Last week, OpenAI said it would begin testing advertisements within its popular chatbot ChatGPT in the coming weeks, targeting adult users in the United States who use the free tier or the company’s new $8-per-month ChatGPT Go subscription. Premium subscribers on the Plus ($20/month), Pro ($200/month), Business and Enterprise tiers will remain ad-free.

This could be a watershed moment for generative AI as OpenAI becomes one of the first major AI companies to introduce advertising directly into a conversational chatbot. It also signals mounting financial pressure: despite reportedly exceeding an estimated $20 billion in annualized revenue by 2025, the company is burning through cash to fund its AI infrastructure ambitions.

The Economics Forcing OpenAI’s Hand

OpenAI projects losses will reach approximately $14 billion by 2026, with the company’s cash burn rate remaining around 57% of revenue through 2027, according to financial documents reviewed by Fortune and The Information. The startup expects to burn through a cumulative $115 billion through 2029 before potentially turning cash flow positive in 2029 or 2030.

These numbers are driven by the computing infrastructure needed to train and run AI models. OpenAI has outlined plans that could amount to as much as $1.4 trillion in AI infrastructure spending over the next eight years, partnering with cloud and chip giants to build the data centers necessary to support its technology.

Only a small percentage of ChatGPT’s estimated 800 million weekly active users currently pay for subscriptions. With roughly 90% of users on the free tier, advertising represents a potential goldmine for the firm, if executed properly.

Unlike traditional banner ads and pop-ups, the advertisements will appear at the bottom of ChatGPT’s responses, labeled and separated from the organic answer, according to the firm’s statement.

“To start, we plan to test ads at the bottom of answers in ChatGPT when there’s a relevant sponsored product or service based on your current conversation,” the startup said in its announcement.

“You’ll be able to learn more about why you’re seeing that ad, or dismiss any ad and tell us why. During our test, we will not show ads in accounts where the user tells us or we predict that they are under 18, and ads are not eligible to appear near sensitive or regulated topics like health, mental health or politics.”

Trust Dichotomy

Sam Altman once said he “hates” advertising, calling it a “last resort” and saying combining it with AI was “uniquely unsettling.” Many other tech executives have made similar pledges — and we know how those have ended.

Last year, Altman acknowledged he wasn’t “totally against” ads but warned that it would “take a lot of care to get right.”

What changed?

OpenAI’s annual burn rate has hit approximately $17 billion, largely consumed by computing infrastructure. The company is also reportedly gearing up for a potential initial public offering as early as late 2026 with some estimates placing valuations approaching $1 trillion, creating pressure to demonstrate a path to profitability.

In its announcement, OpenAI seems to be attempting to address trust concerns by outlining five core advertising principles: mission alignment, i.e. ads support making AI more accessible, answer independence, i.e. ads never influence responses, conversation privacy, i.e. data isn’t sold to advertisers, user choice and control, i.e. personalization can be disabled, and long-term value — i.e. the company won’t optimize for engagement time.

“We do not optimize for time spent in ChatGPT,” OpenAI stated, possibly in tangential reference to social media platforms like Meta and TikTok that have been criticized for maximizing user engagement to boost ad revenue. “We prioritize user trust and user experience over revenue.”

Are users likely to believe these assurances? The company has faced controversies including lawsuits alleging harmful outcomes linked to ChatGPT interactions, including in cases involving suicides, among a multitude of other concerns around AI’s recommendations — paid or otherwise.

Competitive Consequences

Rival Anthropic has not announced advertising plans, while Google’s Gemini and Microsoft’s Copilot have different competitive dynamics given their parent companies’ existing ad businesses.

“If ads feel clumsy or opportunistic, users can easily switch to rival chatbots,” noted Emarketer analyst Jeremy Goldman in comments to Reuters. However, he added that OpenAI’s decision could pressure competitors “to clarify their own monetization philosophies, especially those positioning themselves as ‘ad-free by design.’”

ChatGPT represents potentially ripe ground for advertisers. The ability to reach users during active research and decision-making moments — for instance, when they’re asking questions about travel, shopping or solving problems — could prove more valuable than traditional display advertising.

However, that assumes that system costs come down and users accept the ads without fleeing to competitors. OpenAI is betting that most free users prefer seeing occasional sponsored recommendations over paying $8 to $20 monthly for ad-free access.

What Happens Next?

The advertising test will begin “in the coming weeks” for logged-in adult users in the U.S. on free and Go tiers, the firm said. OpenAI also said it plans to gather feedback and refine the experience before potentially expanding globally or introducing new ad formats.

The company hinted at more interactive advertising possibilities in the future. Rather than static recommendations, users might eventually be able to ask follow-up questions about advertised products directly within the conversation, transforming ads into extensions of the AI interaction.

“Soon you might see an ad and be able to directly ask the questions you need to make a purchase decision,” the company said.

With losses mounting and competition intensifying, the company has little margin for error — and the real purchase decision could be whether OpenAI has successfully pivoted and sold the idea that helpful AI and advertising can coexist.

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