How to Use ChatGPT: A Plain-English Beginner's Guide (2026)
ChatGPT is a free AI tool that answers questions, explains things in plain language, helps draft letters and emails, and holds a conversation. Go to chatgpt.com, create a free account, type your question in the box, and press Enter. There is nothing to install and no technical knowledge required. Only 10% of Americans over 65 have tried it — but those who do tend to find it surprisingly useful.
What exactly is ChatGPT?
ChatGPT is an artificial intelligence program made by a company called OpenAI. You type a question or request — just as you would text a message — and it writes back a detailed, conversational response. It is not a search engine, and it is not a person. It is software that has been trained on an enormous amount of written text and has learned to produce helpful, human-sounding replies.
The easiest way to understand it: imagine a very well-read assistant who has absorbed millions of books, articles, and websites, and can now explain almost any topic in whatever level of detail you ask for — but who sometimes gets facts wrong and has no memory of your conversation the next time you visit.
It launched in late 2022 and became the fastest-growing consumer application in history. As of early 2026, it has around 900 million weekly users worldwide. Despite this, adoption among adults over 65 remains low — Pew Research found that only about 10% of Americans in that age group have ever tried it, compared with 58% of those under 30. That gap is closing, and for good reason: the tool has become noticeably more capable and easier to use.
How to start your first conversation
You do not need to download anything or buy anything. Here is all it takes:
- Open your phone's or computer's browser (Safari, Chrome, Edge — any will do).
- Go to chatgpt.com
- Tap or click Sign up and create a free account with your email address.
- Once signed in, you will see a text box in the middle of the screen with the words "Message ChatGPT".
- Type your question — anything you like — and press Enter or tap the arrow button.
- ChatGPT will write its response within a few seconds.
That is the entire process. There are no forms to fill in, no technical settings to configure, and no right or wrong way to phrase your question. Write as you would speak.
A tip on phrasing
ChatGPT responds better to natural, complete sentences than to keywords. Instead of typing "blood pressure medication side effects" as you might search Google, try: "Can you explain in plain English what the common side effects of beta blockers are?" The more context you give, the more useful the response.
What ChatGPT is genuinely good at
These are the uses where most people find ChatGPT consistently helpful:
Explaining things in plain English
Medical terms, legal documents, insurance policies, financial statements — ask ChatGPT to explain anything "in plain language" and it will do so patiently.
Drafting letters and emails
Describe what you want to say and to whom, and ChatGPT will write a draft. You can then edit it or ask for a different tone.
Researching unfamiliar topics
Getting a new diagnosis, buying a new device, planning a trip — ChatGPT gives you a solid starting point before you make decisions or speak to a professional.
Summarising long documents
Paste the text of a long letter, article, or document and ask ChatGPT to summarise it in a few bullet points. This saves significant reading time.
Step-by-step instructions
Tech problems, recipes, home repairs — ask for step-by-step guidance in plain language for any task, tailored to your exact situation and device.
Brainstorming ideas
Gift ideas, activity suggestions, conversation starters, birthday card messages — ChatGPT is an endlessly patient thinking partner for any creative need.
Where ChatGPT falls short — important limitations
ChatGPT is genuinely useful, but it has limitations that are important to understand before relying on it:
- It can be confidently wrong. ChatGPT sometimes generates plausible-sounding facts, names, dates, or statistics that are simply incorrect. This is called "hallucination." The more specific a fact, the more important it is to verify it from an original source.
- It does not know about recent events. Unless you are using a version with web search enabled, ChatGPT's knowledge has a cutoff date and it cannot tell you about news that happened recently.
- It is not a doctor, lawyer, or financial advisor. It can explain concepts and help you prepare for a conversation with a professional, but it cannot replace that conversation. Never make significant health, legal, or financial decisions based solely on what ChatGPT tells you.
- It cannot take action on your behalf. ChatGPT can write an email but cannot send it. It can explain a process but cannot do the thing itself — unless you are using newer "agentic" features that most people are not using yet.
These limitations do not make ChatGPT useless — far from it. They mean you should treat it as a starting point and a thinking aid rather than a final authority. For most everyday uses, cross-referencing its responses with a quick Google search or a call to a relevant professional is all the safety check you need.
