Thomas Nedjar
All apps
E-commerce

The UCP protocol, six months on: what the data already says about agentic commerce

Publié le 24 June 2026

When Google launched UCP in January, I greeted it with the wariness that fourteen years of SEO and GEO have taught me. Six months later, I’m changing my mind, because the mechanism holds and the first numbers are following.

What UCP does, simply

UCP (Universal Commerce Protocol) is an open standard that lets an AI like Gemini or Google’s AI Mode buy directly from a merchant. The agent understands the request, builds the cart, applies the offers and settles the purchase without the person leaving the interface, and the merchant keeps control of its sales and its customers. In May, Google layered Universal Cart on top, an AI-driven cart already live in Search and Gemini in the United States.

Three standards, three layers (not rivals)
A single purchase can rely on all three at once.
UCP ACP AP2
Role Discovery, cart, checkout, order Payment execution inside the AI Authorization: proving the user’s consent
Backed by Google + Shopify OpenAI + Stripe Initiated by Google, governed by the FIDO Alliance
Surface AI Mode, Gemini ChatGPT Cross-cutting (under the hood)
Governance Open coalition (Apache 2.0) OpenAI + Stripe FIDO Alliance (60+ organizations)
Status (June 2026) Rolling out, Universal Cart live in the US In-chat checkout discontinued March 2026; the protocol survives Adopted as the authorization layer
Indicative cost ~3.2% (processor fees, no platform fee) ~7.2% (4% OpenAI + Stripe) n/a (authentication layer)
Likely outcome 2026-2027: not a single winner, but a division of roles between discovery (UCP), authorization (AP2) and execution specific to each AI.

Why it’s catching on this time

What convinced me isn’t the list of big brands on board, it’s that Amazon, Meta, Microsoft, Salesforce and Stripe joined the project in late April. When Google’s competitors adopt its protocol, it’s rarely a fad.

The numbers point the same way. In the first quarter of 2026, traffic from AI to merchant sites jumped 393% year on year, and it now converts better than classic traffic, whereas it was the opposite twelve months earlier.

AI traffic has overtaken human traffic
Conversion of AI-sourced traffic, compared with classic traffic
March 2025
−38%
AI converted worse
March 2026
+42%
AI converts better (record)
In twelve months, the agent went from gadget to best purchase channel. AI traffic to US retail: +393% year on year in the first quarter of 2026 (source: Adobe Analytics).

What it changes for your visibility

For a business that wants to stay visible online, here’s what matters. The usual path, where you search, click, land on the site and buy, is no longer the only route. Increasingly, it’s the agent that picks the product for you, and it only picks well if it has clean, complete information: exact name, up-to-date price, stock, lead time, variants, answers to frequently asked questions. Taking care of this data becomes as important as taking care of your pages, and it’s exactly the kind of work we support our clients on.

The purchase funnel, short-circuited
Yesterday
Search

Click

Product page

Purchase
With UCP
Purchase intent

AI agent (catalog, cart, payment)

Purchase
On high-intent queries, the purchase is completed inside the AI. The merchant’s site is no longer a required step.

Two caveats before getting carried away. The rollout starts in the United States, then Canada, Australia and the United Kingdom by the end of 2026, with no announced date for Europe or Switzerland. And the multi-trillion-dollar projections for 2030 come from firms that have an interest in thinking big, so I cite them without endorsing them. The move is under way, and it’s better to prepare your data now than to chase the agent later.

Thomas Nedjar
Thomas Nedjar
Expert SEO/GEO et automatisations

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