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By MATT OβBRIEN and LINLEY SANDERS
Updated 5:01 AM PST, January 25, 2026
American workers adopted artificial intelligence into their work lives at a remarkable pace over the past few years, according to a new poll.
Some 12% of employed adults say they use AI daily in their job, according to a Gallup Workforce survey conducted this fall of more than 22,000 U.S. workers.
The survey found roughly one-quarter say they use AI at least frequently, which is defined as at least a few times a week, and nearly half say they use it at least a few times a year. That compares with 21% who were using AI at least occasionally in 2023, when Gallup began asking the question, and points to the impact of the widespread commercial boom that ChatGPT sparked for generative AI tools that can write emails and computer code, summarize long documents, create images or help answer questions.
Home Depot store associate Gene Walinski is one of the employees embracing AI at work. The 70-year-old turns to an AI assistant on his personal phone roughly every hour on his shift so he can better answer questions about supplies that he is not β100% familiar withβ at the storeβs electrical department in New Smyrna Beach, Florida.
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βI think my job would suffer if I couldnβt because there would be a lot of shrugged shoulders and βI donβt knowβ and customers donβt want to hear that,β Walinski said.
AI at work for many in technology, finance and education
While frequent AI use is on the rise with many employees, AI adoption remains higher among those working in technology-related fields.
About 6 in 10 technology workers say they use AI frequently, and about 3 in 10 do so daily.
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The share of Americans working in the technology sector who say they use AI daily or regularly has grown significantly since 2023, but there are indications that AI adoption could be starting to plateau after an explosive increase between 2024 and 2025.
In finance, another sector with high AI adoption, 28-year-old investment banker Andrea Tanzi said he uses AI tools every day to synthesize documents and data sets that would otherwise take him several hours to review.
Tanzi, who works for Bank of America in New York, said he also makes uses of the bankβs internal AI chatbot, Erica, to help with administrative tasks.
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In addition, majorities of those working in professional services, at colleges or universities or in K-12 education, say they use AI at least a few times a year.
Joyce Hatzidakis, 60, a high school art teacher in Riverside, California, started experimenting with AI chatbots to help βclean upβ her communications with parents.
βI can scribble out a note and not worry about what I say and then tell it what tone I want,β she said. βAnd then, when I reread it, if itβs not quite right, I can have it edited again. Iβm definitely getting less parent complaints.β
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Another Gallup Workforce survey from last year found that about 6 in 10 employees using AI are relying on chatbots or virtual assistance when they turn to AI tools. About 4 in 10 AI users at work reported using AI to consolidate information or data, to generate ideas or to learn new things.
Hatzidakis started with ChatGPT and then switched to Googleβs Gemini when the school district made that its official tool. She has even used it to help with recommendation letters because βthereβs only so many ways to say a kid is really creative.β
The benefits and drawbacks of AI adoption
The AI industry and the U.S. government are heavily promoting AI adoption in workplaces and schools. More people and organizations will need to buy these tools in order to justify the huge amounts of investment into building and running energy-hungry AI computing systems. But not all economists agree on how much they will boost productivity or affect employment prospects.
βMost of the workers that are most highly exposed to AI, who are most likely to have it disrupt their workflows, for good or for bad, have these characteristics that make them pretty adaptable,β said Sam Manning, a fellow at the Centre for the Governance of AI and co-author of new papers on AI job effects for the Brookings Institution and the National Bureau of Economic Research.
Workers in those mostly computer-based jobs that involve a lot of AI usage βusually have higher levels of education, wider ranges of skill sets that can be applied to different jobs, and they also have higher savings, which is helpful for weathering an income shock if you lose your job,β Manning said.
On the other hand, Manningβs research has identified some 6.1 million workers in the United States who are both heavily exposed to AI and less equipped to adapt. Many are in administrative and clerical work, about 86% are women and they are older and concentrated in smaller cities, such as university towns or state capitals, with fewer options to shift careers.
βIf their skills are automated, they have less transferable skills to other jobs and they have a lower savings, if any savings,β Manning said. βAn income shock could be much more harmful or difficult to manage.β
Few workers are concerned about AI replacing them
A separate Gallup Workforce survey from 2025 found that even as AI use is increasing, few employees said it was βveryβ or βsomewhatβ likely that new technology, automation, robots or AI will eliminate their job within the next five years. Half said it was βnot at all likely,β but that has decreased from about 6 in 10 in 2023.
Not worried about losing his job is the Rev. Michael Bingham, pastor of the Faith Community Methodist Church in Jacksonville, Florida.
A chatbot fed him βgibberishβ when he asked about the medieval theologian Anselm of Canterbury, and Bingham said he would never ask a βsoullessβ machine to help write his sermons, relying instead on βthe power of Godβ to help guide him through ideas.
βYou donβt want a machine, you want a human being, to hold your hand if youβre dying,β Bingham said. βAnd you want to know that your loved one was able to hold the hand of a loving human being who cared for them.β
Reported AI usage is less common in service-based sectors, such as retail, health care or manufacturing.
Home Depot did not ask Walinski to use AI when he got a job at the store last year, after a decades-long career in the car business. But the home improvement giant also did not try to stop him and he is βnot at all worriedβ that AI will replace him.
βThe human interface part is really what a store like mine works on,β Walinski said. βItβs all about the people.β
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OβBrien reported from Providence, Rhode Island, and Sanders from Washington.
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Gallupβs quarterly workforce surveys were conducted with a random sample of adults age 18 and older who work full time and part time for organizations in the United States and are members of Gallupβs probability-based Gallup Panel. The most recent survey of 22,368 employed U.S. adults was conducted from Oct. 30-Nov. 13, 2025. The margin of sampling error for all respondents is plus or minus 1 percentage point.
MATT OβBRIEN
OβBrien covers the business of technology and artificial intelligence for The Associated Press.
LINLEY SANDERS
Sanders is a polls and surveys reporter for The Associated Press. She develops and writes about polls conducted by The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research, and works on AP VoteCast.
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