Alibaba integrates Qwen AI with Taobao to launch agentic shopping

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Alibaba just turned its AI assistant into a shopping mall. The company’s Qwen AI app now connects directly to Taobao, Alipay, Fliggy, and Amap, letting users shop, pay, book travel, and order food without ever leaving the chat interface.

The integration, launched on January 15, 2026, is Alibaba’s biggest bet yet that the future of e-commerce looks less like browsing product pages and more like telling an AI what you want and watching it handle the rest.

From chatbot to checkout counter

Alibaba’s upgrade to Qwen supports what the company calls “agentic AI,” a term that means the system can execute multi-step tasks on a user’s behalf rather than just generating text responses. Instead of suggesting you buy running shoes, Qwen can now find the shoes on Taobao, compare prices, and process payment through Alipay, all within the same conversation.

The feature set spans over 400 enabled services. That includes in-chat payments via Alipay, ordering through Taobao Instant Commerce, booking flights and hotels through Fliggy, and navigation through Amap. No app-switching required.

Alibaba VP Wu Jia framed the upgrade in terms that signal the company’s broader ambitions.

“AI is evolving from intelligence to agency.”

A $53 billion conviction

This integration is part of Alibaba’s $53 billion investment in AI technology. The target audience is massive: Alibaba is aiming for 100 million users in China. And unlike standalone chatbots that struggle to monetize beyond subscriptions, Alibaba’s version has a built-in business model. Every transaction that flows through Qwen is a transaction flowing through Alibaba’s ecosystem.

The competitive backdrop is ByteDance, which has been aggressively expanding its own AI capabilities alongside its dominant TikTok and Douyin platforms. Alibaba’s move to embed commerce directly into its AI assistant is a clear attempt to establish a moat before ByteDance or other Chinese tech giants can do the same.

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