Alipay has quietly made one of its most ambitious infrastructure moves yet, launching an AI Open Platform that allows merchants to transform their existing digital services into AI-powered capabilities deployable across a growing range of smart devices. The platform, currently available through invitation-based testing, signals a significant shift in how China’s dominant payments super-app is positioning itself for an AI-first future.
What the Platform Actually Does
The core pitch is efficiency: merchants who have already built mini-programs or integrated APIs within Alipay’s ecosystem can now convert those existing assets into AI-callable services — without having to start from scratch. Alipay’s AI assistant, Abao, becomes the interface layer through which users interact with these services, whether they’re on a smartphone, a pair of AI-enabled glasses, or an IoT-connected device.
That’s a meaningful distinction from many AI platform launches, which typically require developers to rebuild or re-architect their products. Here, the conversion layer handles the heavy lifting, lowering the barrier for merchants who lack deep AI engineering resources but want to participate in the next generation of user interaction.
Beyond deployment, the platform handles hosting, distribution, trading, and settlement infrastructure — essentially a full-stack commercial environment for AI services. Merchants don’t just get reach; they get the financial plumbing to monetize what they build.
Scale Meets Strategy
The numbers behind this launch are hard to ignore. Alipay already commands a user base of approximately one billion people, making it one of the largest digital distribution networks on the planet. The platform extends potential reach further still, into cross-platform smart terminals that go well beyond Alipay’s own app.
This is where the strategic calculus gets interesting. By routing merchant services through Abao across devices, Alipay is essentially trying to become the connective tissue of China’s AI device ecosystem — not just a payments app, but an ambient service layer that follows users from their pocket to their face to their home.
The AI glasses angle is particularly telling. As hardware players race to build consumer-facing AI wearables, they face a content and services problem: the hardware may be compelling, but without a rich ecosystem of useful integrations, adoption stalls. Alipay is positioning itself as the answer to that problem, arriving with a billion-user merchant network already in tow.
The Broader Platform Play
Alipay’s move fits into a wider pattern emerging across big tech in 2024 and into 2025: platform companies are racing to become the default AI middleware layer between users and services. In the West, Apple Intelligence and Google’s Gemini integrations are attempting similar unification across device types. In China, players like Alipay, Baidu, and ByteDance are each carving out their own territory.
What differentiates Alipay’s approach is its starting point. Rather than building an AI assistant and then finding use cases, the company is inverting the model — starting with an enormous existing merchant ecosystem and building the AI orchestration layer on top of it. The services were already there. The intelligence is being layered in.
For merchants, the value proposition is clear: expand your AI service reach beyond the Alipay app itself, reduce development costs through unified integration, and tap into infrastructure you’d otherwise have to build independently. For Alipay, the benefit is equally transparent — deeper lock-in, new monetization surfaces, and a compelling story to tell hardware partners looking for ecosystem depth.
What Comes Next
The invitation-based rollout suggests Alipay is managing scale carefully, likely stress-testing the platform with select partners before a broader commercial launch. That’s standard practice for infrastructure plays of this complexity, but it also means the real test — how merchants actually adopt and monetize within this environment — is still ahead.
If the conversion tools work as advertised and Abao proves to be a genuinely useful interface across device categories, Alipay may have built something more durable than a feature update. It could be the foundation of how AI services reach consumers in China’s next hardware cycle.





