Google’s Universal Commerce Protocol checkout has expanded from AI Mode and Gemini into standard Google Search, making UCP-powered purchases available across the core search product used by billions of searchers daily.
The expansion places a native “Buy” button inside product detail overlays in standard Google Search results. Shoppers with Google Pay credentials can complete a purchase without visiting the retailer’s website. Wayfair is the first retailer confirmed live on this surface in main Search, according to SEO researcher Brodie Clark, who first spotted the feature and whose findings were reported by Search Engine Land. See how it appears according to a screenshot from Clark.

Retailers remain the merchant of record. Orders flow through the retailer’s existing infrastructure rather than through Google. Future payment support will expand to include PayPal alongside Google Pay.
Google announced the original Universal Commerce Protocol in January 2026, co-developed with Shopify, Etsy, Wayfair, Target, and Walmart. The Keyword has tracked each milestone: the protocol’s initial launch, the opening of merchant onboarding, structured product data requirements, and the rollout of UCP checkout inside AI Mode and Gemini. The main Search expansion is the next step in that sequence.
From AI Surfaces to the Full Index
Until now, UCP checkout was limited to AI Mode and Gemini, the surfaces where Google has been testing its AI-powered search experiences. Moving the feature into standard Search is a material distribution shift. More than 20 companies have endorsed UCP since launch, including Adyen, American Express, Best Buy, Mastercard, Stripe, Visa, and Zalando. Shopify’s Storefront Catalog MCP began implementing UCP as of April 22, 2026, extending the protocol’s reach to merchants on Shopify’s platform.
What this Means for Retailers and Advertisers
The expansion converts what has long been an SEO concern — zero-click search results — into a zero-click purchase scenario. As Search Engine Land’s Barry Schwartz described it, an impression in Google Search can now lead to a completed transaction without a single click to the retailer’s site. For retailers enrolled in UCP, this represents additional reach. For retailers that have not yet onboarded, it creates a competitive gap on a high-volume surface.
OpenAI dropped its competing Instant Checkout plan, leaving Google UCP as the dominant agentic checkout protocol in the market. Google has also been testing Direct Offers to surface exclusive deals inside AI Mode, continuing to build a commercial layer across its search products.
The company has not published a specific announcement for the main Search rollout, and has not disclosed a timeline for expansion to additional retailers beyond Wayfair.