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Google wants AI agents to handle checkout with Universal Commerce Protocol

Universal Commerce Protocol could be the missing link between AI chatbots and real online shopping.

By
Shubham Sawarkar
Shubham Sawarkar
ByShubham Sawarkar
Editor-in-Chief
I’m a tech enthusiast who loves exploring gadgets, trends, and innovations. With certifications in CISCO Routing & Switching and Windows Server Administration, I bring a sharp...
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Jan 14, 2026, 12:46 PM EST
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Google’s new Universal Commerce Protocol, or UCP, is basically the missing plumbing for AI shopping: a common way for bots, apps, retailers and payment networks to talk to each other so an agent can discover products, check stock, apply loyalty benefits and actually check out without a dozen brittle custom integrations behind the scenes. It is Google’s big swing at standardising “agentic commerce” — the idea that instead of you clicking through pages and forms, an AI agent does the legwork and only nudges you when it is time to confirm what to buy.​

If you strip away the branding, UCP is an open, commerce‑specific language that lets different systems expose what they can do in a way AI agents understand: things like “create a cart,” “calculate shipping,” “apply coupon,” or “finalize payment.” Today, every large retailer already has APIs for this, but they are all slightly different; UCP tries to normalise those capabilities so the same agent that helps you buy running shoes on one site can, in theory, help you book a hotel, reorder pet food or schedule a home installation, without bespoke engineering for each new partner. Think of it as HTTPS for agent‑led shopping: an agreed set of rules and data types so any compatible agent knows how to safely request prices, authenticate a user and complete a transaction on any compatible backend.​

Google has not built this in isolation either, which is why the announcement raised eyebrows across retail and adtech. Shopify, Etsy, Wayfair, Target and Walmart co‑developed the standard, and a who’s‑who of payments and retail — American Express, Mastercard, Visa, Stripe, Adyen, Best Buy, Flipkart, Macy’s, The Home Depot, Zalando and others — are already listed as supporters. For retailers, that endorsement matters because it signals this is not just another closed Google program but something they can influence and, at least on paper, take with them to other AI platforms like Gemini, ChatGPT or Perplexity if those platforms adopt UCP in the future.​

Under the hood, UCP leans heavily on existing building blocks rather than inventing everything from scratch. It is transport‑agnostic, working over familiar tech like REST and JSON‑RPC, and plugs into other agent standards such as Agent Payments Protocol (AP2) for secure payments, Agent2Agent (A2A) for agents talking to each other, and Model Context Protocol (MCP), which is rapidly becoming the de facto way to expose tools to large language models. The idea is that if you already support those pieces, UCP becomes more of a schema and capability layer than a full replatforming, which lowers the barrier to experimentation for engineering teams that are skeptical of yet another “AI standard.”​

In practical terms, the first place shoppers are likely to feel UCP is on Google’s own AI surfaces. Google says UCP will soon power a new checkout flow on eligible product listings in AI Mode in Search and in the Gemini app, letting you buy from participating US retailers without ever hopping out to a separate checkout page. Payments ride on Google Pay and are stored in Google Wallet, with PayPal support on the way, and retailers remain the seller of record, which means they still own fulfillment, returns and the customer relationship even as the AI layer sits in front of everything.​

There is a broader strategic story here, too. Over the past year, Google has been steadily sketching out what it calls the “agentic shopping era”: agent‑assisted checkout, AI‑driven product discovery and now a fully agent‑compatible protocol that spans discovery, purchase and post‑purchase support. At the National Retail Federation 2026 conference, CEO Sundar Pichai pitched this as part of a larger AI platform shift in retail, alongside products like Gemini Enterprise for Customer Experience, which promises to unify search, support and commerce into a single, AI‑orchestrated flow across channels.​

For retailers, the pitch is attractive but nuanced. On the upside, UCP and related tools could reduce abandoned carts by letting shoppers check out the moment intent peaks, inside whatever agent they happen to be using, whether that is a Google surface or a retailer‑branded assistant. Google is also layering in things like Business Agent — an AI sales assistant that sits in Search and answers questions in a brand’s own tone — plus new Merchant Center attributes tuned for conversational queries, and “Direct Offers,” which let advertisers surface targeted discounts inside AI Mode when a shopper looks ready to buy.​

On the downside, the same standardisation that makes life easier for AI agents also raises familiar platform‑power questions. If shopping journeys begin and end inside AI interfaces that intermediate discovery, comparison and checkout, retailers risk losing some direct traffic, some control over merchandising and potentially some margin if they lean too heavily on paid placements to stay visible. Analysts are already debating whether UCP is a foundational protocol that will quietly sit underneath the next decade of commerce, or a well‑timed narrative play to ensure Google is seen as leading in agentic commerce, even as rivals like Amazon, Shopify and Microsoft push their own versions of AI‑native shopping.​

Where this gets especially interesting is outside Google’s walls. Because UCP is published as an open standard with public docs and reference models, nothing stops another AI platform from wiring into the same capabilities for compatible merchants, or a retailer from exposing its catalog and checkout once and letting multiple agents tap into it. That is the long‑term promise: instead of building one integration for Google, another for a retailer’s own app, a third for a chatbot, and bespoke glue for whatever comes next, brands invest in a single, agent‑friendly layer that travels across ecosystems.​

At the same time, open does not automatically mean neutral. Google benefits every time more of the world’s commerce data and checkout flows are expressed in a format its AI systems are optimised to understand, and retailers will watch closely to see how much leverage they gain versus how much dependency they create. Even so, with major retail and payments players already on board and agentic commerce hype running high, UCP is likely to be one of the more important acronyms retailers hear this year — not because shoppers will ever see it, but because it could quietly reshape who controls the rails of AI‑driven shopping.


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