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03/12/2026


BigCommerce Improves Google Pay Checkout to Prevent Address Overrides
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Key highlights
At BigCommerce, we’re continually refining checkout to give merchants more control and shoppers a more predictable experience. Beginning April 27, 2026, we’re updating how Google Pay interacts with billing and shipping addresses — eliminating unexpected address overrides and keeping express payments consistent.
Checkout keeps any billing or shipping address the shopper already entered
Google Pay only fills addresses when the checkout address fields are empty
This prevents silent address changes that can affect shipping rates, fraud checks, and custom fields
Rollout begins April 27, 2026
Here’s the current behavior in some scenarios at BigCommerce checkout:
A shopper manually fills in billing and shipping address fields
The shopper opens the Google Pay modal and selects a different credit card
The billing and shipping addresses on the checkout page update to the address tied to that newly selected card in Google Wallet
For some stores, this can create mismatches between what the shopper entered and what Google Pay applies. It can also create additional issues such as:
Trigger incorrect shipping rates
Cause custom checkout fields to disappear
Interrupt fraud validation logic
Create shopper confusion at the final step
When a shopper uses Google Pay at BigCommerce checkout:
Checkout preserves any existing billing and shipping addresses
Checkout will no longer accept address overrides from Google Wallet
Google Pay only populates addresses when the checkout address fields are empty.
In other words, Google Pay’s behavior will now become “fill if empty,” instead of, “override what’s already there.”
This change helps prevent unintended address updates that can affect the shopper’s checkout experience and downstream operations, including:
Additional form fields that display based on address values
Shipping rates and eligibility that change by region, local area, or address type
Fraud checks that rely on consistent billing and shipping details
It also improves consistency across express payment methods, reduces support issues tied to address mismatches, and gives enterprise customers more control over address-handling logic. Most importantly, it helps protect shopper trust by avoiding silent address changes.
Our new Google Pay shopper address flow expands to all eligible stores beginning April 27, 2026..
For most customers, no action is required.
If you have checkout customizations or downstream systems that rely on the previous Google Pay address behavior, plan to test your checkout flow once the change is enabled for your store — especially if you rely on:
Address-triggered custom fields
Shipping logic based on address updates
Fraud tooling that expects Google Wallet to rewrite billing details
This update is part of our ongoing commitment to delivering predictable, merchant-controlled checkout experiences — without sacrificing express payment convenience.
To learn more about how Big Commerce is improving the checkout experience read: Excel in Ecommerce Checkout Optimization: Proven Steps to Build Trust and Boost Sales.

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