Binance released Agentic Wallet on April 24, a dedicated keyless wallet designed for AI agents to execute on-chain transactions on behalf of users. The product creates an isolated sub-account under a user’s existing Binance Wallet, separating agent-managed funds from the user’s primary balance, according to FinanceFeeds.
Winson Liu, Global Head of Binance Wallet, said the tool gives developers and retail users a practical route to let agents act on-chain without surrendering custody, according to Yellow.com.
How It Works
The wallet sits beneath a user’s main Binance Wallet as a ring-fenced sub-wallet with its own balance, according to FinanceFeeds. Users configure spending caps, the set of tokens an agent may hold, tradable-token boundaries, and restrictions on higher-risk transactions. Outbound transfers are locked to destinations saved in the user’s address book. All agent activity is routed through a dedicated monitoring dashboard.
At launch, supported operations include balance checks, transfers, spot market and limit orders, order management, and transaction history visibility, according to Binance’s developer documentation. The wallet accepts natural language instructions: “Swap 0.1 BNB for USDT” or “Buy 100 USDT worth of BNB when the price drops to $500.”
The security layer uses Binance’s MPC Keyless technology, meaning the private key is never fully reconstructed on any single device or server. The agent cannot directly hold or transfer keys, and every operation is logged and auditable on-chain, according to Binance’s documentation.
Chain Support and Launch Promotion
Agentic Wallet supports BNB Smart Chain, Solana, Base, and Ethereum at launch, with more chains planned, according to FinanceFeeds. A 15-day promotion offers up to 20 gas-free transactions per user on a first-come, first-served basis, capped at 200,000 transactions globally, alongside zero service fees on trades executed via the wallet.
Compatibility and Competitive Context
The wallet is compatible with AI agent frameworks that support MCP or tool-use protocols, including OpenClaw, Claude Code, and Cursor, via Binance Skills Hub. Users install the wallet skills through the Skills Hub, and Binance AI Pro users get the skills enabled by default.
The launch extends Binance’s broader AI push. In March, Binance rolled out Binance AI Pro beta, a trading assistant built on the OpenClaw framework that integrates models from OpenAI, Anthropic, and Alibaba, according to Yellow.com.
Rival exchanges are building similar products. Coinbase operates Agentic Wallets through its x402 protocol, while OKX launched a keyless tool built on a Trusted Execution Environment in March, according to Yellow.com. The core problem all three are solving is the same: how to give AI agents transactional autonomy without exposing private keys or surrendering custody. Binance’s approach uses MPC-based key sharding and user-defined permission boundaries as the primary guardrails.