On June 10, Visa connected its payment network to ChatGPT. An agent can now recommend a product, initiate a purchase, and complete a Visa transaction on a user's behalf. What deserves attention is everything Visa built around the transaction before letting it happen.
Spending limits. Required approval steps. Merchant-category restrictions. Tokenized credentials. Fraud monitoring tuned for a new kind of actor. None of this is afterthought. These are the conditions Visa established before an agent could touch money.
Then there's the dispute language. Visa's chief product and strategy officer described a new category of problem: cases where the consumer intended the purchase, the merchant processed it correctly, but "something happened in the middle that caused a problem." That middle is the agent. Visa is already naming a liability surface that most other domains haven't acknowledged exists.
Payments have a structural advantage here: they've always had to answer a specific question after the fact. Was this transaction authorized, and if not, who pays? Chargebacks are structured complaints that demand structured records. The entire infrastructure of card networks evolved to produce those records. When agents enter the picture, the same pressure applies. You can't wave away a disputed charge with a log file.
So the accountability furniture arrives early. Last October, Visa announced a Trusted Agent Protocol developed with Cloudflare and supported by Microsoft, Shopify, and Adyen. The goal: help merchants distinguish registered, certified agents from bots. Mastercard's Agent Pay works a parallel track with registered agent identities and enhanced tokenization. The Agentic Commerce Protocol introduces allowance fields and risk signals at the transaction level.
Each mechanism addresses a different layer of what standing actually requires. Mandate: the user set spending limits and approved merchant categories. Recognition: the merchant can verify the agent is registered and certified. Evidence: the transaction produces records that survive a dispute. Recovery: there's a defined path for contesting what happened, including the new "something in the middle" category.
There's plenty we don't know yet. The Visa/ChatGPT integration launched three weeks ago. There's no public data on merchant adoption rates, dispute filings, or whether the approval steps feel natural in practice. Visa has said most early transactions will keep humans in the loop, notifying consumers to approve the actual purchase. The furniture is built. Whether it holds weight under real dispute volume remains open.
But the pattern is legible. Payments are building standing for agents because the alternative is unmanageable. When money moves, someone will eventually ask who authorized it. The system that can answer cleanly gets to keep operating. The one that can't gets litigated into a shape it didn't choose. This Independence Day weekend, some purchases might be the first where an agent handled the whole transaction. When something goes wrong, the question that matters is whether there's a clean answer waiting.

