Search Console AI Reports Guide 2026
Use Google's 2026 Search Console generative AI reports to measure AI Overviews and AI Mode visibility, limits, controls, and SEO actions.
The 2026 Search Console generative AI performance reports let you monitor which pages get impressions in AI Overviews and AI Mode, but they are visibility reports only—they do not include clicks, CTR, or query data. Use them as a diagnostic layer to identify surfaced URLs, then cross-reference with standard Search Console and analytics before making content or opt-out decisions.
- The new reports isolate AI Overviews and AI Mode impressions, but lack click and query data, so they cannot prove traffic loss or revenue impact.
- Always join AI-impressed page lists with standard Search Console, GA4, and CRM data before making content or opt-out decisions.
- Use the four-layer measurement model (visibility, search demand, on-site behavior, business value) to avoid misattributing ranking losses to AI features.
- Different page types require different responses to high AI impressions—glossary pages may need more depth, while product pages should enhance structured data and reviews.
- Before opting out, weigh the trade-offs per business model; opt-out controls should not replace content improvements.
Google's new Search Console generative AI performance reports give SEOs a separate view of where their pages appear inside AI Overviews, AI Mode, and generative AI experiences in Discover. The important caveat: the reports are visibility reports, not traffic reports. They show impressions, pages, countries, devices for Search, and dates, but they do not show clicks, CTR, position, queries, revenue, or a clean split between AI Overviews and AI Mode.
Use the reports to answer one question first: "Which pages are being surfaced by Google's generative AI features?" Then connect that page list to standard Search Console, GA4, CRM, and rank-tracking data before making content or opt-out decisions.
1What Changed on June 3, 2026
Before this launch, site owners had to infer most AI-search impact from blended Search Console data. AI Mode and AI Overviews were counted in broader Search performance surfaces, but SEOs could not isolate where generative AI visibility was happening with a dedicated report.
The June 3 release changed that in three ways:
| Change | What it means for SEOs | What it does not solve |
|---|---|---|
| Dedicated Search generative AI report | See pages that receive impressions in AI Overviews and AI Mode | Does not show clicks, CTR, position, or queries |
| Dedicated Discover generative AI report | See visibility in generative Discover surfaces | Does not include device segmentation like Search |
| New visibility and control language from Google | Gives publishers a clearer place to monitor AI surfaces and manage inclusion | Does not make AI-search ROI measurable from Search Console alone |
Google's announcement says the data remains included in overall performance reporting while a separate view is being launched for generative AI visibility (Google Search Central). Google's Help Center adds two practical constraints: not every property has the report during rollout, and a property may not qualify if it has not received enough generative AI impressions (Search Console Help).
Search Engine Land's launch coverage also emphasized the same operational limitation practitioners care about most: the report includes impressions, pages, countries, devices, and dates, but not click data (Search Engine Land).
2What The Reports Actually Show
The Search report measures how often URLs from your site appeared in generative AI features on Google Search. Google's Help Center currently lists AI Overviews and AI Mode as included Search features, and says the list may change as Google develops Search (Search Console Help).
The practical dimensions are:
| Dimension | Search generative AI report | Discover generative AI report | How to use it |
|---|---|---|---|
| Impressions | Yes | Yes | Measure visibility trend, not traffic |
| Pages | Yes | Yes | Identify URLs being surfaced by AI features |
| Countries | Yes | Yes | Separate market rollout and demand differences |
| Devices | Yes | No, based on Google's launch language | Spot mobile-vs-desktop Search behavior |
| Dates | Yes | Yes | Track changes after launches, content updates, and opt-out changes |
This is enough to build a visibility dashboard, but not enough to answer whether AI Overviews are "stealing clicks" from a page. You need blended analysis because Search Console's AI report intentionally starts with impressions.