Practical examples to try right now
If you have just signed up and are not sure what to ask, here are real examples that many adults find immediately useful:
- "Explain my Medicare Explanation of Benefits letter in plain English." Paste the text of a confusing letter and let ChatGPT translate the bureaucratic language.
- "What are some gentle exercises for someone with knee arthritis?" Ask for health information to discuss with your doctor, not to replace that discussion.
- "Write a text message to my son explaining that I can't make it to dinner on Sunday and suggesting we reschedule." Get a draft of a message you find awkward to write.
- "What is the difference between Medicare Advantage and Original Medicare?" Ask for explanations of complex topics you have been meaning to understand.
- "I'm thinking of buying a new iPad. What questions should I ask before I decide?" Use ChatGPT to prepare for any purchase or decision.
You can ask follow-up questions
Unlike a search engine, ChatGPT remembers the conversation as long as the window is open. If an answer is unclear, type: "Can you explain that in simpler terms?" or "Can you give me an example?" and it will rephrase. You can go back and forth as many times as you need — there is no limit on questions.
What about privacy and safety?
This is a reasonable concern. The short answer: ChatGPT is safe to use for general questions and everyday tasks, but you should never type sensitive personal information into it.
By default, OpenAI stores your conversations and may use them to train future versions of the AI. That means anything you type is not fully private. The practical rule is straightforward: if you would not say something on a postcard you were sending to a stranger, do not type it into ChatGPT. This means:
- No Social Security numbers
- No bank account or credit card numbers
- No passwords
- No Medicare or insurance numbers
- No detailed health information that could identify you
For general questions, explanations, and writing help — none of which require identifying information — ChatGPT is as safe to use as any other website. We cover the privacy topic in much more detail in our companion article: Is ChatGPT Safe? What You Need to Know Before You Start.
The free version vs the paid version
The free version of ChatGPT at chatgpt.com is sufficient for almost everything described in this article. It handles questions, explanations, letter drafting, summaries, and general conversation without any payment required.
ChatGPT Plus costs $20 per month and offers faster responses, access to more advanced AI models, and the ability to generate images. For most adults using ChatGPT for the tasks described here, the free version is the right starting point. You can always upgrade later if you find yourself using it heavily and wanting more speed or features.
Common Questions About ChatGPT
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Is ChatGPT free to use?
Yes. The free version at chatgpt.com is fully functional and requires only a free account. There is a paid plan called ChatGPT Plus at $20 per month with faster responses and more advanced features, but the free version handles questions, explanations, writing help, and general conversation without any charge.
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Can ChatGPT give me medical or legal advice?
ChatGPT can explain medical terms and legal concepts in plain language, which many people find helpful before talking to a professional. It cannot diagnose conditions, prescribe treatments, or give advice that accounts for your specific circumstances. Always confirm important medical or legal decisions with a qualified doctor or attorney.
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Does ChatGPT always tell the truth?
No. ChatGPT can produce confident-sounding answers that are factually wrong — this is called "hallucination." It is most likely to be inaccurate on specific facts, dates, names, statistics, and recent events. Always verify important information from a reliable source such as a government website, your doctor, or a trusted news outlet.
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Do I need to know anything about computers to use ChatGPT?
No prior technical knowledge is needed. If you can type a question and press Enter, you can use ChatGPT. It works on any phone, tablet, or computer with an internet browser. There is nothing to install unless you want to use the optional phone app.
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What is the difference between ChatGPT and a regular internet search?
A search engine like Google returns a list of links to websites. ChatGPT reads your question and writes a direct, conversational answer. You do not need to click through multiple websites. The tradeoff is that ChatGPT may be wrong, while search results link to sources you can check. For current news and time-sensitive facts, search engines are more reliable. For explanations and writing help, ChatGPT is often more efficient.
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Can I use ChatGPT on my phone?
Yes. Visit chatgpt.com in your phone's browser, or download the free ChatGPT app from the App Store (iPhone) or Google Play (Android). The app includes a voice mode where you can speak your questions rather than type them — useful if typing is difficult.