Klarna backs Google UCP to power AI agent payments


Klarna aims to address the lack of interoperability between conversational AI agents and backend payment systems by backing Google’s Universal Commerce Protocol (UCP), an open standard designed to unify how AI agents discover products and execute transactions.

The partnership, which also sees Klarna supporting Google’s Agent Payments Protocol (AP2), places the Swedish fintech firm among the early payment providers to back a standardised framework for automated shopping.

The interoperability problem with AI agent payments

Current implementations of AI commerce often function as walled gardens. An AI agent on one platform typically requires a custom integration to communicate with a merchant’s inventory system, and yet another to process payments. This integration complexity inflates development costs and limits the reach of automated shopping tools.

Google’s UCP attempts to solve this by providing a standardised interface for the entire shopping lifecycle, from discovery and purchase to post-purchase support. Rather than building unique connectors for every AI platform, merchants and payment providers can interact through a unified standard.

David Sykes, Chief Commercial Officer at Klarna, states that as AI-driven shopping evolves, the underlying infrastructure must rely on openness, trust, and transparency. “Supporting UCP is part of Klarna’s broader work with Google to help define responsible, interoperable standards that support the future of shopping,” he explains.

Standardising the transaction layer

By integrating with UCP, Klarna allows its technology – including flexible payment options and real-time decisioning – to function within these AI agent environments. This removes the need for hardcoded platform-specific payment logic. Open standards provide a framework for the industry to explore how discovery, shopping, and payments work together across AI-powered environments.

The implications extend to how transactions settle. Klarna’s support for AP2 complements the UCP integration, helping advance an ecosystem where trusted payment options work across AI-powered checkout experiences. This combination aims to reduce the friction of users handing off a purchase decision to an automated agent.

“Open standards like UCP are essential to making AI-powered commerce practical at scale,” said Ashish Gupta, VP/GM of Merchant Shopping at Google. “Klarna’s support for UCP reflects the kind of cross-industry collaboration needed to build interoperable commerce experiences that expand choice while maintaining security.”

Adoption of Google’s UCP by Klarna is part of a broader shift

For retail and fintech leaders, the adoption of UCP by players like Klarna suggests a requirement to rethink commerce architecture. The shift implies that future payments may increasingly come through sources where the buyer interface is an AI agent rather than a branded storefront.

Implementing UCP generally does not require a complete re-platforming but does demand rigorous data hygiene. Because agents rely on structured data to manage transactions, the accuracy of product feeds and inventory levels becomes an operational priority.

Furthermore, the model maintains a focus on trust. Klarna’s technology provides upfront terms designed to build trust at checkout. As agent-led commerce develops, maintaining clear decisioning logic and transparency remains a priority for risk management.

The convergence of Klarna’s payment rails with Google’s open protocols offers a practical template for reducing the friction of using AI agents for commerce. The value lies in the efficiency of a standardised integration layer that reduces the technical debt associated with maintaining multiple sales channels. Success will likely depend on the ability to expose business logic and inventory data through these open standards.

See also: How SAP is modernising HMRC’s tax infrastructure with AI

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