64% of Teens Use AI Chatbots: What Pew Research's Latest Data Means for Your Business
Pew Research Center released its most comprehensive 5-year analysis of American attitudes toward AI — spanning five years of surveys and revealing a market that's more nuanced than the hype suggests. The headline number: 64% of U.S. teens ages 13-17 now use AI chatbots regularly.
But the real insight isn't about teens. It's about the growing divide between how different generations interact with AI — and what that means for businesses trying to reach them.
The Numbers That Matter
The Concern Gap
- 50% of U.S. adults say increased AI in daily life makes them more concerned than excited
- Only 10% are more excited than concerned
- 38% are equally concerned and excited
- Concern has risen from 37% in 2021 to 50% in 2025
The Generational Divide
- 64% of teens actively use AI chatbots
- Adults remain cautious, especially about creativity and relationships
- But adults are open to AI for data analysis tasks — showing pragmatic acceptance
The Trust Paradox
Americans are simultaneously worried about AI's impact on creativity and relationships while increasingly relying on it for practical tasks. This isn't contradiction — it's sophisticated consumer behavior.
What This Means for Your Business
1. Your Future Customers Are AI-Native
If you're building products or services for anyone under 25, AI integration isn't optional — it's expected. These users won't tolerate clunky forms, slow responses, or manual processes that AI could handle.
Action item: Audit your customer journey. Every friction point that AI could eliminate is a point where you're losing the next generation of customers.2. Trust Must Be Earned, Not Assumed
Half of adults are concerned about AI. That doesn't mean they won't use it — but they need transparency and control.
Action item: Implement clear AI disclosure, give users opt-out options, and demonstrate how AI improves (not replaces) the human elements of your service.3. Data Analysis Is the Gateway
Americans are most comfortable with AI handling data analysis tasks. This is your entry point.
Action item: Start with AI-powered analytics, reporting, and insights. Once customers see value in AI for analysis, they'll be more open to AI in other areas.4. The International Opportunity
Pew found that concern about AI is lower in most other countries than in the U.S. If you're marketing internationally, different markets may be more receptive to AI-forward positioning.
The Strategic Takeaway
The market isn't "pro-AI" or "anti-AI." It's segmented by:
- Age — younger users are AI-native, older users are AI-cautious
- Use case — analysis and efficiency are accepted; creativity and relationships are contested
- Transparency — users want to know when AI is involved and want control
The winning strategy isn't to hide AI or to lead with it. It's to deploy AI where it adds clear value, be transparent about its use, and give users control.
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Zouhall helps businesses implement AI strategies that align with real consumer attitudes — not hype cycles. Talk to us about building AI-powered experiences your customers actually want.