I’d probably trust AI to help organize my finances, spot wasteful spending, explain investing options, and automate budgeting but not to have unlimited control over my money. In the U.S., people already trust banks, credit card companies, and apps with massive amounts of personal financial data, so AI feels like the next step whether we like it or not. The difference is that AI can analyse behavior patterns at a much deeper level, which makes the convenience incrediblyly useful but also potentially invasive.
I think the line should be drawn at decision-making authority: insights and recommendations are fine, but major transfers, investments, or loans should still require human approval. A lot of Americans would gladly trade some privacy for convenience if it saves time or improves ffinancial outcomes — we already do it with smartphones and social media every day.
What worries me more is not the AI itself, but who owns the data behind it and how securely that information is stored or monetised.
If strong transparency laws, opt-in controls, and clear data protections exist, I could see AI becoming a genuinely powerful financial assistant.
But blindly handing over complete financial autonomy to any system — human or AI — probably isn’t something I’d ever feel fully comfortable with.