Gallup Poll Shows Increasing AI Use Among US Workers with Persistent Skepticism
A Gallup poll conducted in February indicates that more American workers are using artificial intelligence in their jobs, with about 3 in 10 using it frequently. However, skepticism remains common, with many non-users citing preferences for traditional methods, ethical concerns, or data privacy issues. The poll also reveals growing worries about job displacement due to AI and automation.
Los Angeles TimesA recent Gallup poll highlights a mixed response to artificial intelligence among American workers. Conducted in February, the survey found that more employees are incorporating AI into their daily tasks, though a significant portion remains hesitant. This divergence reflects broader changes in workplace technology adoption.
Approximately 3 in 10 workers use AI frequently, defined as daily or several times a week. About 2 in 10 are infrequent users, employing AI a few times a month or year. Around 4 in 10 workers reported that their organizations have implemented AI tools to enhance practices.
Among those using AI, two-thirds described its impact on their productivity and efficiency as extremely or somewhat positive. Workers in management roles reported higher benefits, with 7 in 10 leaders who use AI at least a few times a year noting increased efficiency. In contrast, just over half of individual contributors reported similar gains.
Variations by Role and Industry AI adoption shows differences across job types.
Workers in managerial, health care, and technology roles reported productivity boosts more often, with about 6 in 10 users in these fields citing at least somewhat positive effects. Service job workers using AI reported such benefits at a lower rate of 45%. Even when AI tools are available, adoption is not universal.
S. employees use AI only once a year or not at all. Non-users with access to AI often prefer their current methods, with 46% citing this reason. Ethical opposition, data privacy concerns, or doubts about AI's usefulness account for about 4 in 10 non-users.
Roughly one-quarter of these non-users had tried AI but found it unhelpful, while 2 in 10 felt unprepared to use it effectively.
Concerns Over Job Security The poll identified rising concerns about job loss from technology.
About 18% of workers viewed it as very or somewhat likely that their job would be eliminated within five years due to new technology, automation, robots, or AI, up from 15% in 2025. This concern was higher among workers at AI-adopting companies, at 23%.
A separate Fox News poll from March found that 6 in 10 registered voters believe AI will eliminate more jobs than it creates over the next five years.
Only 1 in 10 expected more job creation, while one-third said it was too early to determine. About 7 in 10 employed voters expressed little to no concern about their own jobs being affected by AI. The findings underscore ongoing debates about AI's role in the workforce.
As organizations continue to integrate these tools, workers' varied experiences suggest a need for training and support to address barriers. Future surveys may track how these trends evolve with advancing technology.
Story Timeline
3 events- March 2026
Fox News poll found 6 in 10 voters believe AI will eliminate more jobs than it creates.
1 sourceLos Angeles Times - February 2026
Gallup poll showed 18% of workers concerned about job elimination by AI, up from 15% in 2025.
1 sourceLos Angeles Times - 2025
Previous Gallup data indicated 15% of workers worried about job loss from technology.
1 sourceLos Angeles Times
Potential Impact
- 01
Higher job displacement concerns could lead to demands for workforce retraining programs.
- 02
Organizations may increase AI training to boost adoption among hesitant workers.
- 03
Differences in AI benefits by role may widen productivity gaps between managers and contributors.
- 04
Voter perceptions of AI's job effects could influence policy discussions on technology regulation.
- 05
Ethical and privacy worries might slow AI integration in service and government-related jobs.
Transparency Panel
Related Stories
SemaforAnthropic Co-Founder Warns of Upcoming AI Capabilities for Exploiting Web Vulnerabilities
Anthropic's co-founder stated that powerful AI models capable of exploiting website vulnerabilities will emerge soon. The company's new model, Claude Mythos, identified unknown security flaws in major web browsers and operating systems. Financial authorities have responded by dis…
Federal Bureau of Investigation / Wikimedia (Public domain)AI Assistant Poke Charges Billionaire $136,000 Monthly Fee
Poke, an AI assistant without a price ceiling, charged one billionaire $136,000 a month. Marvin von Hagen stated this pricing detail. The information highlights Poke's premium service model.
Brina Schenk with UBC and Douglas College / Wikimedia (CC BY 4.0)Microsoft Tests OpenClaw-Like AI Bots for Integration into 365 Copilot
Microsoft is testing AI bots similar to OpenClaw for its 365 Copilot assistant. The effort aims to enable autonomous operation around the clock to complete user tasks. The company plans to demonstrate features at its Build conference on June 2nd.