Fetch.ai’s Agent Marketplace has reached nearly 3 million autonomous agents in its hosting environment, marking a major scale milestone for the project’s agentic infrastructure push. Fetch.ai said the agents are now accessible through discovery and deployment tools that let users search, call and integrate them into workflows.
The marketplace, available through Agentverse.ai, acts as a discovery hub for decentralized agents built around Fetch.ai’s uAgents and DeltaV frameworks. These agents are designed to communicate, negotiate and execute tasks across areas such as logistics, finance and retail without requiring constant manual input.
Agentverse Expands Search, Call and Integration Tools
The latest rollout centers on three core marketplace functions for users and developers. Search allows users to find agents with specific skills or data access, call enables direct invocation of agent functions, and integration supports the use of agents inside automated production workflows.
That structure moves the marketplace beyond simple registration. Instead of listing agents as static software entries, Fetch.ai is positioning Agentverse as an operational layer for autonomous services, where agents can be discovered and connected to real business or application processes.
Still, the 3 million figure should be read carefully. It refers to total registered or hosted agents, while separate tracker data has indicated about 150,000 active deployments on BNB Chain, pointing to a gap between marketplace scale and live on-chain activity.
That distinction matters for measuring adoption. A large agent registry shows growing developer participation and infrastructure capacity, but active deployments, usage frequency and economic throughput will determine whether the marketplace is becoming a production-grade network.
Monetization Becomes the Next Marketplace Test
Fetch.ai’s broader ecosystem is also moving toward developer monetization for autonomous agents. The Fetch.ai Innovation Lab has signaled expanded options that could allow agents to charge for services or potentially issue their own tokens within the ecosystem.
The milestone comes as other crypto infrastructure providers build tools for autonomous systems. Coinbase has introduced Coinbase for Agents to support AI-linked payments, while MetaMask has developed specialized agent wallets with dedicated security controls for automated activity.
Together, these developments show a market shift from conceptual AI-crypto experiments toward live, spend-capable agent infrastructure. The competitive focus is moving toward payments, wallets, discovery layers and developer tooling that allow agents to operate with fewer manual steps.
For Fetch.ai, the next stage will be proving that marketplace scale can translate into sustained usage. The key metrics will be active deployments, transaction activity, revenue generation and no-code adoption as developers move from pilot experiments into full production workflows.







