15 Payment Trends That Will Redefine How Commerce Works in 2026
How payments became strategic infrastructure and what that means for merchants in 2026.

Payments have long moved beyond the role of background utility. They now sit at the center of how businesses manage cost, risk, customer experience, and growth. That shift has been building for years, but 2026 marks a clear inflection point.
Advances in AI, the expansion of real time payment rails, evolving regulation, and changing consumer behavior are forcing merchants to take a harder look at how payments fit into their broader technology and financial strategies.
What was once tactical is now structural. The focus is less about any single solution and more about flexibility, resilience, visibility, and control across increasingly complex environments.
What follows is a view of that transformation, drawn from what we're seeing firsthand and informed by perspectives from Nuvei leaders across AI, product, risk, treasury, partnerships, travel, and global payments strategy.
Agent-mediated commerce becomes real
In 2026, agentic commerce stops being theoretical. While fully autonomous payments remain limited, agent-assisted flows where humans define intent and AI executes within guardrails are moving into real production environments. This shift is gradual, but meaningful.
The first visible change will be in how discovery happens. Consumer agents are increasingly acting as the front door to commerce, influencing which brands are surfaced, how offers are compared, and when a purchase is initiated. As that happens, payments infrastructure must evolve to support agent-driven journeys, enabling agents to price, authenticate, select payment methods, and complete transactions safely and reliably.
To remain competitive, merchants will need to rethink product structure, pricing transparency, and checkout design so they are legible not just to humans, but to agents acting on their behalf. Behind the scenes, this will drive changes in how trust, authentication, authorization, and risk are handled, as payments systems adapt to distinguish legitimate agents from fraud while supporting faster, more automated execution.

Checkout becomes a revenue system
Merchants are increasingly measuring checkout decisions the same way they measure pricing or inventory decisions. Every additional step, authentication flow, or payment option has a measurable impact on conversion and lifetime value.
In 2026, checkout is no longer a static page. It functions as a living system that adapts in real time to customer behavior, device context, risk signals, and payment performance, especially in high-consideration purchases like travel where abandonment is costly.
Those that continuously test and optimize checkout as a revenue system rather than a UX exercise will see compounding gains, particularly at scale.

Network-led checkout moves from experiment to expectation
Network-led checkout experiences such as Paze and Konek will not change behavior overnight.
But neither did 3DS.
In 2026, these experiences continue moving from novel to expected as consumers grow more comfortable with network-enabled identity, tokenization, and authentication. The value is not just speed, but familiarity and trust at the moment of payment.
Once adoption reaches a tipping point, these experiences quietly reset expectations across the market, influencing what consumers consider normal and acceptable.

Orchestration becomes a merchant-led requirement
Large merchants are no longer debating whether they need orchestration capabilities across their payment environments. They now view it as table stakes for scale and resilience.
Multi-acquirer routing, smart retries, and approval optimization are becoming baseline expectations. In 2026, merchants expect payment partners to operate effectively within these architectures and support their optimization goals.

Resilience and financial visibility take priority
In travel, payment strategies are evolving beyond efficiency into a broader focus on resilience and financial control. The cost of failed transactions, settlement gaps, or limited visibility is simply too high at scale.
Airlines and global travel brands are deliberately designing payment environments that operate across multiple gateways, acquirers, and payment methods. While this enables flexibility and localisation, it also increases operational and financial complexity.
In 2026, reconciliation, settlement transparency, and financial visibility are no longer back-office concerns. They are becoming foundational requirements for confidence, accuracy, and scale.

