Editorial illustration for: NEAR Protocol Integrates Private USDC Payments for AI Agent Commerce

NEAR Protocol Integrates Private USDC Payments for AI Agent Commerce

NEAR Protocol (NEAR) has integrated USDC (USDC) payments with its Confidential Intents system to enable private on-chain transactions for AI agents, the project’s development team said on May 15. The integration allows autonomous AI agents to make and receive payments without exposing transaction details to third-party observers on the public blockchain.

The move positions NEAR as an early infrastructure layer for what the team describes as agentic commerce, autonomous digital activity where AI systems transact independently on behalf of users.

How Confidential Intents Work

Confidential Intents is a NEAR-native privacy layer that wraps payment instructions in cryptographic proofs before broadcasting them to the network. The system allows a sender to prove to the network that a payment is valid without disclosing the amount, counterparty, or purpose to public chain observers.

This differs from standard on-chain USDC transfers, where every payment amount and wallet address is permanently visible on the public ledger. For AI agents managing subscriptions or paying service providers at regular intervals, public exposure of those payment patterns would disclose operational details that the agent’s operator may want to keep confidential.

USDC is a stablecoin, a cryptocurrency designed to maintain a fixed value against the U.S. dollar, issued by Circle.

Its use in this integration gives AI agents access to a dollar-denominated settlement asset without the volatility of native cryptocurrency tokens. That stability is important for autonomous agents executing commercial transactions, because price swings in the payment token would distort the economic logic of the agent’s decision-making.

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Background

NEAR Protocol launched in 2020 as a sharded Layer-1 blockchain focused on developer accessibility and low transaction fees.

Sharding is a database technique applied to blockchains to split the network into parallel processing lanes, improving throughput. NEAR pivoted toward an AI-first positioning in 2024, rebranding its developer tooling under the NEAR AI umbrella and recruiting teams building AI agents that use blockchain infrastructure for payment and identity functions.

The Confidential Intents feature was introduced in early 2026 as a response to growing developer feedback that public payment rails expose too much commercial data in multi-agent systems.

The USDC pairing announced May 15 is the first stablecoin integration for the system, extending its reach from NEAR-native token payments to dollar-denominated transactions. Prior coverage of payment privacy in the cryptocurrency space has focused primarily on privacy coins such as Monero and Zcash, which encrypt all transactions at the protocol level.

NEAR’s approach differs in that privacy is opt-in at the application layer, applied to specific transaction types rather than to the entire chain.

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The AI Agent Commerce Thesis

The broader premise behind NEAR’s integration is that AI agents will need payment infrastructure that functions autonomously and at scale. A human-operated business can manually approve payments and accept the public visibility of standard bank transfers.

An AI agent running thousands of microtransactions per day across multiple service providers requires a system that handles authorization and privacy programmatically. NEAR is betting that the combination of a stablecoin settlement layer and a native privacy mechanism positions its blockchain as the preferred execution environment for that activity.

Competitors in the AI-agent payment space include projects building on Ethereum (ETH) using layer-2 rollups for speed, and Solana (SOL)-based teams using compressed transactions for low cost.

NEAR’s differentiation rests on the native Confidential Intents design, which requires no external privacy layer or bridging step.

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What Comes Next

The development team has not published a timeline for expanding Confidential Intents to other stablecoins or to non-payment data types such as identity credentials. Whether enterprise and developer adoption follows the integration will depend on tooling availability and whether larger AI platforms choose NEAR as a settlement layer.

The most concrete near-term test is developer uptake in the weeks following the May 15 announcement, which will show in on-chain agent transaction counts on the NEAR network.

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Consulting Editor

Murtuza is a seasoned finance journalist with extensive experience covering cryptocurrencies and blockchain technology. He has contributed to Benzinga and Cointelegraph, among other publications, reporting on emerging trends, the regulatory landscape, and more. Find him at @murtuza_merc on Twitter and mmerchant001 on Telegram. Disclosure: Murtuza holds ATOM, AKT, TIA, INJ, and OSMO.

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