The ChatGPT edge: Why people are embracing US$200 AI bills


The ChatGPT logo, a keyboard, and robot hands are seen in this illustration taken January 27, 2025. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration

New York: There’s no limit these days to the uses of artificial intelligence (AI).

The technology promises to do everything faster, smarter and better than humans. But far from the excitement on Wall Street or Silicon Valley, everyday people are embracing AI, hoping to make themselves faster, smarter and better.

It’s been a little more than two years since OpenAI released its chatbot ChatGPT, which opened a public gateway to AI.

Before then, the idea of AI felt technical and abstract, reserved for engineers and scientists.

Now, anyone from stay-at-home moms to financial analysts are using a flood of apps to research, solve problems or even supercharge their work.

In fact, more than 35% of Americans report using some kind of AI-enabled product at least once a week, according to a recent Gallup poll. Many are willing to pay too.

ChatGPT has a free version of its AI chatbot, but users can pay up to US$200 a month for unlimited access to its more advanced models.

Paid versions of apps like AI image generator Midjourney and the design app Canva are also growing in popularity, each costing about US$10 a month. And for power users, this can mean paying multiple bills, akin to streaming platforms for television shows.

But to them, the cost is worth what feels like extra brain power.

“People are willing to spend money on this kind of stuff,” said Vasant Dhar, a professor at New York University’s Stern School of Business. “It makes life easier, better and the applications are all across the board, from virtual companions to investing advice.”

Jessica Valvo in New Jersey has been using ChatGPT and a few other apps to get ideas for filming videos with her French bulldog.

With 19,000 followers on Instagram, her dog named Meatball Ravioli is known for wearing costumes like an American flag on the Fourth of July or a mini sombrero while she cooks Mexican food.

She hopes by acting on AI-generated ideas and following its advice for engaging an audience, she might be able to monetise her platform.

And more and more she finds herself turning to AI for tips on running her household, like making dog treats to save money or prolonging the life of a rug by putting ice cubes on edges that have rolled up.

“I use it anytime I have a question,” she said. “I’ll just say, ‘give me ideas to wash my windows,’ and it will come up with ideas.”

For some, AI can even function as a personal assistant or consultant.

Will Francis, who works as a content creator and educator in Peak District, England, spends about US$80 a month on AI apps outside of ChatGPT.

He’ll use them to draft emails, transcribe recordings, create and analyse spreadsheets and even make PowerPoint decks.

“I’d say I get a part-time assistant’s worth of time, maybe two days a week, out of AI tools in total,” he said.

The 45 year old, who’s trying out the US$200 version of ChatGPT, says it works best as a “co-thinker” for analysis and spotting patterns.

But that it can also offer a kind of thoughtful engagement he doesn’t often get elsewhere.

Lately, Francis has been using ChatGPT as a career coach.

“I will tell it what I want to achieve; it remembers that,” said Francis. “There’s something really magic when it says that back to you. It’s like, God, you remembered. Like, no one talks to me like that in my real life.”

Whether it’s writing captions for photos or generating images from text prompts, AI’s varied uses make it easy for users to justify a subscription.

Duncan Rogoff, a 35-year-old who works in motion graphics in San Francisco, says he pays about US$50 a month for Midjourney, Anthropic’s AI assistant Claude and ChatGPT’s Plus tier.

“It adds up over the course of the year, but I think it’s definitely worth it,” he said. — Bloomberg

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