Perplexity, the AI search startup that’s been quietly carving a path between Google and the new generation of assistant-first tools, is taking a bigger swing at commerce just as the holiday buying season kicks into gear. The company announced this week that it will roll out a free “agentic” shopping product for U.S. users next week — an experience that promises to move people faster from the moment they ask a question to actually completing a purchase.
When Perplexity talks about “agentic” shopping, it’s talking about the assistant doing more of the checkout work for you — not by forcing a one-size-fits-all buy-button, but by letting you complete a purchase directly from an answer in the search experience. “The agentic part is the seamless purchase right from the answer,” Dmitry Shevelenko, Perplexity’s chief business officer, told reporters. The pitch is straightforward: people still want to research, but they also want the friction removed between finding a product and buying it.
Under the hood, Perplexity says the free tool will be smarter about detecting when someone is in shopping mode (versus simply researching) and will personalize results using memory from users’ past searches. The company also plans to let users buy from more than 5,000 merchants via the search experience — a big expansion beyond the limited, paid-only shopping feature the company introduced last year.
PayPal is the checkout partner — and merchants handle the rest
A notable part of this rollout is Perplexity’s partnership with PayPal. Under the new model, PayPal merchants will act as the merchants of record, meaning merchants themselves will handle the purchase, returns and customer service. That’s a shift from Perplexity’s earlier “Buy With Pro” setup, where Perplexity functioned as an intermediary for purchases. PayPal has also said that its buyer-protection policies will apply to purchases made within the Perplexity experience — a reassurance that could matter a lot to shoppers and smaller sellers worrying about chargebacks or disputes.
Michelle Gill, who leads PayPal’s agentic strategy, described the company’s work as building the infrastructure and protections needed as commerce moves onto AI platforms — language that signals PayPal is positioning itself to be the payments plumbing for a new wave of conversational and agent-driven checkout flows.
How this fits into the larger AI-commerce race
Perplexity isn’t alone. OpenAI launched an e-commerce feature called Instant Checkout in September that lets ChatGPT users buy items inside the chat interface, and it quickly partnered with platforms like Etsy and Shopify — then added PayPal in follow-up deals. Google, too, has been folding shopping capabilities into its Gemini and AI modes. In short, every major AI player is testing ways to turn conversational moments into direct transactions.
The differences among these products matter. OpenAI has been explicit that it will take a fee on purchases; Perplexity has so far declined to say whether it will take a cut. How each company structures fees, merchant incentives and discovery tools will shape which merchants sign up and how profitable these channels become.
Why merchants should care (and why some will be cautious)
For merchants, agentic shopping can be an easy path to new customers — but it also rewrites discovery economics. When an AI assistant surfaces a handful of results and then completes a sale in-app, merchants need visibility inside that experience (and a commercial model that makes sense). Perplexity’s decision to make merchants the merchant of record reduces Perplexity’s operational burden, but it also places the work of fulfillment, returns and customer service squarely on sellers’ shoulders. That will favor merchants who already use PayPal and who can absorb or automate post-sale logistics.
Smaller sellers may welcome the customer reach but worry about margins, fees, and the loss of brand control. Larger brands will be watching things like attribution and customer data — who owns the buying signals, and how much of that data flows back to merchants versus staying with the AI platform? Those answers will help decide whether merchants lean into Perplexity or hedge their bets across multiple AI storefronts. (History shows platforms that own the checkout often capture more data and revenue — which is why the details matter.)
What consumers should watch for
If you’re a shopper, a few practical points matter:
- Buyer protection: Perplexity says PayPal buyer protection will apply, which is helpful — but consumers should still confirm protections and read terms for in-app purchases before they hand over money.
- Privacy and data: personalization based on search memory can make recommendations better — and creepier. Check what Perplexity stores, how long it keeps searches, and whether you can opt out of memory-based personalization.
- Price checks: AI summaries are convenient, but they aren’t infallible. Compare price and shipping on the merchant’s site if you care about the absolute best deal.
The revenue question — and the larger game
Perplexity wouldn’t say whether it will take a fee on transactions; OpenAI has been more direct about taking a commission on Instant Checkout. The business models are still being written in real time: subscription revenue, transaction fees, and merchant services are all on the table. How Perplexity chooses to monetize will affect merchant adoption, user trust, and what the product looks like a year from now.
The bigger picture: search, assistants and commerce
We’re watching the slow dissolution of the strict “search then click” model. AI assistants want to compress steps — research, compare, checkout — into a conversational flow. That’s powerful for convenience but raises questions about marketplace fairness (which products get surfaced and why), consumer protections, and where control sits in the commerce stack.
Perplexity’s free agentic shopping product is an important test: can a fast, in-answer checkout coexist with merchant economics and consumer protections? Or will it simply shift the battleground for dollars and data to whichever assistant can lock in the most users (and the most merchant relationships)? Either outcome will change how most of us buy online.
What to expect in the near term
If Perplexity follows the plan, you’ll see the new free shopping option appear in U.S. accounts “next week” after the company’s announcement this week — timed, perhaps deliberately, to catch holiday shopping momentum. Expect to see Perplexity push promotional copy about simplified checkout and personalized recommendations, while merchants and privacy advocates dig into the fine print.
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