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Statistics · Adoption

Why AI adoption stats range from 17% to 89% — and what's actually true

Six credible studies, six different answers. None of them are lying — they're measuring different things. This is the reconciliation nobody else publishes.

Last updated: July 4, 2026
Direct answer: Most U.S. small businesses (roughly two-thirds to three-quarters) now use AI tools in some form. Fewer than half meet stricter definitions of AI use, and only about 14–20% have AI genuinely embedded in core operations. Any single number without its definition is marketing, not measurement.

The studies, side by side

StudyFigureWhat it actually measuresPopulation & caveat
U.S. Census Bureau — Business Trends and Outlook Survey (2026)17–20%AI used in producing goods/services — a narrow operational definitionProbability sample of all U.S. businesses; the most rigorous method, the strictest question
Federal Reserve — Small Business Credit Survey (2026)46%AI use by small employer firmsEmployer firms only (excludes ~27M nonemployer businesses); rigorous survey
U.S. Chamber of Commerce / Teneo (2026)68% (also reported: 89% "some form")Regular use of AI tools; the 89% figure includes any use at allAdvocacy organization; definitions shifted between waves — always check the question wording
Goldman Sachs — 10,000 Small Businesses Voices (Mar 2026)76%Current AI usage, self-reportedAlumni of Goldman's program — growth-oriented firms, likely adoption-skewed
Intuit QuickBooks — AI Impact Report (Jan 2026)77%Regular AI use among small and midsize businesses34,000+ responses, but drawn from software-buying SMBs — a digitally active population
SBE Council — Tech Use Survey (2026)82%Have invested in AI tools (ever)"Invested ever" is the loosest definition in the set

The three variables that explain everything

1. Definition of "using AI"

"Have you ever used an AI tool?" captures a business owner who asked ChatGPT to write one Instagram caption. "Is AI used in producing your goods or services?" (Census) captures a business whose operations depend on it. Between those two questions lies a 70-point spread.

2. Population surveyed

The U.S. has ~33.2 million small businesses, but ~27 million are nonemployer firms (solo operators). Surveys of "small businesses" that actually sample employer firms, software customers, or accelerator alumni will always overstate adoption relative to the full population.

3. Method

The Census BTOS uses probability sampling — every business has a known chance of selection. Most industry surveys use opt-in panels, which skew toward digitally engaged respondents: exactly the people most likely to use AI.

The honest summary

If you need one sentence: most small businesses now touch AI; a minority run on it.If you need one number for casual tool use, say ~70–77% (Intuit/Goldman/Chamber). If you need the rigorous operational number, say 17–20% (Census) or 46% for employer firms (Fed). If a report gives you a number without its definition, discard the report.