Klarna announced a similar move in the U.S.: its flexible payment options are coming to Google Search, AI Mode and the Gemini app within Google Pay . In that flow, Google Pay users may see a Klarna button at checkout and access options such as pay-in-four interest-free installments or longer-term financing for larger purchases
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The key shift is placement. BNPL is moving closer to the AI-assisted discovery and checkout journey, rather than remaining only on a retailer’s final payment page .
Google Pay already supports BNPL as an alternative online payment method at select merchants, and Google says the financing is not offered by Google but by BNPL providers, each with its own requirements . Availability is not universal: Google’s consumer support says BNPL with Google Pay is available to users in the U.S. and U.K. at select merchants, while Google Pay API developer guidance describes BNPL availability for USD transactions on desktop and mobile web
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For consumers, that means Google Pay can present installment lenders alongside other payment choices when a transaction and user are eligible . For merchants, Google’s developer documentation says BNPL may help improve conversion and cart size; the BNPL provider pays the merchant upfront, and Google Pay does not charge merchants additional fees for offering BNPL
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Affirm’s developer documentation says eligible merchants can offer Affirm through Google Pay and Chrome without additional setup, with users selecting Affirm inside the Google Pay wallet where available . That does not mean every merchant or shopper gets every BNPL option: availability can depend on merchant participation, region, currency, cart size and the provider’s approval rules
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Google Search and Gemini are becoming shopping surfaces where users can move from product consideration toward checkout inside a Google experience . By adding Affirm and Klarna through Google Pay, the payment step becomes less separate from the AI shopping flow
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That changes the role of financing. An installment offer can influence the purchase decision earlier in the journey, especially where Google’s own developer materials say BNPL may affect conversion and cart size . But the announced integrations do not show Google’s AI choosing a lender on a shopper’s behalf; they show BNPL options being made available in the checkout flow reached from Google Search, AI Mode and Gemini
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The Search and Gemini rollout also connects to Google’s broader agentic-commerce work. Google describes agentic commerce as shopping in which AI completes tasks on people’s behalf, and says it has introduced the Agent Payments Protocol, or AP2, for agent-led payments and the Universal Commerce Protocol, or UCP, as an open standard for agentic commerce .
Affirm has been reported as supporting AP2, described as an open-source, payment-agnostic protocol for agent-led payments . Klarna has been reported as joining UCP to bring flexible payments into AI-driven shopping journeys from discovery to settlement
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The implication is not that AI agents are automatically borrowing money for users today. The nearer-term implication is that financing, payment authorization and checkout credentials are being standardized for AI-assisted commerce. If agent-led shopping grows, BNPL providers already present in wallet and protocol layers may be better positioned to appear at the moment an authorized purchase is made .
For Affirm and Klarna, the opportunity is distribution. Google Search, Gemini and Google Pay place their financing options closer to the point where shoppers discover products and decide how to pay . That could make BNPL more contextual: a payment choice shown during a Google-led shopping journey rather than only on a retailer’s final checkout page
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The risk is commoditization. Google Pay can present options from various BNPL providers, while financing terms and eligibility remain under the provider’s control . In that environment, differentiation may depend less on owning a checkout button and more on approval criteria, available terms, merchant eligibility, user trust and clarity of disclosure
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The convenience comes with caveats. Google says BNPL with Google Pay is available only with select merchants and providers, and financing is offered by the provider rather than by Google . Google’s developer documentation says eligibility may depend on factors set by the BNPL provider, including cart size and user creditworthiness
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Consumers should compare the full repayment schedule, cost and due dates before choosing an installment plan. Affirm’s described flow emphasizes showing total cost and payment timeline before purchase, while Klarna’s announcement highlights both pay-in-four and longer-term financing options . Longer-term financing can differ from interest-free installment plans, so the important question is not just whether BNPL is available, but what the specific offer requires
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Affirm and Klarna’s Google integrations point to the next stage of online payments: checkout options embedded inside Search, Gemini, Google Pay and eventually agentic-commerce protocols. The most immediate result is a smoother path from AI-assisted shopping to installment checkout; the bigger strategic question is whether BNPL brands become powerful decision-layer partners or interchangeable financing choices inside Google-mediated commerce flows .
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