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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsAI 'slop' in the books: The rising cost of fixing chatbot errors (from a British trade magazine for accountants)
This is from Accountancy Age - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Accountancy_Age - and what it says about AI for accounting is pretty damning.
https://accountancyage.com/2026/01/08/ai-slop-in-the-books-the-rising-cost-of-fixing-chatbot-errors/
AI 'slop' in the books: The rising cost of fixing chatbot errors
As "AI slop" invades the ledger, a new Dext study reveals that half of UK firms have already suffered financial losses due to rogue chatbot advice. With 2026 looming as a potential breaking point for business failures, we examine why the profession is making an urgent call for regulation.
Nikita Alexander
January 8, 2026
-snip-
Top AI-Generated Errors Reported by Accountants:
Incorrect Business Expenses: 46%
VAT Miscalculations: 41%
Flawed Personal Tax Planning: 35%
Payroll & Business Tax Errors: 34%
-snip-
While AI is promised as a time-saver, 93% of accountants now spend significant portions of their month fixing AI-driven mistakes. Nearly 40% of practitioners are losing between 4 and 10 hours per week unravelling incorrect data.
-snip-
Perhaps most concerning for the long-term health of the profession is the shift in client attitudes. The research notes that 72% of accountants have seen an increase in clients using AI outputs to actively challenge professional advice.
We are entering a cycle where The AI said X is being used to justify aggressive or fraudulent tax positions. This puts practitioners in a difficult spot, balancing the role of a trusted advisor with the need to act as a de-programmer for clients who believe their £20-a-month subscription knows more than a Chartered Accountant.
-snip-
As "AI slop" invades the ledger, a new Dext study reveals that half of UK firms have already suffered financial losses due to rogue chatbot advice. With 2026 looming as a potential breaking point for business failures, we examine why the profession is making an urgent call for regulation.
Nikita Alexander
January 8, 2026
-snip-
Top AI-Generated Errors Reported by Accountants:
Incorrect Business Expenses: 46%
VAT Miscalculations: 41%
Flawed Personal Tax Planning: 35%
Payroll & Business Tax Errors: 34%
-snip-
While AI is promised as a time-saver, 93% of accountants now spend significant portions of their month fixing AI-driven mistakes. Nearly 40% of practitioners are losing between 4 and 10 hours per week unravelling incorrect data.
-snip-
Perhaps most concerning for the long-term health of the profession is the shift in client attitudes. The research notes that 72% of accountants have seen an increase in clients using AI outputs to actively challenge professional advice.
We are entering a cycle where The AI said X is being used to justify aggressive or fraudulent tax positions. This puts practitioners in a difficult spot, balancing the role of a trusted advisor with the need to act as a de-programmer for clients who believe their £20-a-month subscription knows more than a Chartered Accountant.
-snip-
Great.
And keep in mind that thanks to the AI bros and our dunce of a president, the US government is now running on chatbots, and individuals are pressured by tech companies to use them almost everywhere.
I'll admit I laughed at the line about the people using chatbots needing to be deprogrammed. But it is a serious problem - people are too susceptible to chatbots, even when what the chatbots are saying is ridiculous and even harmful.
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AI 'slop' in the books: The rising cost of fixing chatbot errors (from a British trade magazine for accountants) (Original Post)
highplainsdem
Sunday
OP
UpInArms
(54,174 posts)1. I have a friend who
Refuses to use ai with their job function, as it makes too many errors and requires too much time to repair them
highplainsdem
(60,363 posts)2. Good for your friend! I've always suspected that most people who believe AI saves them a lot of time
simply aren't catching and fixing the errors.