AEON today published its 2025 payment figures, and they read like the opening chapter of a new kind of economy. The numbers are straightforward but telling. AEON Pay, the company’s AI payment rails and Web3 mobile wallet, handled 5.7 million transactions last year, moving more than $263 million in volume and serving 1.81 million people. The platform also brought in an average of over 80,000 new users every month, which suggests steady, real-world onboarding rather than a one-time spike.
There’s tech behind the headline figures. AEON says its x402 data integration is now live on BNB Chain, and that activity is verifiable on-chain through BNB x402scan. So far, x402 records show about 304.89k transactions and roughly $3.8 million in on-chain volume, meaning you can actually trace some of the payment flows directly on a public ledger. That’s the point: give AI-driven transactions receipts you can inspect, audit, and rely on.
Read together, those facts sketch out where the company thinks the market is heading. AEON frames 2025 as a moment when economic value starts to be created more by autonomous systems, AI agents doing tasks, calling services, and settling with one another, than purely by people clicking or consuming content. If that sounds futuristic, the practical implication is blunt and immediate: payments infrastructure needs to do things differently. It needs to handle tiny, fast, frequent payments; it needs to identify and settle with non-human actors; and it needs to connect that on-chain activity to fiat money so merchants get paid in the real world.
AEON is building for that world. The company positions itself as a payments and settlement layer tailored to “agentic” commerce, supporting emerging standards like x402 and ERC-8004, enabling high-frequency microtransactions, on-chain agent identity, and fiat rails that bridge crypto activity to everyday merchants. According to AEON, by the end of 2025, its services touched 50 million real-world merchants across Southeast Asia, Africa, and Latin America, markets where mobile payments already thrive and where crypto adoption is often more practical than ideological.
What’s striking about AEON’s report is how it highlights the shift from an attention-driven internet to something more transactional and task-oriented. Where earlier platforms monetized eyeballs and clicks, the coming phase is about machine-to-machine and machine-assisted transactions: a smart assistant orders a service and pays for it automatically, or an AI agent executes a job and sends micro-payments as it completes subtasks. For those use cases, traditional payment rails can be slow, opaque, or expensive; AEON’s sales pitch is that it can do those things faster, verifiably, and at scale.
Of course, raw numbers don’t settle every question. The path from experimentation to widespread, regulated adoption is full of hurdles: regulatory scrutiny, merchant acceptance, integration complexity, and questions around cost-efficiency for on-chain settlement. Verifiable on-chain receipts and agent identity are important technical pieces, but whether they become standard practice depends partly on business incentives and partly on regulators and banks warming to non-human economic actors.
Still, AEON’s 2025 snapshot is a useful one. Millions of transactions, hundreds of thousands of verifiable blockchain events, and a user base that grew month after month. It doesn’t prove the AI economy has arrived in full, but it does show the plumbing being built, and that plumbing matters. If autonomous systems will be doing more buying, selling, and settling, someone will have to handle the payments cleanly. AEON wants that role, and for now, its figures make a plausible case that interest and activity are already moving in that direction.