B2B payments enter a cost-control era
As B2B payments continue to digitize, cost is moving decisively to the center of the conversation. Card usage is increasing because it brings speed, automation, and scale, but it also introduces higher acceptance costs. Surcharging is gaining traction not because businesses want to add friction, but because digitization is accelerating and card economics are becoming harder to absorb.
In 2026, Visa’s Commercial Enhanced Data Program (CEDP) reinforces this shift. While richer data improves transparency and reporting, it also makes card acceptance costs more explicit and, in some cases, more difficult to manage. As a result, businesses are looking for clearer levers to control economics, including compliant surcharging and more deliberate use of alternative payment rails.
At the same time, demand is accelerating for both card and integrated bank transfer workflows, including ACH, SEPA, and CAD EFT, to be embedded directly into suppliers’ existing systems of record. Businesses want fewer manual steps, less handling of sensitive payment data, and seamless reconciliation across payment types. In 2026, the most effective B2B payment strategies will not choose between cards and bank transfers. They will embed both intelligently, using each where it delivers the best economic and operational outcome.

Card economics shift power back to merchants
The expected Visa and Mastercard settlement in late 2026 will fundamentally change card acceptance in the U.S. For the first time at scale, merchants will have more flexibility in how they manage card economics.
Real time cost prediction and rules-based decisioning at authorization will become critical.
Merchants will increasingly decide whether to accept, surcharge, steer, or route transactions based on economics and margin impact.
Preparation will matter. Those merchants that invest early in visibility and control will be better positioned when these changes take effect.

Open Banking and Real Time Payments become operational
Real-time payments are not new. What is new is how practical and accessible they are becoming, particularly in the U.S.
Industries like gaming demand speed, certainty, and irrevocability. In 2026, Request to Pay and bank transfer rails gain traction as merchants look to reduce cost, improve cash flow, and limit fraud exposure.
This marks a shift from experimentation to operational use at scale.

Neobanks expose the cost of legacy card models
Neobanks are increasingly leveraging real-time payment rails and local payment methods to challenge traditional card economics. Built on modern infrastructure and unconstrained by legacy systems, they can experiment more aggressively with how money moves and how value is delivered to consumers.
With loyal, digital native customer bases and access to cheaper rails, neobanks in 2026 are testing long held assumptions around interchange, acceptance costs, settlement speed, and even what consumers expect from a payment experience. Faster access to funds, lower or more transparent fees, and seamless in-app experiences are reshaping perceptions of what is “normal” in everyday payments.
As consumers grow more comfortable with non-card payment flows through neobank experiences, their expectations carry over to other merchants and channels. In parallel, merchants pay closer attention to cost structures and question whether card-based models always make sense for every transaction.
In 2026, this dynamic will continue to influence how both consumers and merchants think about value in payments.
While cards will remain critical, the dominance of traditional card economics will face sustained pressure as alternatives prove they can deliver speed, trust, and convenience at a lower cost.

Stablecoins redefine capital strategy and balance-sheet intelligence
By 2026, stablecoins will move beyond payments infrastructure and into the core of how enterprises think about capital itself. For finance leaders, the shift is less about transaction speed and more about control, timing, and balance-sheet efficiency.
As regulatory clarity improves, stablecoins will be increasingly treated as programmable cash equivalents that can sit alongside traditional treasury instruments. This allows enterprises to actively manage liquidity across time zones and business units, shorten settlement cycles, and improve cash forecasting with far greater precision.
More importantly, stablecoins will enable capital to be deployed and rebalanced dynamically, rather than sitting idle due to legacy settlement windows or batch-based banking processes. Liquidity becomes something that can be optimized in real time, not reconciled after the fact.
Over time, this changes the financial operating model itself. Payments, treasury, and capital management begin to converge, not operationally but strategically, as capital becomes more continuous, responsive, and intentional.

Local payment methods still decide global growth
Despite the scale of global platforms, payments remain deeply local. Consumers continue to trust familiar methods such as bank transfers, wallets, and regional schemes, and that trust plays a direct role in whether a transaction is completed or abandoned.
In 2026, the challenge for merchants is no longer simply adding local payment methods. It is choosing the right ones. Offering too few local payment methods limits market reach, reduces conversion, and can signal a lack of local credibility. At the same time, offering too many options can overwhelm customers, creating decision fatigue, choice regret, and ultimately dissatisfaction at checkout.
The most effective global strategies strike a balance. They are informed by data, market context, and customer behavior, surfacing the most relevant payment options for each region and use case rather than presenting a long, undifferentiated list. Localization becomes a matter of precision, not proliferation.
As merchants expand into new markets, this approach increasingly separates leaders from laggards. Localization is no longer an optimization layered on late in the process. It is a prerequisite for trust, conversion, and sustainable growth from day one.