What Is Missing
Do not build executive reporting that treats AI impressions as visits or revenue. The missing fields are as important as the included fields:
| Missing field | Why it matters | Workaround |
|---|---|---|
| Clicks | You cannot calculate actual AI-feature traffic | Compare the same URLs in standard GSC and GA4 |
| CTR | You cannot calculate AI-surface click rate | Use standard Web CTR as a separate, blended signal |
| Queries | You cannot see which prompts or searches triggered visibility | Infer intent from page topic, Search Console queries, and rank-tracking SERP captures |
| Position | You cannot compare AI visibility to classic rank | Use standard GSC average position only as traditional Search context |
| AI Overview vs AI Mode split | You cannot tell which AI surface generated the impression | Use date, country, and device patterns as directional clues only |
| Conversion value | Search Console has no revenue or lead quality data | Join to GA4, CRM, ecommerce, or BI data by landing page and date |
Quattr's analysis of the launch summarized this neatly: the report shows impressions, pages, countries, devices, and dates, but not clicks, CTR, or traffic (Quattr).
The report does not include clicks, CTR, or queries. Never present AI impressions as traffic or revenue to stakeholders.
3How To Access The Report
Inside Search Console, look for the generative AI performance report under the Performance area. If it is missing, do not assume your site has no AI visibility.
Google lists three common reasons the report may not appear:
- The report is still rolling out and your property does not have access yet.
- Your site has not received enough generative AI impressions.
- Your site may be excluded from Search generative AI features, in which case it needs to be included to be eligible (Search Console Help).
Use a domain property where possible. Path-prefix properties can still be useful for traditional reporting, but generative AI visibility is easiest to interpret when the property covers the full site.
4The Correct Measurement Model
Think of AI-search measurement as a four-layer model.
| Layer | Data source | Question answered | Decision enabled |
|---|---|---|---|
| Visibility | GSC generative AI report | Which pages appeared in AI features? | Which URLs deserve review |
| Search demand and clicks | Standard GSC Performance report | Did impressions, clicks, CTR, or average position change? | Whether demand or click behavior changed |
| On-site behavior | GA4, server logs, analytics warehouse | Did organic sessions and engagement change? | Whether click changes affected site visits |
| Business value | CRM, ecommerce, subscriptions, leads | Did revenue or qualified pipeline change? | Whether to invest, rewrite, or opt out |
This model prevents two common mistakes:
- Treating AI impressions as traffic.
- Blaming AI Overviews for a drop that was actually caused by ranking loss, tracking failure, seasonality, or a content quality problem.
For the broader reporting stack, pair this workflow with the SEO1 guides on Google Search Console workflows and measuring SEO ROI.
5Weekly Workflow For SEOs
Run this workflow once a week for properties that have the report. It takes 30-45 minutes once dashboards are set up.
1. Export AI-Impressed Pages
Open the generative AI report and sort by impressions. Export the top pages for the last 7, 28, and 90 days.
Create three working groups:
| Group | Meaning | First action |
|---|---|---|
| High AI impressions, high organic clicks | AI visibility may be additive or at least not obviously harmful | Protect and improve the page |
| High AI impressions, falling organic clicks | Possible AI answer satisfaction, SERP layout change, or intent shift | Compare queries, rankings, snippets, and GA4 |
| Low AI impressions, strong organic clicks | Traditional search works but AI visibility is weak | Review content structure and entity coverage |
Do not judge a page from one day of data unless the traffic pattern is extreme. Use rolling 7-day and 28-day windows for decisions.
2. Join By URL, Not By Query
Because Google's generative AI report does not expose query data, the URL is your stable join key.
For each page, build a row with:
- AI impressions from the generative AI report.
- Web clicks, impressions, CTR, and average position from standard GSC.
- Organic landing-page sessions from GA4.
- Conversions or revenue from your CRM/ecommerce system.
- Last content update date.
- Content type: definition, comparison, tutorial, product page, category page, local landing page, news, or research.
This turns the report from a novelty metric into an editorial queue.
3. Diagnose The Pattern
Use this decision table before making content changes.
| Pattern | Likely explanation | Action |
|---|---|---|
| AI impressions up, Web clicks stable | AI visibility may be incremental or non-cannibalizing | Keep monitoring; improve internal CTAs |
| AI impressions up, Web impressions stable, Web CTR down | AI answer may be satisfying more informational intent | Add original data, examples, tools, templates, or first-hand analysis |
| AI impressions up, Web average position down | Ranking loss may be the main issue, not AI | Run normal SEO diagnosis first |
| AI impressions down, Web clicks down | Page may be losing relevance or crawl/indexing strength | Refresh content and check indexing, internal links, and competitors |
| No AI report access, Web CTR down | You cannot prove AI impact from this report | Use SERP tracking and page-level analytics instead |
4. Segment By Page Type
Different page types need different responses.
