A new service called RentAHuman.ai has launched, allowing AI agents to hire people for real-world tasks via an API. Built by a crypto engineer known as “AlexanderTw33ts,” the platform positions itself as a “meatspace layer” for AI, enabling autonomous software to outsource physical labor, errands, and meetings. It saw explosive early demand, with over 1,000 people registering to be “rentable humans,” briefly crashing its servers. Payments are handled in stablecoins, with users setting hourly rates typically between $50 and $175.
A service called RentAHuman.ai has launched, letting AI agents outsource real-world tasks to people who are paid by the hour and triggered by an API call. The platform emerged as a direct response to the limitations of autonomous AI agents, which excel at digital coordination but stall at physical work.
The service, built by a crypto engineer known as “AlexanderTw33ts,” positions itself as the “meatspace layer” for AI. It saw explosive early interest, with registrations ballooning to more than 1,000 and briefly crashing the site due to demand.
The launch follows the viral surge of the open-source agent framework OpenClaw, which made autonomous software practical but highlighted the need for physical embodiment. “Autonomous agents are cool but stuck in the digital form,” AlexanderTw33ts posted, noting agents can now use a protocol to hire humans for real-world tasks.
Users set their own rates, typically between $50 and $175 per hour, with payments handled in stablecoins for seamless transactions. Developer Praveen Yen noted the utility, writing, “This fills a real gap. Agents can browse, code, and analyze—but they can’t pick up your dry cleaning.”
Social media reactions included enthusiasm but also unease, with one user commenting, “Good idea but dystopic as fuck.” Another post warned, “We went from ‘AI will replace humans’ to ‘AI will manage humans’ real quick.”
A competing project called “HumanAPI” surfaced almost simultaneously, highlighting market demand. As signups climb, the platform could create new income streams while raising questions about the future of labor managed by AI.

