How Rezolve AI is trying to build the future of agentic shopping

Retail Brew· June 21, 2026

Rezolve AI is positioning itself as a foundational infrastructure provider for agentic commerce, a shift where AI agents make purchase decisions and transact on behalf of consumers. The London-based company utilizes its Brain Suite of tools to move beyond keyword-based search toward a model that understands consumer intent through retailer-owned data. This evolution aims to replace traditional e-commerce interfaces with personalized, conversational experiences, potentially rendering current online shopping platforms obsolete.

Rezolve AI has seen significant financial momentum, reporting $60 million in revenue for the first quarter of 2026, which already surpasses its total 2025 revenue of $46.8 million. The company is currently tracking toward a full-year guidance of $360 million, supported by a client base of over 950 retail customers including major brands like Dunkin’ and BJ’s Wholesale Club. CEO Daniel Wagner attributes this growth to a market shift where enterprises are finally understanding how to implement AI models effectively, describing the potential of agentic commerce as being larger than the initial impact of the internet.

The company’s Brain Suite—comprising Brain Commerce, Brain Checkout, and Brainpowa—uses a combination of traditional binary semantic search and probabilistic algorithms to eliminate common AI errors. Unlike standard AI that merely assists in discovery, agentic AI is designed to act autonomously by considering options and executing transactions. This technology aims to bridge the gap between how people naturally shop and the rigid structure of current e-commerce platforms, which Wagner argues are built for processing orders rather than facilitating a true shopping experience.

To scale its operations, Rezolve AI recently signed a partnership with Tata Consultancy Services and has made an unsolicited bid to merge with Commerce.com, a move that could create a combined entity valued at over $700 million. While based in London, the company views the United States as its most significant commercial opportunity due to the region's history of being early adopters of new technology. Wagner predicts that traditional e-commerce platforms will eventually disappear, much like mail-order catalogs, as agentic commerce becomes the industry standard for personalized digital retail.

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