Payments data becomes business intelligence
Every transaction tells a story, but in 2026 far more companies will start listening to what that story is actually saying. Payments data is no longer just a record of what happened. It is becoming one of the most accurate, real-time signals of customer behavior, operational friction, and market performance.
As merchants operate across more geographies, payment methods, and channels, traditional analytics often lag behind reality. Payments data, by contrast, reflects real behavior at the moment of decision. In 2026, it will increasingly inform pricing strategies, personalization, approval optimization, fraud decisions, and where and how businesses choose to expand.
What changes is not just access to data, but how it is used. Leading organizations are moving from retrospective reporting to forward-looking insight. They are using payment performance to understand where customers drop out, which issuers underperform, how local preferences shift, and where cost and friction quietly erode margins.
The gap between companies that simply collect payments data and those that operationalize it will widen quickly. Those that can turn transaction-level insight into action will move faster, make better decisions, and adapt more confidently in volatile markets.

New European payment methods face the adoption test
New payment methods such as Wero and Revolut Pay are attracting significant attention across Europe, backed by strong brands, large user bases, and ambitious rollout plans. But in payments, visibility and adoption are not the same thing.
Merchants are watching these developments closely, not because of press coverage or consortium backing, but because they want evidence of real consumer behavior at checkout.
History has shown repeatedly that changing how consumers pay is hard, even for well-funded players with broad distribution. Familiarity, trust, and habit remain powerful forces, particularly in markets where existing local payment methods already work well.
In 2026, the real test for new European payment methods will be whether they can demonstrate sustained usage, not just initial activation. That means proving they improve conversion, reduce friction, or lower costs in ways that are tangible for both consumers and merchants. Without clear benefits at the point of payment, novelty fades quickly.
From a customer experience perspective, success will depend on how naturally these methods fit into existing journeys. Payments that require consumers to change behavior without offering meaningful upside rarely scale. Merchants will follow what customers actually use, not what generates the most headlines.

Stablecoins become the operating layer for global treasury
In 2026, stablecoins will increasingly move from experimental payment rails into core components of corporate treasury management, particularly for companies operating across multiple jurisdictions.
Rather than relying on fragmented correspondent banking networks, enterprises are using stablecoins to centralize liquidity while maintaining local flexibility. Funds can move instantly across borders on-chain, then be off-ramped into local fiat currencies through domestic payment rails when needed, reducing cost, complexity, and opacity.
Beyond speed, stablecoins introduce new options for working capital efficiency. Enterprises are beginning to explore bank-less yield opportunities on idle funds without sacrificing liquidity or operational control. As regulatory frameworks mature in key markets, confidence in using stablecoins as day-to-day treasury tools continues to accelerate.
This shift simplifies treasury operations. Stablecoins allow payments, liquidity management, and settlement to operate as a single, continuous flow, rather than disconnected processes spread across multiple providers and timelines.

Compliance becomes an operating advantage
In 2026, compliance will no longer be viewed as a constraint on growth. It will increasingly be recognized as an operating advantage for payments companies and merchants that want to move faster, enter new markets with confidence, and scale responsibly.
As regulatory expectations expand across payments, crypto, data protection, and financial crime, businesses are shifting away from reactive, manual compliance models. Instead, they are embedding compliance directly into operating processes, product design, and decisioning workflows. This allows compliance teams to support growth in real time rather than slowing it down after the fact.
For merchants, this shift matters because regulatory clarity and consistency reduce uncertainty. Faster onboarding, clearer risk decisions, and fewer disruptions become possible when compliance is built into the foundation of payment operations rather than layered on top.
In 2026, the strongest compliance functions will not be the most restrictive. They will be the most integrated, data-driven, and collaborative, enabling the business to move with speed while maintaining trust with regulators, partners, and customers.















