ChatGPT’s market share slips below 50% for first time
More than three and a half years after ChatGPT’s initial release, AI assistants are now used by millions of people worldwide, and the competitive landscape
More than three and a half years after ChatGPT’s initial release, AI assistants are now used by millions of people worldwide, and the competitive landscape is changing fast. While OpenAI’s chatbot is still the most popular assistant worldwide, globally, its market share has dipped below 50% for the first time as users are migrating between different assistants like Google’s Gemini, Anthropic’s Claude, and xAI’s Grok, according to analytics firm Sensor Tower’s State of AI Report for 2026. ChatGPT’s growth has been impressive. It became the fastest app ever to reach 1 billion monthly users, as Sensor Tower reported this month. Notably, OpenAI counts weekly active users, and it last reported 900 million of them in February. The chatbot still remains the most popular AI assistant worldwide with over 1.1 billion monthly users, followed by Gemini with 662 million and Claude with 245 million. Image Credits: Sensor Tower Image Credits:Sensor Tower Until January, ChatGPT commanded over 50% market share, but by May’s end, it had fallen to 46.4% thanks to the rise of Gemini (27.7%) and Claude (10.3%). Other assistants, including Grok, Perplexity, DeepSeek, and Meta AI, have less than 5% market share.
Image Credits: Sensor Tower Image Credits:Sensor Tower Sensor Tower’s State of AI Report also found that users are increasingly willing to switch between assistants. Specific events appear to accelerate that behavior: OpenAI’s deal with the U.S. Department of Defense (DoD) in February triggered a measurable spike in uninstalls, for example — suggesting brand trust and values alignment matter to users, not just features. While Gemini’s momentum is largely due to its integration with Google’s broader ecosystem of tools, Anthropic’s Claude has gained a strong reputation for productivity use cases and is closing in on ChatGPT’s user retention rate. In the first half of 2026, people are on pace to download nearly 2.3 billion AI apps and spend over $4.2 billion on them, according to Sensor Tower estimates. That compares to $1.83 billion in spending in H1 2025 — a jump that suggests the industry is shifting its focus from pure growth toward monetization. That said, both download and spend growth rates have decelerated, an indicator that the market may be maturing even as absolute numbers climb. Regionally, Asia recorded the first download decline of 3.3% in Q1 2026, drive by dips in China and India.
Despite leading globally in total downloads, Asia trails North America and Europe when it comes to in-app spending — a split that matters for companies deciding where to invest in premium features and monetization. Image Credits: Sensor Tower Image Credits:Sensor Tower In the U.S., users are gravitating toward AI assistants for productivity tasks and spending more on premium features. Across platforms, average revenue per user has grown industry-wide, but Claude is standing out. Thirteen percent of Anthropic’s users are paying for a subscription plan — a conversion rate that leads the field and will be a metric worth watching for investors evaluating which AI businesses are building lasting revenue. Sensor Tower estimates that the hours spent on AI apps will have increased from 17.2 billion hours in H1 2025 to roughly 36 billion hours in H1 2026. The top three assistants command 89% time spent on AI assistant apps. Meanwhile, adjacent categories like AI companions or AI content generation apps remain fragmented and wide open to competition, which represents both a risk and an opportunity depending on which players move first. and Shopping OpenAI started experimenting with in ChatGPT in February.
