the multi-party settlement architecture takes a cut: issuing institutions (banks), acquiring institutions (banks), networks (Visa/Mastercard/Amex), processors (Stripe, Adyen). This cannot be eliminated through engineering means.
Moreover, card fees vary based on card type, merchant category, and transaction volume. An agent making thousands of decisions per hour needs a predictable cost basis.
If there are 1,000 API calls per hour, an agent using card support would incur processing fees of about $300-$500. In contrast, an agent supported by stablecoins using the x402 protocol would incur costs of less than $1-$10 (between Solana and Base chains).
In these new transaction types, the buyer protection model also reverses. Card networks are buyer-centric: sellers bear the costs of fraud protection, chargeback risks, and compliance overhead. Stablecoins are seller-centric: settlement is final, sellers gain certainty, while buyers forfeit recourse.
This reversal is often seen as a disadvantage of stablecoins. However, when certain conditions overlap, it becomes an advantage:
Buyers do not need protection: the transaction amount is extremely small, delivery is instant and verifiable, or payment is voluntary.
The burden of card rails on sellers is high enough to hinder transactions: the minimum fee per transaction exceeds the payment amount, leading to irretrievable losses from chargebacks on consumable digital goods, or sellers simply cannot access traditional payment infrastructure.
(Chargeback losses cost merchants $117 billion annually. Chargeback mechanisms are terrible for digital goods and consumable services. If someone uses $50,000 worth of computing power and then disputes the charge, the computing power has already been consumed. The seller not only bears the cost but also the loss from the chargeback.)
Agents greatly expand the overlapping area of these two conditions. Here are specific application scenarios:
Micropayments. A coding agent pays $0.003 for an API call. Buyers do not need chargeback protection for amounts less than a cent; if the API returns garbage data, they can simply stop calling.
Verifiable digital goods. An agent purchases a dataset or computation result, the quality of which can be checked programmatically within milliseconds. When verification is instant, you do not need chargeback protection. Physical goods require this protection because you have to wait days to know if they are defective. But in most cases, digital goods do not.
Pay-as-you-go services and elastic computing. A $5 computing task is manageable, and the seller can absorb the chargeback risk. But if usage spikes from $5 to $50,000 in a day, delivering $50,000 worth of resources and then facing a fraud dispute becomes a big problem. Stablecoins allow you to settle finally in a high-frequency, low-value manner. Usage can scale, while the seller's exposure to fraud risk does not have to increase.
Long-tail cross-border services. For example, a developer in Lagos offers a niche API that a startup in Berlin wants to use. This seller may not have access to Stripe/Visa (availability is limited in many countries), cannot afford the setup costs for a merchant account, or cannot handle the KYC (Know Your Customer) overhead for a side project.
These are not edge cases. They represent a structurally growing category of commerce that card rails cannot reach. The point here is simple: For agency commerce, cards win; for machine-native transactions that humans will never perform or that card rails will hinder, stablecoins win.
Stablecoin Tech Stack: An Expansion
In the past two years, a complete tech stack supporting agent-native payments has quietly taken shape. It consists of four layers:
First, settlement infrastructure. Card authorization is a multi-hop process: from the merchant's terminal to the acquiring institution, then to the network, and finally to the issuing institution, actual settlement takes T+1 to T+3 days. An agent waiting for card authorization spends several seconds per transaction, and funds remain in limbo for days. Stablecoin transactions settle on EVM chains in just seconds, and on Solana, they are sub-second, providing immediate finality rather than a "processing" state, which is highly beneficial for merchants. In the time it takes to settle a single card payment, an agent can execute thousands of stablecoin transactions.
Second, the payment protocol: x402. x402 is an HTTP-native micropayment protocol that allows agents to pay for API calls using stablecoins. There are no merchant accounts, no card networks, and no acquiring institutions. Coinbase's implementation on Solana processes each transaction at a cost of $0.00025. Since May 2025, over 50 million transactions have been settled across all supported chains. x402 is a good starting point, but I expect new infrastructure solutions to emerge in the near future.
Next is wallet and policy infrastructure. Cards excel in handling permissions, but stablecoins can do so with the help of wallet-layer policy engines. Coinbase's Agentic Wallets (launched in February 2026) implement gasless transactions on the Base chain and have programmable spending limits. Additionally, the policy layer led by @turnkeyhq, @privy, and @safe allows developers to directly encode dynamic whitelists, spending caps, and merchant-level routing rules in the wallet. These safeguards are similar to the card tech stack, ensuring that agents' permissions are constrained by the infrastructure rather than relying on the reliability of large language models (LLMs)/skills/orchestrators themselves.
Finally, the most novel and underutilized part is agent identity: ERC-8004. The "Trustless Agents Standard" (launched in January 2026) is building on-chain agent reputation infrastructure, with 83,000 registered agents across 18 networks in the first few months. Its goal is to achieve agent-native credit scoring, as there is currently no under-collateralized credit on-chain, but I hope that with 8004, this will change.
Tech Scorecard
*(Data sourced from Visa, Stripe, x402, Coinbase, Bitpay, and Solana documentation)
Build for Tasks, Not for Camps
The market has signaled a shift. In February 2026, ACP architect @stripe added support for x402 on the Base chain, effectively bridging agents that natively use cards to stablecoin settlement. They recognize that the future is not "cards vs. cryptocurrency," but rather matching the most suitable payment rail for the task.
The emerging architecture is hybrid:
For transactions that humans would also perform in the existing economy, cards win. Payment rails already exist, merchants accept them, and buyer protection mechanisms are built-in.
For transactions that humans will never perform or that cards cannot handle, stablecoins win. Such as micropayments, pay-as-you-go APIs, self-service, and global long-tail markets.
Stablecoins will not replace traditional payment tech stacks.
Agents will simply route each transaction to the payment rail tailored for them.
*Direct chargeback costs globally range from approximately $25 billion to $33 billion, but the total impact borne by merchants (lost goods, shipping costs, processing fees, fines, operational costs for handling disputes) pushes it up to around $117 billion. Visa is a registered trademark of Visa Inc., and this article is not affiliated with or endorsed by Visa.
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