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[ARTICLE · art-36055] src=pewresearch.org ↗ pub= topic=artificial-intelligence verified=true sentiment=· neutral

The gender gap in AI

A Pew Research Center survey found that men are more likely than women to use AI chatbots regularly and for work tasks, while women are more skeptical about AI's impact. The gender gap in overall chatbot use has closed since 2024, but men still lead in daily usage and use of specific brands like Copilot and Gemini.

read7 min views18 publishedJun 17, 2026
The gender gap in AI
Image: Pewresearch (auto-discovered)

Does gender factor into how people use and think about artificial intelligence (AI)? In some ways, it does.

“Americans and AI 2026: Chatbots, Smart Devices and Views on Impact”

Year U.S. adults Men Women
2024 33 39 28
2026 49 50 47

“Americans and AI 2026: Chatbots, Smart Devices and Views on Impact”

Men report using chatbots more regularly than women and are more likely to turn to them for a variety of things, including work. Women, on the other hand, are more skeptical about AI, including how it will impact their own lives.

This work is part of a Pew Research Center survey on Americans’ views of and experiences with AI, conducted Feb. 17-23, 2026. Read the main story to learn more.

Here’s more on what we found:

“Americans and AI 2026: Chatbots, Smart Devices and Views on Impact”

Men Women Men-Women DIFF
Gemini 29% 20% 9%
Copilot 22% 13% 9%
Grok 11% 4% 7%
Claude 9% 4% 5%
Character.ai 4% 2% 2%
ChatGPT 44% 44% 0%
Meta AI 13% 15% -2%

“Americans and AI 2026: Chatbots, Smart Devices and Views on Impact”

Chatbot use is on the rise for both men and women– but women saw a steeper increase since 2024.8** The gender gap in overall chatbot use has closed**. A similar share of men and women now report using AI chatbots. This is a shift from two years ago, when men were 11 percentage points more likely than women to say this.But a higher share of men use these tools regularly. Men are more likely than women to say they use chatbots on a daily basis (27% vs. 20%).

Along with tracking use of chatbots overall, we also looked at which platforms men and women turn to.

**Men stand out for their use of some specific brands. **For example, men are more likely than women to say they ever use Copilot (22% vs. 13%).

Larger shares of men than women also report using Gemini, Grok and Claude.

ChatGPT – the most widely used chatbot in our survey – is used by identical shares of men and women.

Reasons for using chatbots

“Americans and AI 2026: Chatbots, Smart Devices and Views on Impact”

Men Women
To search for information 45% 39%
For fun or entertainment 28% 22%
For tasks at work (among employed adults) 40% 35%
To create or edit images or videos 24% 23%
To get medical advice 21% 19%
To get diet or fitness information 20% 19%
To get news 15% 12%
For emotional support or advice 8% 11%
For companionship 4% 4%

“Americans and AI 2026: Chatbots, Smart Devices and Views on Impact”

On a broad level, men and women tend to use chatbots for similar reasons, with search and work tasks (for those who are employed) topping the list for both groups. But there are some modest differences in what they go to chatbots for.

In several categories, men **are somewhat more likely than women to say they use chatbots. **These include searching for information, work tasks, fun or entertainment or getting news.

Women are slightly more likely than men to say they use chatbots for emotional support or advice. There are no gender differences in reporting using chatbots for companionship.

Helpfulness of chatbots

“Americans and AI 2026: Chatbots, Smart Devices and Views on Impact”

Men Women
Their productivity 35% 25%
How informed they are 30% 26%
Their creativity 23% 19%
Their happiness 9% 7%
Their relationships 6% 6%

“Americans and AI 2026: Chatbots, Smart Devices and Views on Impact”

In addition to understanding how men and women are using chatbots, we also wanted to understand if they felt differently about whether they’ve found these tools helpful or not.

Men are more likely to say chatbots are helpful for their productivity. While 35% of men say these tools help their productivity, the share drops to 25% among women.** **

There are modest or no gender differences in how people view chatbots’ impact on their knowledge, creativity, happiness or personal relationships.

AI-enabled smart devices and AI summaries

Chatbots tell one part of the AI adoption story, but there’s also a range of things people incorporate in their lives and homes that use AI.

Women are more likely than men to say they have a smartwatch(40% vs. 34%).** Larger shares of men report reading AI summaries**that appear at the top of search engine results, compared to women (63% vs. 57%).- But there is little or no gender difference in having other devices that use AI, like smart speakers or robot vacuums.9

Views about AI

“Americans and AI 2026: Chatbots, Smart Devices and Views on Impact”

Question Positive Negative Equally positive and negative Not sure
U.S. adults Them, personally 23% 31% 27% 19%
Men Them, personally 29% 27% 27% 16%
Women Them, personally 17% 33% 27% 22%
U.S. adults Society 16% 40% 31% 13%
Men Society 22% 36% 30% 12%
Women Society 11% 43% 31% 15%

“Americans and AI 2026: Chatbots, Smart Devices and Views on Impact”

Across our surveys, there’s a consistent pattern where women tend to view AI more negatively than men. These gender differences also show up in other surveys of teenagers and AI experts.

In our new survey, women are about twice as likely to say AI will have a negative impact on them personally over the next 20 years than a positive one (33% vs. 17%).

Men, by comparison, are more evenly split. Roughly an equal share of men predict positive outcomes as negative ones.

When it comes to its societal impact, 43% of women expect AI will affect society negatively. Far fewer think it will be positive for society.

While men’s views about societal impact also tilt negative, the gap is not as large.

The speed of AI development

“Americans and AI 2026: Chatbots, Smart Devices and Views on Impact”

Too quickly At about the right pace Too slowly Not sure
U.S. adults 63% 19% 2% 16%
Men 58% 23% 3% 15%
Women 68% 14% 1% 17%

“Americans and AI 2026: Chatbots, Smart Devices and Views on Impact”

We also asked the public if AI was advancing too quickly, too slowly, or at the right pace and found some gender differences there as well.

Majorities of Americans believe AI is moving too fast, but women are more likely than men to say this (68% vs. 58%).

Relatively few Americans believe AI is moving too slowly, but men are about 10 percentage points more likely than women to think it’s advancing at the right pace.

AI literacy and confidence

As AI rapidly evolves, there have been more conversations about and efforts to increase the public’s understanding of the technology.

a lot about …

“Americans and AI 2026: Chatbots, Smart Devices and Views on Impact”

a lot about …

Men Women
AI 55% 41%
AI chatbots 48% 38%

“Americans and AI 2026: Chatbots, Smart Devices and Views on Impact”

Just as with certain uses and views, men and women also differ in their familiarity and confidence in using AI.

Nearly all men and women today have some familiarity with AI. But men are more likely to say they’ve heard a lot about the technology.

Just over half of men say they’ve heard a lot about AI overall, compared with 41% of women.

When it comes to chatbots, similar gender differences are present. Men are also more likely than women to say they have heard a lot about chatbots (48% vs. 38%).

Confidence in using chatbots

Confidence in chatbot use also varies by gender. Men are more likely than women to say they’re extremely or very confident using chatbots (22% vs. 15%)

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