State of Enterprise AI Adoption 2026
Roughly 71% of organizations now use generative AI in at least one function, yet only about 39% report measurable EBIT impact, exposing a widening adoption-to-value gap as spending surges past $600 billion.
Enterprise AI in 2026 has reached near-universal adoption but uneven returns. McKinsey finds 71% of organizations regularly use generative AI in at least one business function, while only a minority can yet tie it to enterprise-level profit, defining the central challenge: turning broad deployment into real value.
Adoption is now mainstream
The adoption curve has been steep and fast. Stanford's AI Index reports that 78% of organizations used AI in at least one business function in 2024, up from 55% a year earlier, a 23-point jump. McKinsey's 2025 survey echoes the trend, with 71% regularly using generative AI specifically. Adoption that historically took half a decade for enterprise software compressed into roughly two years, making AI a default capability rather than an experiment.
The value gap
Usage and impact are not the same thing. McKinsey found that just 39% of organizations report enterprise-level EBIT impact from AI, and only a sliver attribute significant value to it. Most deployments cluster in marketing, sales, product development, service operations and software engineering. The lesson is that adopting tools is easy; rewiring workflows and governance to capture measurable returns is the hard part that separates leaders from the pack.
Spending is concentrating
Money is flowing in faster than value is coming out. Gartner forecast worldwide generative AI spending of $644 billion in 2025, up 76% year over year, though about 80% of that goes to hardware like servers, phones and PCs rather than software. End-user spending on the models themselves was a comparatively modest $14.2 billion. That split suggests the infrastructure buildout is running ahead of proven application-layer ROI.
Agents are the next frontier
The clearest 2026 trend is the pivot to AI agents that act, not just generate. Gartner notes only 17% of organizations had deployed AI agents by its 2026 survey, but more than 60% expect to within two years. It separately predicts 40% of enterprise applications will embed task-specific agents by the end of 2026, up from under 5% in 2025. The race is shifting from chat interfaces to autonomous workflows embedded directly in business software.
Najczęstsze pytania
What percentage of companies use AI in 2026?
McKinsey reports 71% of organizations regularly use generative AI in at least one function, and Stanford's AI Index found 78% used AI in at least one business function in 2024, up from 55% a year earlier.
Why doesn't AI adoption translate into profit?
McKinsey found only about 39% of organizations report enterprise-level EBIT impact. Deploying tools is easy, but capturing value requires redesigning workflows, governance and processes, which most companies have not yet done.
How widely are AI agents deployed?
Gartner found only 17% of organizations had deployed AI agents by its 2026 survey, but over 60% expect to within two years, and it projects 40% of enterprise apps will embed task-specific agents by the end of 2026.
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Compiled by ToolGlance from publicly reported data; figures link to their sources. Updated 2026-05-30.