Retail banks are moving fast on AI in 2026. Budgets are growing. Roadmaps are packed. Internal momentum is real. Customer loyalty, however is not. And the disconnect is becoming harder to ignore.

AI adoption is accelerating across retail banking, yet differentiation keeps slipping and relationships continue to thin. This isn’t because AI isn’t powerful enough. It’s that right now, too many banks are using it to make the same experience cheaper and faster (think speedier problem resolution, fewer calls, more self‑service). Those gains matter, but they don’t automatically translate into trust, preference, or primacy. Efficiency is not a relationship strategy.

When AI optimizes transactions, relationships pay the price

Most retail banking AI strategies today are productivity‑led, focusing on call deflection, automation, and cost takeout. That’s understandable and necessary. But when banks deliver convenience without connection, they train customers to treat banking as a commodity, and to switch when a better rate or short-term incentive shows up.

Even worse, AI can scale the wrong outcome. “Agentifying” an existing process doesn’t make it more valuable, it just makes it faster. If the journey is emotionally hollow, AI helps deliver that hollowness at scale. This is automation theater made to look impressive, but it also quietly undermines loyalty.

The result? Banks’ AI strategies are training customers to behave transactionally.

The real threat isn’t AI assistants; it’s relationship displacement

Customers are starting to outsource banking conversations to third‑party AI assistants. This isn’t just a new channel; it’s a change in who owns the relationship. If customers form habits around asking an external assistant first, that assistant becomes the interface. The bank becomes the backend.

Many incumbents see this coming and are rushing to build their own assistants. But “we have an assistant too” is not a strategy. The goal should be to protect the moments where trust is made or lost. Banks need to earn the right to be the customer’s guide, not just a transaction processor. Otherwise, they will allow AI intermediaries to capture the advisory layer leaving them to compete on balance sheet economics alone.

Ignore “AI Bank” FOMO

A new wave of AI‑native banks is also emerging, with AI embedded as core architecture rather than bolted‑on branding. Most will fail. Why? “AI‑first” is not a value proposition, and it doesn’t automatically create loyalty.

But a few will succeed and that’s enough to reset expectations around cost, speed, autonomy, and personalization. Incumbents shouldn’t have AI‑bank FOMO. They do need to understand that the competitive landscape is changing. What feels optional today will become table stakes faster than most leadership teams expect.

Redefine AI success: It’s about relationships not efficiency

What I’m seeing isn’t an AI problem, it’s an intent problem.

The uncomfortable truth is that today’s efficiency‑led AI is quietly working against the outcomes banks say they want: loyalty, trust, and primacy. The banks that win won’t be the ones with the most automation, they’ll be the ones that use AI deliberately to build relationships, and to make customers feel guided, understood, and safer making financial decisions.

That requires a shift:

  • From productivity metrics to relationship health
  • From call deflection to trust, engagement, and wallet share
  • From faster transactions to better advice, guidance, and support

If your AI strategy mainly focuses on making servicing cheaper and faster, you’re accelerating commoditization. If it makes customers feel valued and understood, then you’re building a competitive advantage.

2026 should be the year retail banking stops confusing activity with progress. AI will keep advancing either way. The real question is whether customer relationships will advance with it.

To explore what banks should do next, and what happens if they don’t, see the full Consumer Banking Trends, 2026 report. Forrester clients can request a guidance session with me to learn more.