Mastercard has partnered with JD.com to break into the Chinese market through a distribution route that traditional marketing alone could not deliver.
The deal embeds Mastercard’s payment infrastructure into JD.com’s retail and logistics network, expanding international card acceptance for overseas visitors in China.
Michael Miebach, CEO at Mastercard, said the partnership would deliver “seamless and secure solutions” and position Mastercard as “a bridge between China and the world.”
The deal also includes plans to integrate Mastercard Agent Pay into JD.com’s platform, positioning the brand inside AI-driven purchasing flows at a point when agentic commerce is still taking shape, ahead of the distribution decisions that will matter most.
Mastercard aims to use the JD.com partnership to build a distribution footprint in China that would otherwise take years to establish independently.
Global financial brands are increasingly using local platform partnerships in markets where consumer acquisition is difficult, setting a template for how financial services brands can enter closed or semi-closed markets.
