Fear of losing human interaction, privacy and security top concerns for bank customers
Fear of losing human interaction, privacy and security top concerns for bank customers
Published by Wanda Rich
Posted on November 7, 2025

Published by Wanda Rich
Posted on November 7, 2025

RFI Global report highlights importance of building trust and providing more personal user experiences to overcome top customer concerns as use of AI in financial services accelerates
EMBARGO 6 November 2025 0500 GMT - London, UK – As the transition to AI in financial services accelerates and mobile banking pervades, banks and other financial institutions must work harder to create more personalised customer experiences and build trust if they are to overcome customer concerns about privacy, security and loss of human interaction.
RFI Global’s Trends and Predictions report, launched today, dives deep into how global consumers and businesses think about, choose and experience financial services to reveal five key consumer trends and predictions that will shape the sector in 2026.
According to the report, an overwhelming majority of consumers – 95% in Singapore, 94% in Australia, 84% in and the USA – have concerns about AI-powered financial services.
Fear that overreliance on AI will lead to fewer opportunities for human interaction and expertise is a top 3 concern. However, fewer consumers in Australia (29%) and Hong Kong (25%) claim this fear – compared to banking users in the USA (53%), Canada (45%) and Malayasia (42%).
“In a landscape of rapid technological change, banks and neobanks alike must build trust through transparency, bias checks, regular audits, and clarity about how AI is used and where human expertise remains vital,” said Caitlin Hill, Insights Director at RFI Global. “Banks that meet consumers with transparency, the reassurance of human support and hybrid models will differentiate themselves in a crowded market.”
Privacy and security impacts customer retention
Privacy and security is another top cited concern related to AI-powered financial services globally with 55% in the USA, 50% in Malaysia, 44% in Canada, 41% in Singapore expressing concerns, compared to 37% in Australia and 28% in Hong Kong.
This has impacted customer retention, with 5-20% of customers across markets – 5% in Australia, 6% in the UK and 11% in the USA – stating their dissatisfaction with how the bank responded to them when they fell victim to banking fraud as a reason they are considering switching their primary bank. This figure reaches 20% in the UAE.
“Driven by AI, the scale, speed and sophistication of fraud has turned it into a greater global threat,” said Luke Allchin, Director, North America at RFI Global.
Innovation creates best-in-class digital banking experiences
Insights from RFI Global’s iSky platform, which tracks thousands of consumer and business interactions on more than 200 banking and finance apps worldwide, point to an accelerated period of innovation by leading institutions and smaller challengers.
These new customer-controlled features may have been initiated to unlock new revenue streams, but they also provide more empowerment for users to manage their digital footprint and profile, addressing concerns around privacy and security.
New privacy and security features have been added in over the past 2 years: 13.8% of banks have built-in app functionality to lock or disable a card; 11% have added the ability to mask personal information on the interface for the first time; and 16% of banks have incorporated profile or account closing features in app. Further, one of most highly sought after features globally – the ability to cancel and replace a card – has also grown by 3% year on year.
“Banks are no longer just providing digital access; they’re designing digital empowerment,” said Mark Donohue, Managing Director, iSky at RFI Global, who founded the recently acquired iSky Research. “Collectively these innovations point to a sector rapidly professionalising its digital capabilities. Yet there is still more to be done to address customer concerns. The next 12 months will be pivotal, determining which providers lead on service and those left to compete on price.”
Other trends highlighted in the report are:
You can download RFI Global’s 2026 Trends and Predictions report here.
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