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Tom Wang
Tom Wang

Posted on • Originally published at tomcn.uk

Stripe Tempo Goes Live: AI Agent Payment Rails

Stripe Just Launched Its Own Blockchain — And It Changes Everything for Payment Developers

On 18 March 2026, Stripe-backed Tempo went live on mainnet, bringing a payments-optimised blockchain into production alongside a new open standard: the Machine Payments Protocol (MPP). For fintech developers and crypto payment engineers, this is a watershed moment. The company that processes over $1 trillion in annual payment volume is now building its own settlement layer — purpose-built for stablecoins and AI agent transactions.

And Stripe is not alone. Circle launched USDC Nanopayments on testnet the same month, enabling gas-free micro-transfers down to $0.000001. The race to become the default payment rail for autonomous AI agents is officially underway.

What Is Tempo and Why Does It Matter?

Tempo is a payments-focused blockchain co-developed by Stripe and Paradigm. Unlike general-purpose chains optimised for DeFi or NFTs, Tempo is engineered specifically for high-throughput stablecoin settlement. The numbers speak for themselves:

  • 100,000 transactions per second — orders of magnitude beyond Ethereum's base layer
  • Sub-second finality — critical for real-time payment confirmation
  • Native stablecoin support — built from the ground up for dollar-pegged assets

The design partners read like a who's who of global finance and technology: Visa, Mastercard, Deutsche Bank, Standard Chartered, Revolut, Nubank, Shopify, OpenAI, Anthropic, Ramp, and DoorDash. When both card networks and AI labs are building on the same infrastructure, the signal is clear — this is where payment settlement is heading.

The Machine Payments Protocol: OAuth for Money

The real innovation is not the blockchain itself but what runs on top of it. MPP introduces a concept called "sessions" — essentially OAuth for money. Here is how it works:

  1. An AI agent authenticates and sets a spending cap
  2. The agent streams micropayments continuously as it consumes services (data, compute, API calls)
  3. Payments settle in stablecoins without human approval at each step
  4. Service providers receive real-time confirmation of payment

This is fundamentally different from traditional payment flows. There is no checkout page, no card authorisation, no 3D Secure challenge. The agent pays as it goes, much like how a developer's API calls are metered and billed — except settlement happens in real time on-chain.

Visa contributed to the MPP specification, developing standards for letting agents pay with traditional credit or debit cards alongside stablecoin rails. This hybrid approach — crypto-native settlement with card network fallback — is precisely the kind of infrastructure that payment developers need to understand.


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About the Author

I'm Tom Wang, a Founding Engineer at Radom building crypto payment infrastructure, Open Banking integrations, and cross-border payout systems with Rust and Go. Based in London, UK.

Currently open to new opportunities in fintech, crypto payments, and AI agent engineering.

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