
Paystack is testing a new kind of checkout that could quietly change how online payments work in Nigeria. The company has launched Paystack Index, an early-access product that allows supported AI agents to help users complete routine transactions such as buying airtime, purchasing mobile data, sending money through Zap and ordering food through Chowdeck.
The important part is not just that Paystack has added AI to payments. The bigger story is that the checkout process itself may be moving away from websites and apps into conversational assistants. According to Techpoint Africa, Paystack Index is live in Nigeria and works with AI clients including ChatGPT, Claude and OpenClaw. It was developed with support from TSG Labs, the experimental venture studio under The Stack Group.
For TechBooky readers, this connects directly to the direction Paystack signalled earlier this year when it became a holding company and said it would invest in AI-driven products. Paystack is no longer behaving like a company that only wants to process card or bank-transfer payments for merchants. It is trying to position itself as payment infrastructure for whatever interface comes next.
Today, most people still pay online by opening an app, visiting a website, selecting a product or service, entering details, confirming the amount and approving the payment. Agentic commerce changes that flow. A user may simply ask an AI assistant to buy data, send money or reorder lunch, and the assistant then routes the request through the necessary merchant and payment rails.
That is why Paystack is starting with simple, repeatable transactions. Airtime, mobile data and transfers are predictable enough for users to understand and for Paystack to put guardrails around. Food ordering is a little more complex, but still familiar enough to test whether consumers will trust an AI intermediary with everyday spending.
The trust question will decide how far this goes. Paystack says users remain in control and can set permissions and spending limits. That matters because a payment assistant that acts too freely would quickly become a security and customer-service problem. In Nigeria, where failed transfers, disputed debits and fraud concerns are already part of digital finance, any AI payment product has to prove that it is not just clever, but also accountable.
If AI agents become a serious commerce channel, merchants will have to think beyond normal product pages. They will need clean pricing, reliable inventory data, strong refund policies and enough structured information for an AI system to understand what they sell. In other words, the next version of search engine optimisation may include making a business readable to AI agents that are making recommendations and initiating purchases.
This is where Paystack’s merchant network gives it an advantage. The company already sits close to thousands of African businesses that rely on its payment APIs. It also has Zap, its consumer payments product, which TechBooky previously covered when Paystack introduced the transfer app and later when Zap added Apple Pay support. Paystack Index now links that merchant infrastructure and consumer payment layer to the AI assistant economy.
This will not replace apps overnight. Paystack itself appears to see the product as a learning exercise, not an immediate volume machine. But that is exactly why the experiment is worth watching. The companies that understand how people behave when AI agents begin to shop, compare and pay on their behalf may define the next wave of African fintech.
For now, Paystack Index is a controlled experiment in Nigeria. But if it works, it could become one of the earliest signs that African payments are moving from app-based fintech into AI-native commerce.
Discover more from TechBooky
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.