| Page type | Best response to high AI impressions | What not to do |
|---|---|---|
| Glossary / definition pages | Add concise answer blocks plus deeper examples and internal links | Do not pad with generic definitions |
| Comparison pages | Add methodology, pricing dates, firsthand testing, and decision tables | Do not let AI summarize a commodity list |
| Product/category pages | Improve product data, Merchant Center feeds, schema, reviews, and availability | Do not opt out before checking revenue impact |
| Local pages | Add real service-area proof, photos, reviews, staff, and local examples | Do not create thin location variants |
| Research/report pages | Promote proprietary data and update dates visibly | Do not hide the core finding below generic intro text |
Google's generative AI optimization guidance says foundational SEO still matters because AI features are rooted in Google's Search systems, while unique, non-commodity content is the long-term lever most likely to help visibility (Google Search Central generative AI guide).
5. Separate Content Problems From Reporting Problems
If stakeholders ask, "Did AI Overviews kill our traffic?", answer with a structured test:
- Did the affected URLs appear in the generative AI report?
- Did standard Web impressions stay stable or grow?
- Did Web CTR fall while average position stayed stable?
- Did GA4 organic sessions fall for the same URLs?
- Did conversions fall, or only informational visits?
- Did competitors, SERP features, seasonality, or tracking changes explain the movement?
Only when most of these line up should you call the issue likely AI-search cannibalization.
Join AI-impressed URL lists with standard GSC, GA4, and CRM by page URL—not query—to build an editorial queue and diagnose real impact.
6Opt-Out Controls: When To Use Them
Google announced new controls for website owners alongside the reporting changes, describing them as part of a broader set of tools for navigating AI in Search (Google product blog). The strategic question is not "Can we opt out?" It is "What do we lose if we opt out?"
Use this matrix:
| Site/business model | Default recommendation | Reason |
|---|---|---|
| Ecommerce | Stay included | Product and category visibility can still drive qualified demand |
| B2B SaaS | Stay included, monitor demo/pipeline pages closely | AI visibility may influence research-stage buyers |
| Local services | Stay included | AI answers can surface local entities, reviews, and service proof |
| Ad-supported publisher | Test carefully by section | Informational answers can reduce pageviews, but visibility may still support brand reach |
| Subscription publisher | Consider limited opt-out tests | High-value content may lose subscription opportunities if summarized |
| Regulated YMYL site | Stay included only if content is accurate, reviewed, and current | Wrong or stale content can be amplified in sensitive contexts |
Do not use opt-out controls as a substitute for better content. Google's AI features documentation says normal Search controls such as nosnippet, max-snippet, noindex, and robots rules affect how content can appear, but those controls also have broader Search consequences (AI features and your website).
Opting out of AI features may also affect how your content appears in broader Search. Test content improvements first.
7Content Strategy From The Report
The generative AI report is most useful when it changes your content backlog.
Pages With High AI Impressions And Low Clicks
These are often pages where the answer is easy to summarize. Improve them by adding information an AI answer cannot fully replace:
- Original examples from your own data or client work.
- Decision trees.
- Templates.
- Calculators.
- Benchmarks with methodology.
- Screenshots or process evidence.
- Expert commentary with named authorship.
- Comparisons that include trade-offs, not just definitions.
For example, a page explaining "what is crawl budget" may be fully satisfied in an AI answer. A page that diagnoses crawl waste from real log-file patterns, includes a prioritization worksheet, and shows before/after crawl stats has a stronger reason to earn a click.
Pages With Low AI Impressions But Strong Organic Performance
These pages may be ranking well in traditional Search while being hard for AI systems to extract. Review:
- Is the direct answer visible in the first 150-250 words?
- Are entities, dates, products, and steps named clearly?
- Are headings descriptive enough to stand alone?
- Are claims cited close to where they appear?
- Is the page mostly generic, or does it contain original information gain?
- Are images, tables, and examples accessible and crawlable?
This overlaps with Answer Engine Optimization, but avoid treating AEO as a bag of hacks. Google's own guidance says there are no special AI-only tricks required for Search; good technical SEO and useful content remain the base (Google AI optimization guide).
