This article by SEO expert Tom Demers breaks down the biggest SEO changes coming in 2026, focusing on how AI-driven search, GEO, and Google’s evolving SERP experience will impact visibility, traffic, and measurement.
Key takeaways
There’s a lot brewing in SEO coming into 2026:
So, which trends are particularly important for business owners and marketers to keep an eye on coming into 2026? We’re breaking down the ones you need to know.

These are the SEO trends we’re keeping an eye on.
AI Overviews were a major factor in SEO traffic in both 2024 and 2025, and that’ll be the case again in 2026.
Google has shown no signs of slowing down the rollout of AI Overviews, and it’s likely that we’ll see significant growth in some combination of AI Overviews and AI Mode in Google search results.
For instance, in January of 2025:
As of December 2025, those numbers were:
Here’s what I currently see for a local query looking for roofing companies near me in 2025:

If you’re a local roofing company in this search result, your map listing and organic listing are still key (for now–and as long as your customers aren’t going right to ChatGPT).
But there are already examples of Google testing AI Overviews in place of map packs for certain queries in certain areas:
Starting to see search results where AI is replacing local packs 😱
This is not a better user experience. The 2nd business here actually has reviews, photos etc but they are not being pulled in because AI results are still pretty stupid. This result has:
1. AI results
2. LSAs… pic.twitter.com/54qgeZuTuQ— Joy Hawkins (@JoyanneHawkins) September 26, 2025
And Google has started testing allowing searchers to ask follow-up questions of an AI chatbot in search results as well (“ask anything”):
(1/2) Today we’re starting to test a new way to seamlessly go deeper in AI Mode directly from the Search results page on mobile, globally.
This brings us closer to our vision for Search: just ask whatever’s on your mind – no matter how long or complex – and find exactly what you… pic.twitter.com/mcCS7oT2FI
— Robby Stein (@rmstein) December 1, 2025
In terms of the immediate 2026 traffic impact, this may be the single most important trend for business owners and marketers to be aware of. A few things to keep in mind:
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Every transformative technology goes through surges and drops. The dot com boom and bust. For example, take a look at Bitcoin:

It would be naive to think that “GEO” and AI adoption will just go up and to the right without any dips or drawbacks.
It’s also important to keep in mind the relative scale of different platforms.
In August of 2024, ChatGPT reported it had 200 million weekly users. As of October 2025, the number was 800 million.
Incredible growth, but in 2024, Google already boasted:
“Six products with more than two billion monthly users, including three billion Android devices. Fifteen products have half a billion users.”
Studies have shown that sites generate 34x the search traffic from Google and traditional search engines that they get from chatbots (in other words: SEO traffic is ~34x GEO traffic).
So while GEO traffic is growing and will be even more significant by the end of 2026, it’s much, much less than SEO traffic for now. In fact, WordStream’s Small Business Website Trends Report found that 60% of businesses hadn’t seen any impact to their website traffic as a result of AI-assisted search (yet).

In 2026, it’s likely that you will see GEO hype cycles and reactionary “sky is falling” doomsday predictions. A lot of GEO platforms are being built and backed by venture funds, which likely means:
The reality is: 1) GEO is a very promising channel that will likely grow quickly in the coming months, 2) SEO is not going to go to zero and will continue to drive high-intent, profitable traffic, and 3) optimizing for both will have a lot of overlap.
What you can choose to do instead of overreacting to hot takes on LinkedIn is just follow the data. AI search traffic is going to grow over time (unevenly; some niches will see much more activity here than others), there will be opportunities to drive traffic, some tools will help with this, and many will give some useful data.
Pay attention to the real opportunity, and right-size your investment to the channel (regardless of which way the hype is blowing).
⬇️ Download our 2026 Small Business Website Trends Report to find out how businesses are planning and thinking about SEO and their web presence this year.
Whenever a marketing channel becomes the “flavor of the week,” lots of bad advice about how best to leverage that channel inevitably follows. Right now, there’s a sprinkling of bad advice about how to get visibility and traffic from AI tools like ChatGPT, Perplexity, etc.
That bad advice is likely to grow significantly throughout 2026.

