67% of Boomers Still Sit Outside AI’s Reach

67% of Boomers Still Sit Outside AI’s Reach

67% of Boomers Still Sit Outside AI’s Reach

https://www.pymnts.com/news/artificial-intelligence/2026/67percent-boomers-still-sit-outside-ai-reach/

Publish Date: 2026-05-08 11:26:00

Source Domain: www.pymnts.com

Forget the robot concierge. Consumers are warming up to artificial intelligence one mundane errand at a time, and that may be exactly the point.

“The AI On-Ramp: Data Shows How Everyday Tasks Build Consumer Habits,” the April Agentic AI Report from PYMNTS Intelligence, found that the most powerful consumer entry points for generative AI aren’t the flashiest ones. The study drew on a February survey of 3,288 adults in the United States and five monthly waves of data from October through February. It identified finding product links, rewriting personal messages, and checking symptoms as the everyday tasks driving AI habit formation.

The report framed these tasks as AI’s version of the early search box. Google became a daily habit because search was simple, useful and needed often. Generative AI now faces a similar test. Consumers do not need to understand AI models. They need a tool that helps them finish a task faster, with little at stake if the first result misses.

That is why shopping and writing stand out as common, low-pressure uses. A wrong product link can be ignored, or a rewritten text can be edited. These are the kinds of experiences that let consumers try AI without feeling exposed.

Several data points show where those habits are forming:

  • In February, 31.4% of AI adopters used AI to find product links. This is the strongest signal in the dataset because it is widely used, broad across age, income and gender, and up 1.6 percentage points from the October-to-January average.
  • On average, 30.1% of AI adopters used AI to edit or reword personal writing. This makes personal communication one of the highest-usage AI tasks, with a broad reach even though it skews somewhat younger.
  • As of February, 66.7% of baby boomers and seniors remained AI nonusers. That compares with 29.6% of Generation Z, showing that AI’s next growth opportunity may depend on proving its value to older consumers through practical, trusted uses.

The optimistic read is that AI…

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