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Introducing Square AI: Helping UK Small Businesses Turn Instinct Into Confident Decisions

Business

Introducing Square AI: Helping UK Small Businesses Turn Instinct Into Confident Decisions
Business

Business

Introducing Square AI: Helping UK Small Businesses Turn Instinct Into Confident Decisions

2026-02-10 17:00 Last Updated At:17:46

LONDON--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Feb 10, 2026--

Square today announced the UK launch of Square AI, a free, conversational AI assistant built directly into the Square platform to help businesses of all sizes make clearer, faster decisions using their own business data.

This press release features multimedia. View the full release here: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20260210922162/en/

The launch follows new research commissioned by Square, which shows that while more than half (53%) of UK SMEs have used AI in their business, only 30% use it regularly. This low level of adoption is leaving many businesses experimenting without seeing value, or not yet taking advantage of AI at all.

The research found that UK businesses rely heavily on instinct to run their operations: 51% of SME owners describe themselves as instinct-led, compared with just 19% who rely on data to make decisions. Combining gut feel with data is the secret sauce for businesses, however: almost three in four (74%) UK SME owners say they feel more confident when instinct is combined with insight.

“Across our markets, we’re already seeing businesses use Square AI to get clearer on their performance, make faster decisions, and spend less time buried in reports,” said Willem Avé, Global Head of Product at Square. “Businesses generate enormous amounts of data every day through payments and commerce. For a long time, turning that data into real insight has been something reserved for larger organisations with analysts and operations teams. Square AI levels the playing field by bringing powerful analytics into the flow of running a business, through a simple, conversational AI assistant. It enables businesses of every size to combine their instinct with real data, without complexity.”

Because Square brings together payments, sales, and day-to-day business operations in one place, it already has a uniquely clear, unified view of how businesses run. Square AI is built to work across that existing ecosystem, helping businesses turn the information they already rely on into clearer insight, without needing separate tools, integrations, or manual analysis.

Square AI is a free tool built directly into Square’s platform, making it simpler and more cost-friendly to adopt advanced AI tools. Already in use by several UK businesses during early access, Square AI is helping operators get rapid answers from their vast datasets, and spend less time pulling reports. The tech provides:

UK businesses are time poor, but are being forced to spend more time than they need analysing data (4.3 hours per week) and running admin and reporting (2.3 hours).

Freeing up that time would be crucial for businesses. When asked how they’d spend time given back, respondents said they’d focus on improving their work-life balance (37.2%); find ways to market or promote their business (36.2%); explore new ideas or focus on business growth (35.0%); and spend more time building relationships with customers (32.4%). The research underlines that the real value of AI is not just about doing less, it’s about giving business owners time back to spend on whatever is most important to them.

“UK businesses are operating in a tough environment right now, with rising costs, staffing pressure, and little margin for wasted time,” said John O’Beirne, CEO and Executive Director of Square International. “Where Square AI comes in is backing everyday decisions with clarity and confidence, while giving owners meaningful time back each week to focus on what matters most: their customers and their success. It's built to feel practical, familiar, and trustworthy, because that's what UK businesses need to keep moving forward.”

One UK business that has been using Square AI during early access is Brickwood Coffee & Bread, an Aussie-inspired, multi-location, South London-based cafe.

“[Square AI] is really useful for owner-operators, because it gives you quick answers to straightforward questions,” said Jayke Mangion, owner of Brickwood. “Whether it’s: ‘how many croissants did we sell last week?’ or ‘how did revenue compare to this day last year?’, you can get the insights instantly and can make decisions faster.”

Square’s research also shows UK businesses respond best to AI when it is positioned as a practical assistant rather than abstract technology. 53% agree AI helps them make more informed decisions, 43% say it could help them understand their business data more easily, and 41% say they want an assistant that digs into their data and identifies opportunities while they focus on what matters most.

Square AI uses everyday, conversational language to help business owners get answers from their data, with no training or technical setup required.

At the same time, trust remains a key barrier. 40.6% of UK SME owners say they do not trust AI to make recommendations without oversight, and 42% say clearer information about how their data is used would increase their comfort. Built directly into Square’s established commerce platform, Square AI offers a familiar and transparent entry point into AI for businesses already trusting Square with payments and operations.

Adoption is strongest in sectors like food and beverage, where businesses are already leaning into AI to improve operations, service, and day-to-day decision making.

Square AI is free for UK sellers to use and works inside the tools they already rely on, supporting everyday decisions without replacing human judgement.

Square AI will be available to UK sellers from February 2026.

Research conducted by Censuswide among 500 UK SME owners between 29 December 2025 and 9 January 2026.

About Square

Square helps businesses turn transactions into connections and businesses into neighbourhood favourites.

In 2009, Square started with a simple invention – the first mobile card reader, which changed how the entire financial system thinks about small businesses. Square has since grown into a global business platform helping millions of sellers of all sizes participate and thrive in their communities.

Whether independently run or a global chain, Square understands that sellers succeed when they have the freedom to focus on the experiences that keep customers coming back. From point of sale and payments to online commerce, staff management, banking, and more, Square brings together the tools sellers need to run and grow on one intelligent platform. For more information, visit squareup.com/uk.

Square AI surfaces sales trends instantly, without digging through reports. (Graphic: Square)

Square AI surfaces sales trends instantly, without digging through reports. (Graphic: Square)

Square AI can help operators factor in local events and conditions when making day-to-day decisions. (Graphic: Square)

Square AI can help operators factor in local events and conditions when making day-to-day decisions. (Graphic: Square)

Square AI is a conversational assistant that turns everyday business data into clear, actionable insight. (Graphic: Square)

Square AI is a conversational assistant that turns everyday business data into clear, actionable insight. (Graphic: Square)

LIVIGNO, Italy (AP) — It's true at every Olympics, in every event. There is gold, silver, bronze, and heartbreak.

Fourth place is the cruelest place to finish at the Games, and nothing told the story better at the Milan Cortina Games than the tears flowing out of British freeskier Kirsty Muir, who was edged off the podium by a mere .41 points in the slopestyle finals on Monday.

"I’ll be proud of myself in a minute,” Muir said, as she made her tear-stained way through the long interview area at the bottom of the hill. “But I’m in a bit of a hole right now.”

The 21-year-old Muir was coming in off a win in the X Games last month, with every reason to believe she could contend for a medal in an event highlighted by Mathilde Gremaud, who won her second straight gold medal, and Eileen Gu, who won her second straight silver.

A missed grab here. A little wobble there. Muir finished fifth at the Beijing Games four years ago, so this was an improvement. But not as big a leap as she'd hoped for.

“The last time, I was 17, I put the tricks down to come fifth, the best I’d ever done them,” she said. “I was so proud of myself. It’s hard to say how I’m feeling right now. I’ve got a lot to process."

AP Winter Olympics: https://apnews.com/hub/milan-cortina-2026-winter-olympics

Britain's Kirsty Muir reacts during the women's freestyle skiing slopestyle finals at the 2026 Winter Olympics, in Livigno, Italy, Monday, Feb. 9, 2026. (AP Photo/Gregory Bull)

Britain's Kirsty Muir reacts during the women's freestyle skiing slopestyle finals at the 2026 Winter Olympics, in Livigno, Italy, Monday, Feb. 9, 2026. (AP Photo/Gregory Bull)

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