A handful of American households pay for AI. Is the future free or a subscription?

Stay up to date with our Up First newsletter, sent every weekday morning.Kirby Plessas doesn't have an AI subscription.She has two.As a self-described technophile, she uses chatbots outside of work to plan family parties, tweak cocktail recipes and once to diagnose a broken wine cooler's motherboard.
All the help Plessas gets from AI justifies the $40 a month she pays for both OpenAI's ChatGPT and Google's Gemini."I wouldn't doubt that within a year I'll probably have a Claude subscription as well," she said.But for most people, she believes, free AI is good enough.And judging by their spending, Americans agree.Only about 3% of households were paying for AI in February, using the most recent numbers available from the Bank of America Institute, which researches consumer trends based on the bank's customer transactions.Yet while the number of personal subscribers remains small — plenty of workplaces and universities do pay for AI services — their ranks are growing fast.
About 10% more households paid up in February compared to a year earlier, according to the institute."If you think back to Netflix and streaming services, at the beginning the growth was quite slow," said Sekoul Krastev, cofounder of the Decision Lab, a research firm with an emphasis on behavioral science.Krasteve said it isn't the norm to pay for AI — yet."Once that status quo is created, subscriptions will definitely start to go up sharply just the way we saw with streaming services," he said.Plessas puts it this way: "There's a thought out there that we're all going to get addicted to using AI.
So when the free ones go away, everyone will have to pay."Even if they worry about how it will affect their daily lives, most Americans use AI.In fact, 51% of Americans said they use AI to research what they're curious about, according to a Quinnipiac poll released in March.They're just using free versions.
Most AI platforms offer them — to a point.For example, OpenAI lets users send its defau...