In the autonomous payment ecosystem, AgentPay SDK leads the integration between AI agents and the stablecoin USD1, offering a local infrastructure designed for security and granular controls.
World Liberty Fi has released the AgentPay SDK as an open-source toolkit dedicated to artificial intelligence agents managing money. The launch coincides with the stablecoin USD1, presented as a native settlement asset for autonomous systems.
The toolkit allows developers to create agents capable of executing payments according to programmable policy rules on EVM-compatible networks. Additionally, the software operates entirely on the user’s machine and does not send any data to WLFI servers, preserving privacy and control.
The AgentPay SDK manages payments through four functional layers: a CLI tool, a local signing daemon, a policy engine, and a skill pack. The latter automatically detects development environments and installs in Claude Code, Codex, Cursor, Windsurf, Cline, and Goose.
When an agent initiates a transfer, the skill pack automatically routes the operation to the correct network. For transactions in USD1, the system defaults to Binance Smart Chain, chosen for reduced gas costs and quick finality, following predefined settings without requiring manual intervention from the developer.
Before on-chain transmission, the SDK verifies that the wallet has sufficient USD1 and the BNB token for gas. Additionally, the local policy engine compares each transfer against user-defined spending rules, checking the limit per transaction and the daily cap.
Transaction signing occurs entirely locally via Unix domain socket. The private key is never exposed to the agent, the skill pack, or external services. This architecture keeps custody in the operator’s hands and prevents credentials from traveling over the network.
When the wallet lacks sufficient funds, the AgentPay SDK halts the operation and returns a structured error response. The message includes the wallet address, required assets, chain ID, and a QR code for replenishment.
The agent transmits this information to the user, transforming a failed payment into a recoverable workflow. Additionally, this approach reduces uncertainty for autonomous systems operating in multi-chain contexts, improving overall reliability.
WLFI presented the SDK on X, defining it as “Financial Infrastructure for the Agentic Economy.” According to the team, current artificial intelligence systems still show significant limitations in direct money management, despite advanced reasoning capabilities.
The AgentPay SDK thus integrates a threshold-based approval layer for transactions exceeding set limits. When a transfer surpasses the threshold, the software pauses it and generates a manual approval request; the operator can authorize with a single CLI command, after which the transaction is signed and transmitted.
The stablecoin USD1 is preconfigured on Ethereum and BSC with the contract at address 0x8d0D000Ee44948FC98c9B98A4FA4921476f08B0d. Additionally, native integration with Bitrefill allows agents to purchase gift cards, eSIMs, and prepaid products directly from the execution environment.
The SDK offers over 40 CLI commands dedicated to wallet management, chain switching, and account recovery procedures. Overall, the combination of stablecoin, operational tools, and local policies aims to cover the entire lifecycle of an autonomous payment.
WLFI’s roadmap includes adopting EIP-3009 to enable gasless meta-transactions, eliminating the need for agents to hold native tokens to pay fees. This approach aims to simplify the user experience and reduce operational risk.
Additionally, the team is working on an EIP proposal for “policy-aware” interfaces dedicated to agents and a white paper on AI-managed payment security. In parallel, a plugin ecosystem for third-party extensions is being developed to expand the toolkit’s functionalities.
In subsequent phases, WLFI aims to integrate cross-border payments, connections with DeFi protocols, remittance services, and settlement solutions for institutional clients. Compared to the current focus on EVM single-chain transfers, these extensions aim to cover more complex financial use cases.
Ultimately, the stated goal is to position USD1 as a settlement asset for autonomous agents enabled for large-scale payments, providing programmable and controllable transactional channels directly by the user operator.

