Using AI-Generated Financial Analysis Wisely

David Uhlmann |

Artificial intelligence tools can be useful for learning, organizing information, and exploring financial planning questions. They can help explain concepts, summarize tradeoffs, and surface better questions. But AI-generated financial analysis should be treated as a starting point for discussion, not as a final planning recommendation.

AI Can Be Helpful When Used for Exploration

AI tools can be especially helpful when you want to better understand a topic before making a decision. They can translate technical concepts into plain English, summarize tradeoffs, and identify areas that may deserve further review.

AI is often best used to help you ask better questions, not to make final financial decisions by itself.

Where AI Should Be Used Carefully

AI tools can produce answers that sound confident even when the assumptions are incomplete, outdated, or incorrect. This matters because financial planning decisions often depend on details that are specific to your household, tax situation, employer benefits, investment accounts, estate documents, insurance coverage, and timing of future goals.

AI-generated analysis should be used carefully for areas such as:

  • Retirement income planning and withdrawal strategies
  • Tax estimates, Roth conversions, and multi-year tax planning
  • Investment recommendations and portfolio allocation decisions
  • Deferred compensation elections or payout strategies
  • Stock option, RSU, ESPP, or concentrated stock decisions
  • Estate planning questions and beneficiary planning
  • Insurance coverage analysis, including life, disability, long-term care, and umbrella liability coverage
  • Home purchase, mortgage, or refinancing decisions
  • Social Security timing and Medicare-related income planning
  • Legal, tax, or regulatory interpretations

Important: The more a decision depends on your full financial picture, current law, precise calculations, or professional judgment, the more careful you should be about relying on AI output without review.

Why AI Results May Differ From Professional Planning Analysis

AI tools may not know your complete situation unless every relevant detail is provided. Even then, the tool may simplify, omit, or assume key items. The result may look precise, but the precision can be misleading if the underlying assumptions are not reviewed.

Examples of Better and Riskier AI Use

Planning Models and Projections Need Validation

Some AI tools can generate projections or illustrations, including retirement projections, tax estimates, investment scenarios, or probability-based models. These can be educational, but they are highly sensitive to assumptions.

Results may change significantly depending on expected returns, inflation, tax rates, timing of income, spending levels, account types, rebalancing, and how long the analysis assumes you will need income. For that reason, AI-generated projections should generally be viewed as educational illustrations unless the assumptions, calculations, and methodology have been reviewed.

Please Be Careful With Personal Information

Before entering personal information into any AI tool, consider whether the tool is appropriate for sensitive financial data. Avoid entering confidential details unless you are using a secure, advisor-approved workflow.

Be especially careful with:

  • Social Security numbers
  • Account numbers
  • Full tax returns
  • Paystubs
  • Estate documents
  • Insurance policies
  • Employer benefit documents
  • Personally identifiable information
  • Full financial account details

How to Share AI-Generated Analysis With Your Advisor

If you use AI to explore a financial planning topic, it can still be helpful to share the output. The most useful items to provide are:

  • The question or prompt you asked
  • The AI-generated response
  • Any assumptions used
  • Any numbers or inputs you provided
  • The decision you are trying to make

The AI output can then be reviewed as a conversation starter. The advisor’s role is to validate the assumptions, identify missing context, and determine whether the conclusion fits your broader financial plan.

The Bottom Line

AI can be a helpful educational tool, but it should not replace coordinated financial planning.

The goal is not to avoid AI. The goal is to use it wisely, with appropriate validation, context, and judgment.

Use AI to learn, explore, and organize questions. Use professional planning tools and advisor review before making financial decisions.