About

Booking, built for agents.

The next wave of commerce won’t happen in a browser tab. AI agents will research, decide, and transact — and the rails for that barely exist. BookingLayer is one of those rails: a way for an agent to book the real world over an API, priced per call, settled in stablecoin, with spending always scoped and revocable.

What we believe

  • Agent-native. No accounts, no dashboards, no glue code. A signed proposal is the authorization; an MCP toolset is the interface.
  • Non-custodial. We never hold keys and can’t pull funds that weren’t authorized. Money sits in escrow per booking and is captured only on success.
  • Honest surface. We say exactly where we are. Right now that's a public beta: the testing sandbox works end-to-end on mock inventory (no real money), and production isn't wired with funds yet.
  • Open standards. x402, AP2, UCP, EIP-712 — we build on the protocols the agentic web is converging on, not a walled garden.

Why now

Agents can already plan a trip, compare options, and decide. What they can’t do is complete the purchase — every booking site assumes a human with an account, a browser, and a card on file. That last step is where autonomy breaks. BookingLayer gives an agent a single endpoint to actually transact, with the guardrails — scope, budget, escrow — that make letting software spend money safe.

How it’s different

  • No human checkout. No login, no saved card, no captcha. The agent authenticates with a signature and pays inline.
  • Spending you can bound. A proposal sets exactly what may be booked and the most that can be spent — and you can revoke it at any time.
  • Pay per call. A small, transparent fee per booking. No seats, no subscriptions, no minimums.
  • Money held, not taken. Funds sit in escrow and reach the supplier only on a confirmed booking; otherwise they return automatically.
We’re in public beta and building in the open. The testing sandbox is open now — connect over MCP and try the full flow. The machine-readable surface — /test/v1/discovery, /v1/schema — is the real product; the website just explains it.