Bank and Credit Card Digital Platforms Show Solid Fundamentals, but Gaps Emerge in Critical Moments
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Core digital banking and credit card experience remains strong overall
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Comprehensive virtual assistants drive significant increase in overall customer satisfaction
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Virtual assistants strained by more advanced security and customer service tasks
Banks and credit card providers in Canada are steadily expanding artificial intelligence (AI)-powered virtual assistants across their mobile apps, but the technology continues to fall short in high-stakes customer scenarios. While virtual assistants perform well for simple transactional tasks, they struggle to guide customers through more complex issues, according to a series of recent studies of banking and credit card mobile app and online users in Canada, released .
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The studies—the JD Power 2026 Canada Banking Mobile App Satisfaction Study;SM 2026 Canada Online Banking Satisfaction Study;SM 2026 Canada Credit Card Mobile App Satisfaction Study;SM and 2026 Canada Online Credit Card Satisfaction StudySM —track overall customer satisfaction with banking and credit card providers’ digital offerings.
“AI-powered virtual assistants are becoming a more prominent feature across banking apps in Canada, and customers are clearly open to using them for everyday financial questions and simple transactions,” said Jennifer White, managing director of financial services intelligence at JD Power. “But the data also shows a hard ceiling: when situations become complex, especially around fraud or urgent account issues, these systems still struggle to deliver effective resolution. The next phase in the evolution of this technology isn’t about adding more automation but rather designing better handoffs to human support before customers get stuck in frustrating self-service loops.”
Following are some key findings of the 2026 studies:
- Core digital experience remains strong despite AI friction: Overall satisfaction (all on 1,000-point scales) with Canada banking apps is 678; overall satisfaction with banking websites is 668; overall satisfaction with credit card apps is 674; and overall satisfaction with credit card websites is 654. Despite ongoing challenges with virtual assistants, these performances are driven largely by the strength of the core digital experience, as most bank and credit card apps and websites deliver on key fundamentals including fast and seamless login, modern design and intuitive navigation.
- Virtual assistants drive increase in satisfaction when they work well: When users perceive virtual assistants as highly comprehensive and capable, overall satisfaction is 160 points higher than the industry average. However, satisfaction drops when users attempt to resolve problems, dispute charges or identify fraud, exposing a critical gap in handling security and customer service needs and underscoring the importance of deeper functionality and reliable escalation paths to support customers’ needs.
- Virtual assistant users tend to be tech-oriented and younger: Virtual assistant users tend to be younger, more tech-oriented and heavier mobile app users. Usage is concentrated among Gen Z1 (19%) and Millennials (13%), and as these digital-native users increasingly turn to virtual assistants, expectations continue to rise, putting pressure on providers to deliver more capable and reliable tools.
“When virtual assistants strike the right balance between simplicity and robust capability, they can significantly elevate the digital experience for bank and credit card customers,” said Jon Sundberg, director of digital solutions at JD Power. “At this stage, while many providers have introduced virtual assistant features, few have successfully combined intuitive design with a broad range of functionality. Closing that gap is the next major step for banks and credit card issuers, especially as more customers grow comfortable turning to AI-driven tools for financial guidance.”
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