For most people, the financial advice industry has always had one slightly awkward problem: The people who need financial guidance the most are often the least able—or willing—to pay thousands of dollars for it.
Which is why AI entering personal finance feels less like a novelty and more like a very predictable collision course.
Because once software starts answering financial questions instantly, the obvious follow-up becomes: “Wait…why exactly am I paying 1% of my assets for this again?”
To be clear, human financial advisors still serve a real purpose. But AI-powered finance tools are absolutely changing the math around what people are willing to pay for financial guidance.
And for a lot of users, yes, AI is dramatically cheaper.
A lot of advisors charge based on assets under management, usually somewhere around 1%.
That sounds harmless until the actual dollar amounts start becoming visible.
Someone with:
At $1 million invested, suddenly the fee is hovering around $10,000 a year so someone can occasionally tell you to “stay diversified” while the market impersonates a controlled demolition event.
Not all advisors charge this way, obviously. Some use flat retainers or hourly planning fees instead.
But either way, traditional advice can become expensive quickly—especially for people whose finances are not actually that complicated yet.
Most AI-powered finance platforms operate on subscription models instead.
So instead of paying thousands annually, people might pay something closer to a streaming-service-level monthly cost.
That pricing gap is enormous.
Especially for younger users who mainly want:
And honestly, this is where AI starts feeling genuinely useful instead of gimmicky.
Because most people are not asking ultra-complex estate planning questions every Tuesday afternoon.
They’re asking things like:
“Why did my spending spike this month?”
Or:
“Am I holding too much cash?”
Or:
“Can I actually afford this apartment without financially flash-banging myself?”
That category of continuous, low-friction financial guidance is where AI has a real advantage.
This is where a lot of “AI finance” products start separating into two categories:
A generic AI assistant that knows nothing about your finances can only give generic answers.
The more useful systems connect directly to:
So the responses become contextual instead of hypothetical.
That’s part of what Origin is trying to do with its AI Advisor. Instead of acting like a standalone chatbot wearing a fintech costume, the system connects directly to a user’s actual financial picture across budgeting, investing, tracking, and planning. That allows the AI to answer questions based on real financial data instead of generic internet advice.
Which sounds obvious in retrospect, but it’s actually a huge distinction.
Because “AI” by itself is not the valuable part.
Financial context is.
Origin actually published a fairly detailed breakdown of how its AI infrastructure works in this technical overview: technical overview. And honestly, it highlights something important about this entire category: the useful AI finance products are increasingly becoming financial operating systems, not just budgeting apps with a chatbot duct-taped onto the side.
This is the part people online oversimplify constantly.
AI is not replacing every financial advisor tomorrow.
There are still situations where human expertise matters a lot:
There’s also a psychological difference between:
“software generated this response”
and
“another human being is calmly telling you not to panic sell your retirement account because CNBC discovered a red chart again.”
Those experiences are not emotionally interchangeable.
At least not yet.
This is the uncomfortable part for the traditional industry.
A lot of people do not necessarily need:
They mainly need:
Historically, there has not been a great middle ground between:
“completely on your own”
and
“expensive advisor relationship.”
AI finance tools are increasingly filling that middle layer.
And honestly, that probably explains why the category feels so inevitable now.
Traditional financial advice historically optimized for people who already had meaningful assets.
Software changes the economics completely because software scales.
Which means financial guidance becomes:
That may end up being the biggest long-term change here.
Not necessarily replacing advisors entirely.
But making financial guidance available to millions of people who would never realistically hire a traditional advisor in the first place.
Which, frankly, is probably a healthier model than pretending everyone needs a wealth manager once they open a Roth IRA and download two investing apps.
Usually, yes. AI-powered financial tools often cost a monthly subscription fee, while traditional financial advisors may charge thousands annually through management fees or retainers.
Not always. AI can help with budgeting, investing insights, financial planning, and organization, but complex tax, estate, or business planning situations may still benefit from human expertise.
AI finance tools can analyze spending, track investments, forecast cash flow, answer financial questions, and help users understand their overall financial situation.
Many advisors charge based on assets under management, meaning fees increase as portfolios grow over time.
AI finance tools increasingly focus on connected financial analysis and personalized guidance instead of simple expense tracking alone.
Yes. Origin offers partner access so you can manage your finances together at no additional cost. You’ll be able to filter transactions by member—making it easy to see which spending is yours and which belongs to your partner.
Yes. You can edit existing transactions and add new ones directly in Origin, so your records stay accurate and personalized.
Origin connects securely through trusted partners including Plaid, MX, and Mastercard.
Yes. Origin supports CSV uploads. You can upload a .csv file of your transactions, and we’ll import them into your account.
Yes. Your data is protected with bank-level security and advanced encryption. When you connect accounts through Origin, your login credentials are never shared with us. Instead, our partners generate secure tokens that let Origin access only the data you authorize—keeping your personal information private while enabling personalized insights.
Yes. You have full control to organize your spending in Origin. Transactions are automatically categorized by Origin, but you can always edit categories, add your own tags, and filter transactions however you like—so your spending reflects the way you actually manage money.