Alipay, China’s leading mobile payments and super app platform, today unveiled its AI-powered assistant Abao and opened invitation-only testing to users, marking the biggest redesign in the platform’s history and signaling its full-scale shift toward AI-driven services.

Starting June 16, selected users can access the new interface by simply swiping right. A broader rollout is expected in the coming months.

The redesign aims to simplify interactions and consolidate services. It shifts mobile apps from a traditional service-discovery model to an AI-native experience where services are delivered directly through conversation.

At the same time, Alipay says it has maintained strict safeguards around payments and user authorization.

Credit: GeekPark

Through a chat interface, users can ask Abao to complete a wide range of everyday tasks with a single prompt, including checking housing fund balances, locating EV charging stations, paying bills, and booking services, according to GeekPark. Alipay says that the assistant can connect users to tens of thousands of real-world service scenarios and turn conversation into action.

The new interface has been streamlined into two primary sections: Abao and Assets. Financial records are consolidated into a unified ledger, giving users a clearer view of spending and earnings.

For security, any transaction involving fund transfers still requires explicit user confirmation. The AI can only perform actions that users authorize, while Alipay continues to uphold its long-standing payment protection guarantee.

Recognizing that not all users are ready for an AI-first experience, Alipay is allowing users to switch freely between the classic version and the new AI interface.

Credit: GeekPark

The launch is notable because it comes at a time when WeChat — China’s largest super app with the country’s biggest user base and strongest social ecosystem — is still exploring how AI agents should be integrated into its platform. By making AI a primary entry point and opening large-scale testing, Alipay has arguably moved ahead in the race to redefine the next generation of super apps.

Payments and daily services are widely viewed as one of the most promising environments for AI agents. These scenarios are high-frequency, goal-oriented, and tied to clear user intentions, making them ideal for AI-powered task execution.

Unlike traditional chatbots that primarily provide information, Abao is directly connected to real-world services such as government benefits, utility payments, transportation, and healthcare. This enables a full workflow from understanding user intent to completing the requested task.

Credit: Alipay

If the trial receives positive feedback, it could accelerate Alipay’s evolution from a payment platform into a full-fledged AI life assistant. It may increase pressure on competitors, including WeChat, to speed up the deployment of their own AI agent strategies.

Over the next few years, competition over who can become users’ primary digital agent may emerge as one of the most important battlegrounds in China’s internet industry.

Jessie Wu is a tech reporter based in Shanghai. She covers consumer electronics, semiconductor, and the gaming industry for TechNode. Connect with her via e-mail: jessie.wu@ovau.ip-ddns.com.