8Dashboard Template
Build a dashboard with one row per URL and these columns:
| Column | Source | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| URL | GSC AI report | Join key |
| AI impressions, 7 days | GSC AI report | Short-term visibility |
| AI impressions, 28 days | GSC AI report | Trend smoothing |
| AI impressions delta | GSC AI report | Change detection |
| Web clicks | Standard GSC | Traffic from traditional Search |
| Web CTR | Standard GSC | Click behavior |
| Average position | Standard GSC | Ranking context |
| Organic sessions | GA4 | On-site traffic reality |
| Conversions/revenue | CRM/ecommerce | Business impact |
| Last updated | CMS | Freshness |
| Content type | Manual/CMS | Prioritization |
| Recommended action | SEO owner | Editorial queue |
Use conditional formatting:
- Red: AI impressions up, Web CTR down, conversions down.
- Amber: AI impressions up, Web CTR down, conversions stable.
- Green: AI impressions up, clicks or conversions stable/up.
- Grey: no report access or insufficient data.
9Common Mistakes
Mistake 1: Reporting AI Impressions As AI Traffic
Impressions mean visibility. They do not mean a user clicked to your site. Label dashboards "AI visibility" unless clicks are available from another source.
Mistake 2: Assuming Every CTR Drop Is AI Cannibalization
CTR can fall because of ranking changes, SERP features, seasonality, brand demand, tracking changes, or query mix. The AI report is one clue, not a verdict.
Mistake 3: Optimizing Only For Extraction
If a page is too extractable and not useful beyond the summary, it may get impressions without clicks. Add original value that makes the click worthwhile.
Mistake 4: Blocking AI Features Too Early
Opting out can remove visibility before you understand whether that visibility assists branded recall, later conversions, or high-value research paths. Test by section and monitor business outcomes.
Mistake 5: Creating Thin "AI Overview" Pages
Google warns against creating content primarily to manipulate rankings or AI responses. Build pages around user value, original experience, and clear structure, not long-tail query spam (Google generative AI optimization guide).
10Quality Checklist
Before changing a page because of AI report data, check:
- The page is indexed and eligible for snippets.
- The main answer is clear near the top.
- The page includes information beyond what a generic AI answer can summarize.
- Factual claims have nearby citations.
- Dates are visible for freshness-sensitive guidance.
- Product, local, or organization data is consistent with structured data and visible content.
- Internal links point to stronger supporting pages.
- The page has a conversion path appropriate to its intent.
- You have compared AI impressions with standard Web clicks and GA4 sessions.
- You have waited long enough to avoid reacting to incomplete data.
11Bottom Line
The Search Console generative AI reports are a major measurement improvement because they turn AI-search visibility from a guess into a page-level signal. They are also deliberately incomplete. The winning workflow is not "optimize for AI impressions." It is:
- Find pages surfaced in AI Overviews, AI Mode, and Discover AI features.
- Compare those pages with standard Search clicks, GA4 sessions, and business outcomes.
- Improve pages where AI visibility exposes commodity content.
- Protect pages where AI summaries may replace high-value visits.
- Keep reporting language precise: impressions are visibility, not traffic.
Used this way, the report becomes an editorial and analytics advantage instead of another vanity metric.
Start Your AI Visibility Audit
Connect Google Search Console to your analytics stack and identify pages AI surfaces today.
Frequently Asked Questions
What data is included in the 2026 Search Console AI reports?
They show impressions, pages, countries, devices (Search only), and dates, but no clicks, CTR, queries, or position. The Discover report lacks device segmentation.
Why can’t I see the generative AI report in my Search Console?
The report may still be rolling out, your property hasn’t received enough AI impressions, or your site is excluded from AI features and needs to be included.
How do I measure if AI Overviews are hurting my traffic?
Use the four-layer model: first check AI impressions, then compare Web clicks and CTR, on-site sessions, and business conversions to rule out other causes like ranking loss or seasonality.
Should I opt out of AI features to protect my traffic?
Only after analyzing trade-offs per business model. For ecommerce, SaaS, and local services, staying included is often better. Try content improvements first.
What pages benefit most from high AI impressions?
Pages with original examples, tools, or proprietary data tend to earn clicks even when summarized. Commodity informational pages may need added depth.
Originally published in the EcomExperts SEO library · Last reviewed June 2026.
