1 In 3 Small Business Owners Tap Personal Savings For AI

Mike Allerson
Us dollar bills being inserted into a piggy bank; small business AI spending

Competitive anxiety, not careful planning, is driving a large share of small-business AI spending, according to a survey of 241 small- and mid-sized business owners from the lender Clarify Capital, published on June 11, 2026. One in three owners said they have dipped into personal funds to cover AI costs, with average annual spending reaching $10,600.

For solopreneurs and microbusiness owners, that finding lands close to home. When the line between business and personal money is already thin, paying for AI tools out of savings can quietly drain the cushion meant for emergencies or retirement.

What The Survey Found

Clarify Capital reported that 33 percent of owners used personal funds for AI, while 67 percent drew on operating cash flow, 18 percent used a business line of credit, and 11 percent took out a loan. The average annual outlay across respondents was $10,600.

The pressure is real and uneven. Across all owners, 37 percent said they feel some pressure to borrow for AI just to keep up with competitors, a figure that rose to 55 percent in financial services. Spending skewed heavily toward software, with 88 percent buying AI tools, 39 percent funding workflow automation, and 30 percent paying for training.

Why This Matters For Self-Employed Owners

The survey suggests AI has shifted from optional to table stakes in some fields, which can push owners to buy out of fear rather than need. That instinct is risky when the money comes from personal savings instead of business cash flow.

Measurement is the other gap. More than half of owners, 54 percent, set no return-on-investment goal before spending, so many cannot tell whether a tool is paying for itself or just adding another subscription to the pile.

See also  Small Steps Today Drive Big Gains

What Self-Employed Owners Should Do Next

Set a simple budget and a check-in date before buying any new tool, and start with one product tied to a clear task such as invoicing, scheduling, or content. Favor paying from business cash flow over personal savings, and keep the two accounts separate so an AI experiment never touches your emergency fund.

It also pays to watch how AI is reshaping the work itself, since the same tools are changing hiring and applications, as covered in our report on AI-generated job applications. Treat each purchase as a test with a deadline, not a permanent fixed cost.

What To Watch Next

Watch whether lenders and vendors build more products aimed at small AI loans, since 57 percent of those seeking financing wanted $15,000 or less. A wave of cheap, targeted financing could ease the personal-funds squeeze, or it could pull more owners into debt for tools they have not yet learned to measure.

Future surveys should also show whether early adopters keep spending. Clarify Capital found owners who already saw a return were more than twice as likely to plan bigger AI budgets, a pattern worth tracking through the rest of 2026.

Photo by Markus Kammermann: Unsplash

About Self Employed's Editorial Process

The Self Employed editorial policy is led by editor-in-chief, Renee Johnson. We take great pride in the quality of our content. Our writers create original, accurate, engaging content that is free of ethical concerns or conflicts. Our rigorous editorial process includes editing for accuracy, recency, and clarity.

Hi, I am Mike. I am SelfEmployed.com's in-house accounting and financial expert. I help review and write much of the finance-related content on Self Employed. I have had a CPA for over 15 years and love helping people succeed financially.