OpenAI launched a new personal finance feature inside ChatGPT on Friday. U.S. Pro subscribers can now connect their bank and investment accounts directly to the chatbot.
The tool is powered by Plaid, a financial data company that links to more than 12,000 financial institutions. Supported platforms include Chase, Fidelity, Schwab, Robinhood, American Express, and Capital One.

Once accounts are linked, ChatGPT displays a dashboard showing portfolio performance, spending patterns, active subscriptions, and upcoming payments.
OpenAI says more than 200 million people already bring financial questions to ChatGPT each month. This new feature turns those general questions into answers based on a user’s real account data.
To get started, users click “Get started” in the Finances section on the ChatGPT sidebar. They can also type “@Finances, connect my accounts” in a chat window.
From there, Plaid walks the user through its authentication process. The connection between ChatGPT and the user’s bank is handled entirely by Plaid.
After linking, users can ask questions like how much they spent on groceries last month, which subscriptions they may have forgotten, or how long it would take to pay off a credit card.
The chatbot can also help users estimate how much to save each month to hit a financial goal.
ChatGPT cannot make any changes to linked accounts. It also cannot see full account numbers. It can only read balances, transactions, investment holdings, and liabilities like mortgage or credit card debt.
Users can disconnect their accounts at any time. Once disconnected, OpenAI will delete synced data within 30 days.
Users can also view and delete individual “financial memories” — goals or financial obligations the chatbot has saved.
There is an option to control whether financial conversation data is used to train OpenAI’s models. The company did not detail what it might do with aggregated financial data or what protections exist in case of a data breach.
OpenAI said its GPT-5.5 model handles finance queries with stronger contextual reasoning. The company worked with finance professionals to build a benchmark for personal finance question quality.
OpenAI also plans to add Intuit support, which would allow ChatGPT to estimate the tax impact of selling a stock.
The feature is currently live on ChatGPT’s web and iOS apps. It is available to Pro subscribers only, who pay $200 per month.
OpenAI plans to collect feedback from Pro users before rolling the feature out to Plus subscribers, with a longer-term goal of making it available to all users.
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