Most current GEO advice falls into two categories:
A lot of category 1 is relatively harmless, since it’s advice that helps your company’s SEO visibility and traffic, and will often be good advice for marketing generally.
The bigger threat, though, is category 2.
Some of the advice I’ve seen pushed, specifically, includes:
A lot of the things that “GEO experts” are pushing are both not going to move the needle for GEO and are detrimental to SEO.
Google is in a very interesting position coming into 2026:

All of this will likely lead to a lot of changes to search results throughout 2026. Ask Anything is being integrated in various ways:
Another variation of the ‘Ask anything’ unit on desktop. This time featuring the coloured animation for the AI Mode text that has appeared in the past for other related features, along with the more descriptive title. https://t.co/o8vWrkcyAO pic.twitter.com/9NCWH4ZRDH
— SERP Alert ⚡️ (@SERPalerts) November 28, 2025
They’ve even tested “giving back” to publishers and site owners by adding more links in-line in AI Overviews:
Seeing more and more links in Google’s AI Overviews! – This one has 7 in-content links directly to the source material!!
This is amazing.
Big shoutout and thanks to @sundarpichai credit where it is due, this could keep the open web thriving for decades to come.
If @sama… pic.twitter.com/lcMh6E0nzg
— Joe Youngblood – SEO, Futurology, AI, Marketing (@YoungbloodJoe) November 25, 2025
And they’ve rolled out “Sponsored Results” that look just like organic listings that have led to accidental clicks.
Serving these various masters and working to integrate AI in a way that’s beneficial for users while increasing revenue and profits will likely mean a lot of changes to how search results are formatted in 2026.
This is incredibly important information in that it can help you:
A few specific things can complicate data analysis for companies focusing on SEO and GEO in 2026:
It’s going to be especially important for businesses to focus on connecting KPIs (actual site visits, leads, and qualified leads and sales) to the proper channels without getting distracted or misled by inconsistent data around visibility metrics.
As more companies focus on GEO (even if there is somewhat of a reckoning at some point in 2026), the actual tactics that move the needle on GEO visibility will get more focus and investment, namely:
Much of this activity was already best-practice SEO activity, but as companies see how much this type of work moves the needle on GEO visibility, it’ll be more and more of a focus in 2026.
First, people realize that a tactic or platform is valuable:

Even if the value wanes somewhat:

Then, people leverage the tactic more, and the same tactic tends to get spammed more and more:

This is already happening on Reddit and on third-party authority sites, of course, but the more businesses recognize that mentions in these places move the needle (especially if the Reddit numbers swing back up), the more rampant spam will become as 2026 progresses.
Negative SEO and review ransom aren’t new. As more users turn to LLMs for information and research, and platforms leverage review sources other than Google, some people will game these systems, too. For their own business’s benefit, but also for even more nefarious purposes.
When you do have someone reach out to you threatening to ruin your review rating, save any relevant evidence or information, and you can work on reporting the ransom/attacks through relevant channels.
A lot of the content being created for the web is now straight AI content, or “AI-assisted” in some way. And that includes the words, images, videos, etc.

There are a lot of tools to help create content with AI. They’re still quite limited, and there will be skills (like original storytelling) that they may never master, but lots of tasks that they’re currently being used for:
Late in 2025, new versions of tools like Nano Banana, Google Veo, Sora, and more were released. The AI arms race will push the major players to keep releasing updates and new toolsets, and an influx of VC money into AI tools won’t hurt the development of these capabilities either.
There are areas where these tools will improve and become better (particularly at scale) than humans (if they’re not already). This will mean a few things for businesses:
The businesses and content creators who can simultaneously read the larger trends of where search is going and what works, while also finding ways to leverage new AI-powered tools, will be the most outsized winners in 2026.
Here are the 2026 SEO trends to keep an eye on:
And remember, trends may come and go, but the SEO best practices that move the needle are forever (until Google and other search engines change them 🙃).