Why Gen Z Is Using ChatGPT for Financial Advice

People aren’t just looking for answers. They’re looking for a safe place to ask questions.

Not long ago, if you had a question about money, you searched Google, asked a financially savvy friend, or reached out to your bank. Today, more and more people—especially younger consumers—are opening ChatGPT first.

At first glance, that sounds like a story about technology. But I think it’s actually a story about trust.

People are asking AI questions they often feel uncomfortable asking another person: Why was I denied for a credit card? Is my credit score bad? Can I afford this apartment? Am I behind financially? These aren’t just financial questions; they’re emotional ones. Money carries anxiety, embarrassment, and pressure in ways we rarely talk about openly. For many people, asking for help can feel vulnerable.

That’s why I think this shift matters. Younger generations aren’t adopting AI simply because it’s faster or more convenient. They’re using it because it creates something traditional financial systems often haven’t: a judgment-free environment.

Finance has always had an accessibility problem

Historically, financial advice hasn’t been built for everyone. Many traditional financial tools assume consumers already understand the system. Advisors often cater to higher-net-worth individuals, and financial products frequently expect users to arrive with a baseline level of financial knowledge.

But millions of people are learning as they go.

Immigrants arrive in the U.S. with no local credit history. Recent graduates enter adulthood with student loans and little financial guidance. Freelancers navigate inconsistent income. First-generation Americans often learn the rules of finance without family roadmaps.

This is something I understand personally.

When I immigrated from South Korea to the United States, I had done everything I thought I was supposed to do. I worked hard, had a great job, graduated from a great school, but without a U.S. credit profile, I was completely invisible to the system. 

That experience shaped my perspective because I realized financial systems often confuse missing information with risk.

Millions of people are still experiencing that today.

AI may be solving a problem that banks underestimated

One of the most interesting things happening right now isn’t AI replacing financial professionals. It’s AI becoming a first stop for questions people might otherwise avoid asking.

Unlike people, AI doesn’t make someone feel embarrassed for asking the same question five times. You can ask it to explain APR like you’re twelve. You can admit you don’t understand credit utilization. You can ask a “basic” question without feeling like you’re behind everyone else.

That dynamic matters more than many people realize.

The conversation around AI often focuses on whether it can replace advisors or automate financial guidance. I think the more important question is why consumers increasingly feel more comfortable asking AI than asking traditional institutions.

Because that tells us something about what people were missing in the first place.

The future of finance is guidance, not just information

For years, financial products acted like dashboards. They showed people account balances, credit scores, and transaction histories and expected them to figure out what those numbers meant on their own.

But younger generations increasingly want financial products that act more like guides.

They want context. They want personalization. They want tools that don’t simply display information but help explain what to do next.

That thinking influenced how we built TomoIQ.

At Tomo, we saw an opportunity to rethink what financial guidance could look like. Instead of building another product that simply shows people data, we built TomoIQ as a personalized AI financial assistant designed to help everyday consumers better understand and navigate their financial lives.

Most financial tools have historically catered to people who already have money, already understand the system, or already know the right questions to ask. But millions of Americans are trying to decide how to build credit, improve financial habits, manage emergencies, or make everyday decisions with less than $1,000 in savings.

Those consumers deserve guidance, too.

AI should not only help people optimize wealth. It should help people build it.

The biggest financial problem might not be debt—it might be shame

I believe one of the most overlooked barriers in personal finance today is shame.

Financial anxiety causes people to delay asking questions, avoid checking accounts, or postpone learning because they worry they’re already behind. Often, the issue isn’t motivation. It’s discomfort.

Technology alone won’t solve that. But creating environments where people feel safe enough to ask questions might.

Maybe that’s why younger consumers are increasingly turning to AI for financial advice.

Not because they trust machines more.

Because they’re still searching for financial experiences that feel human.