Four Malaysian Banks Join Visa's AI Payment Testing Programme
Author Avatar

Visa has launched Visa Agentic Ready, a programme designed to help banks test and prepare for AI-initiated payments, as part of a wider Asia Pacific rollout announced on 6 May 2026. In Malaysia, Alliance Bank Malaysia Berhad, CIMB Bank Berhad, Hong Leong Bank, and Maybank are among the first issuers globally to join the programme.

The Shift Toward Automated Payments

Agentic commerce refers to a model where AI systems act on a user’s behalf to complete purchases, rather than the user manually initiating each transaction. An AI assistant could, for example, book a flight, order groceries, or renew a subscription automatically based on a user’s preferences and permissions, with payment completed without the user needing to tap or confirm each time.

This is not entirely new territory for Malaysia. Earlier this year, Mastercard completed a similar pilot with CIMB and RHB, where an AI agent arranged and paid for a ride from Kuala Lumpur International Airport to KL Sentral. Visa’s programme takes a broader approach, focusing on preparing issuers across the ecosystem to handle these transaction types at scale.

Inside The Visa Agentic Ready Programme

Visa Agentic Ready provides a structured, production-grade testing environment where banks can experience how agent-initiated transactions work in practice before they become mainstream. The programme uses Visa’s existing network capabilities, including tokenisation, identity verification, and risk controls, to test how trusted agent-initiated payments could be enabled across different use cases.

The focus in this first phase is on issuers rather than merchants, giving banks a structured way to assess their readiness and build confidence in the new payment model. Additional partners from merchant and ecosystem enabler categories are expected to join as the programme expands.

What This Means For Consumers

For everyday users, agentic payments are not yet available. The programme is a preparatory step, not a consumer-facing product launch. However, the involvement of four of Malaysia’s major banks signals that the underlying infrastructure is being actively built and tested.

The key question for consumers will be around control. Visa has emphasised that the programme is designed to ensure consumers remain firmly in charge of how and when payments are made, with trust, security, and consumer control built into the framework. How that translates into practical settings, such as spending limits, approval requirements, and the ability to review or reverse agent-initiated transactions, will become clearer as the technology matures and moves toward wider deployment.

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for the latest money tips and updates.

0 0 votes
Article Rating
SHARE

Comments (0)

Subscribe
Notify of

0 Comments
Most Viewed Articles
Post Image
Personal Finance News
Petrol Price Malaysia Live Updates (RON95, RON97 & Diesel)
RinggitPlus
- 8th July 2026
We provide weekly updates on every Friday at 5pm on the prices of RON95, RON97 and Diesel in Malaysia and a chart that shows the movement of fuel prices across a 6-week period. Bookmark this page now!
Post Image
Personal Finance News
Google AI Ultra Gets A Lower Starting Price
Iman Aminuddin
- 22nd May 2026
Following announcements made during Google I/O 2026, Google has restructured its AI subscription lineup by introducing a new […]
Post Image
Personal Finance News
KTMB’s 30% Rail Discount Has Been Extended To 14 May
Iman Aminuddin
- 4th May 2026
The 30% discount under the Madani30 promotional code for Keretapi Tanah Melayu Bhd’s (KTMB) Electric Train Service (ETS) […]
Post Image
Personal Finance News
Tenaga Nasional Berhad Turns To AI To Run A Smarter, More Reliable Power Grid
Christina Chandra
- 19th May 2026
Tenaga Nasional Berhad (TNB) is deploying artificial intelligence (AI) across its electricity network to detect faults earlier, route […]

Related articles

Related Posts Image
Related Posts Image
Related Posts Image
Related Posts Image