Half of Employees Say They Rely Too Much on AI, 39% Say It Is Making Them Less Intelligent According to New Research From GoTo

GoTo, the leader in cloud communications and IT, today announced the release of its second annual research report: The Pulse of Work in 2026: Opportunity, Risk, and Responsibility in an AI-Driven Workplace. The report summarizes the findings of a survey of 2,500 global employees and IT leaders on AI use and sentiment, conducted in partnership with research firm Workplace Intelligence.

Among the study’s key findings: although AI has provided an immense boost to workforce productivity, 50% of employees say they rely too much on the technology, and 30% feel they can’t function without it. More concerning still, 39% feel their overreliance on AI tools is eroding their skills and making them less intelligent. These sentiments are especially prevalent among younger workers, with nearly half of Gen Z (46%) reporting that relying too much on AI is making them less intelligent.

A key reason for this overreliance may be the rising expectation to use AI more in the workplace: 60% of employees report feeling pressured to use these tools to boost their productivity. Combined with a lack of effective training, policies, and guardrails, this dynamic is leading many employees to use AI irresponsibly, creating real problems with AI misuse and “workslop.” This can also lead to serious consequences for businesses, as nearly one in four IT leaders say AI mistakes have already affected customers, clients, or their company’s bottom line.

“The opportunity in front of us with AI is enormous. Employees are spending an estimated 2.6 hours every day on tasks that AI could handle, and in the U.S. alone, that translates to more than $2.9 trillion* in potential efficiency gains annually,” said Rich Veldran, CEO of GoTo. “At the same time, 80% of employees admit they aren’t using AI to its full potential, and 69% aren’t very familiar with how it can be practically applied in their role. This is a big opportunity for companies. Organizations need to invest in the right enablement, resources, and guardrails to enable their people to bridge that gap — and when they do, the productivity and economic impact could be staggering. The goal isn’t just smarter technology; it’s a smarter, more empowered workforce.”

Other key findings include:

  • AI overreliance is affecting workforce confidence and career outlooks: Nearly 3 in 10 employees feel AI is doing their job better than they can (29%) and say they’ve started trusting AI more than their own judgment (28%). However, 41% of employees, including 50% of Gen Z, believe relying on AI too much will hurt their career prospects in the long run.

  • Misuse of AI has risen dramatically: An alarming 70% of employees, up from 54% last year, admit they’ve used AI for sensitive or high-stakes tasks, such as legal or compliance-driven work (41%), work requiring emotional intelligence (37%), tasks impacting safety (31%), high-stakes strategic decisions (29%), ethical or sensitive personnel actions (28%), and tasks involving sensitive or confidential information (23%).

  • Unchecked AI outputs are leading to AI “workslop”: 43% of employees say they’ve used AI-generated content despite suspecting it was low quality or might contain errors or fabricated information. Most respondents (77%) say AI-generated work takes more time to review than human work, and 66% say reviewing other people’s AI “workslop” creates additional work for them.

The study also identified solutions that can help companies drive more effective and responsible AI use, although employees and IT leaders don’t always align on the need for improvement. For example, while 84% of employees say their company could do more to encourage responsible AI use, only 48% of IT leaders agree.

How companies can support responsible AI usage:

  • Improve policies and training: Just 44% of IT leaders say their company has an AI policy. Even at companies that have an AI policy in place, most employees (77%) and around half of IT leaders (47%) feel the policy needs improvement. In addition, 80% of employees and 60% of IT leaders say most workers aren’t being trained properly to use AI tools.

  • Help employees develop the skills to work alongside AI: 65% of employees say employers are failing to equip people with the skills they need as AI takes over more work. Checking AI for accuracy and bias, knowing when to trust AI outputs, and using human judgment alongside AI were seen as the most important skills to have. Workers also say “human” skills like creative thinking, emotional intelligence, and leadership capabilities will be critical in the AI-driven workplace.

  • Offer the practical AI tools employees want: Most employees say AI tools that help with data entry and email management (88%) communication (87%), administrative tasks (85%), content creation (83%), and customer support (82%) would be valuable to them. Meanwhile, IT leaders say they most want practical AI tools that assist with security and compliance (98%), performance insights and troubleshooting (97%), and real-time analytics (97%). These tools allow employees and IT to focus on higher value work while leveraging the uniquely human skills and judgment that AI cannot replace.

  • Develop practices to reliably measure ROI: Despite a majority of IT leaders (62%) saying more than 20% of their budget is allocated to AI-related technologies or projects, 43% of these leaders also say their company is not measuring the return on investment of their AI tools very well. As AI implementations scale, businesses need to more effectively measure and evaluate the ROI of AI tools.

“AI adoption has outpaced organizational readiness. GoTo’s 2026 Pulse of Work survey clearly captures that gap: employees are finding real productivity value in AI, but they are also encountering overreliance, uneven guidance, weak training, and uncertainty about trust,” said Dan Rasmus, Founder and Principal Analyst, Serious Insights. “The next phase of AI value will not come from simply putting more tools in people’s hands. It will come from designing the management system around AI: practical policies, role-based enablement, human judgment, knowledge-sharing practices, and measurement that connect AI use to meaningful outcomes. Organizations that treat AI as a knowledge and work-design challenge, not just a technology rollout, will be better positioned to turn early productivity gains into durable capability.”

“Responsible AI use is about having the right tools and supporting the people who use them,” said Dan Schawbel, Managing Partner, Workplace Intelligence. “Our research highlights the importance of equipping employees with the skills, policies, and guidance they need to work alongside AI effectively. Companies that get this right will see productivity gains while ensuring their workforce remains confident, capable, and engaged.”

To learn more about the research, download the full report: goto.com/pulse-of-work

Methodology

Research findings are based on a survey conducted by GoTo and Workplace Intelligence from November 2025 through January 2026. In total, 2,500 global workers completed the survey, including 1,250 full-time knowledge workers and 1,250 IT decision-makers. The survey targeted respondents in the US, Canada, the UK, Ireland, Germany, Austria, Switzerland, India, Mexico and Brazil.

About GoTo

GoTo, the leader in cloud communications and IT, is dedicated to powering a world of work without limits. Featuring flagship products GoTo Connect, LogMeIn Resolve, and LogMeIn Rescue, the GoTo portfolio offers secure, reliable, AI-enabled solutions that are simple to adopt for small and midsize businesses, and scalable to enterprises worldwide. GoTo continuously improves human experiences for AI-enabled workforces across hundreds of thousands of customers. The company is headquartered in Boston, Massachusetts, with approximately $1 billion in annual revenue and 2,500 employees throughout North America, South America, Europe, Asia, and Australia.

About Workplace Intelligence

Workplace Intelligence is an award-winning thought leadership and research agency focused on the world of work. We help companies, and their executives, tell their workplace story in a meaningful, relevant, and impactful way using primary data, insights, and interviews. For more information go to our website and subscribe to our Insider newsletter.

* Assumes there are 102,525,000 knowledge workers in the U.S. (Source: Federal Reserve Economic Dataset) with an hourly wage of $44.08 (Source: Federal Reserve Economic Dataset), who could be saving 13 hours each week by using AI.

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