×
Forecast: Generative AI spending to hit $644 billion in 2025 despite tech limitations
Written by
Published on
Join our daily newsletter for breaking news, product launches and deals, research breakdowns, and other industry-leading AI coverage
Join Now

Generative AI spending is surging worldwide as businesses integrate AI capabilities into hardware, software, and services despite persistent technological limitations. Gartner’s latest forecast reveals a shift in corporate strategy as companies move away from ambitious internal AI projects toward commercial solutions that offer more predictable implementation and value. This strategic pivot comes during a critical phase where generative AI’s potential remains largely unfulfilled, creating tension between soaring investment and uneven real-world performance.

The big picture: Global spending on generative AI will reach $644 billion in 2025, a dramatic 76.4% increase from last year, according to Gartner’s latest forecast.

  • Hardware integration will consume about 80% of this increased spending, with manufacturers embedding AI capabilities into servers, PCs, and smartphones.
  • By 2028, Gartner expects AI features to become standard in nearly all consumer devices, regardless of whether consumers specifically demand these capabilities.

Why this matters: Despite significant investment, generative AI remains technologically immature, with hallucinations and inaccuracies undermining its reliability and business value.

  • The disconnect between AI’s current limitations and its promised potential is creating a challenging environment for CIOs who must justify continued investment.
  • Apple Intelligence exemplifies this tension, with features either underperforming or facing continued delays despite being central to iPhone 16 marketing.

Behind the numbers: Gartner’s forecast breaks down 2025 generative AI spending across multiple categories, showing how investment is flowing across the AI ecosystem.

  • Companies will spend $27.7 billion on AI services and $37.1 billion on AI software.
  • Device-related expenditures will reach $398.3 billion, while server-related spending will total $180.6 billion.

What they’re saying: Gartner’s Distinguished VP Analyst John-David Lovelock believes 2025 will mark a turning point in how companies approach generative AI implementation.

  • “Ambitious internal projects from 2024 will face scrutiny in 2025, as CIOs opt for commercial off-the-shelf solutions for more predictable implementation and business value,” Lovelock noted.
  • He also observed that “consumers are not chasing these features. As manufacturers embed AI as a standard feature in consumer devices, consumers will be forced to purchase them.”

The bottom line: The generative AI market shows no signs of slowing despite technological shortcomings, creating a situation where vendors and customers continue investing heavily while waiting for the technology to mature into the transformative force it promises to become.

Gartner to CIOs: Prepare to spend more money on generative AI

Recent News

Two-way street: AI etiquette emerges as machines learn from human manners

Users increasingly rely on social niceties with AI assistants, reflecting our tendency to humanize technology despite knowing it lacks consciousness.

AI-driven FOMO stalls purchase decisions for smartphone consumers

Current AI smartphone features provide limited practical value for many users, especially retirees and those outside tech-focused professions, leaving consumers uncertain whether to upgrade functioning older devices.

Copilot, indeed: AI adoption soars in aerospace industry

Advanced AI systems now enhance aircraft design, automate navigation, and predict maintenance issues, transforming operations across the heavily regulated aerospace sector.