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Google Search Rankings Are Moving Again — Here’s What’s Actually Happening

google-ranking-volatility

by Darrel

04.29.2026

Google Search Rankings Are Moving Again — Here's What's Actually Happening
SEO Blog

Google Search Rankings Are Moving Again — Here's What's Actually Happening

29 April 2026 By Darrel Pontejo SEO Blog 6 min read
Last updated: April 29, 2026 — actively monitored as situation develops

If your organic traffic has been erratic over the past few weeks, you are not imagining it. Google's search rankings are going through a noticeable period of turbulence — and understanding what is driving it is the first step to responding correctly.

Towards the end of April 2026, several independent SEO tracking platforms began registering elevated ranking movement across Google Search. The timing caught attention precisely because the March 2026 Core Update had already wrapped up on April 8 — yet the tools were showing continued instability. Whether you are managing a local business listing or a content-heavy site, if you depend on organic search, this is worth understanding.

What the tracking tools are showing

The current volatility is not anecdotal. According to Search Engine Roundtable's coverage of the April 23 signals, platforms including Semrush, Advanced Web Rankings, Wincher, Accuranker, Sistrix, Zutrix, and Mangools are all reporting higher-than-normal movement simultaneously. In SEO circles, that kind of multi-tool consensus is treated as a reliable signal that real, widespread ranking shifts are happening — not just the everyday noise that comes and goes.

Semrush Sensor
Accuranker
Sistrix
Wincher
Mangools
Zutrix

What makes this moment distinct is the timing. The March 2026 Core Update ran from March 27 to April 8 — just under two weeks — and at the time it completed, many expected things to settle. Instead, the tools kept moving. Search Engine Roundtable noted this pattern is consistent with late-stage recalibration, new unconfirmed adjustments, or a broader traffic redistribution that has not yet stabilised.

A year of back-to-back disruption

Context matters here. The current volatility does not exist in isolation. The December 2025 Core Update, the February 2026 Discover Core Update — the first ever officially labelled as Discover-specific — and the March 2026 Core Update have collectively put many websites through months of ranking turbulence. SE Ranking data shared exclusively with Search Engine Land found that during the March cycle, nearly 80% of pages in the top three positions changed rankings, and roughly one in four pages that had been in the top ten dropped out of the top one hundred entirely.

Traffic redistribution, not just volatility. Independent analysis by SEO consultant Aleyda Solis, using Sistrix data from March 26 to April 11, found a consistent directional shift: search visibility moving away from aggregator-style sites and toward stronger destination sources — authoritative, brand-owned, and specialist pages.

Part of this picture is structural, not purely algorithmic. Even websites that hold their ranking positions are seeing fewer clicks in 2026, because AI Overviews are now appearing above organic results for a growing range of queries. Research from Ahrefs found that by December 2025, AI Overviews correlated with a 58% drop in click-through rates for pages directly beneath them — up from 34.5% in April 2025. A site can gain positions and still report falling traffic.

This is something I have discussed at length in my post on the future of search and AI platforms in 2026 — the landscape has changed significantly, and it requires a different way of thinking about visibility.

What volatile rankings actually mean for your site

One of the most common mistakes site owners make during periods like this is to treat every drop as a penalty. Google's John Mueller confirmed on Bluesky in March that core updates involve multiple components pushed step by step rather than simultaneously — which is why volatility during and after a rollout often appears uneven and wave-like across the two to three week window.

The pattern we are currently seeing is more consistent with late-stage settling than a new named penalty wave. As Search Engine Roundtable observed, the broader SEO community forums are relatively quiet compared to previous major disruptions — suggesting algorithmic movement rather than a targeted manual action wave.

If you want to understand how your site authority holds up through periods like this, the strategies I outlined in my post on multi-platform SEO strategy are particularly relevant — diversifying your visibility beyond Google alone reduces the risk of any single algorithm cycle doing lasting damage.

What you should actually do right now

  • 1 Segment your data in Google Search Console by page type, device, and country before drawing any conclusions. A drop concentrated in one region or content category has a very different cause than a sitewide decline.
  • 2 Hold off on broad structural changes until rankings stabilise. Volatility phases often produce temporary swings that correct themselves over two to three weeks. Acting impulsively during this window can cause more disruption than the original fluctuation.
  • 3 Audit your most important pages against Google's content quality criteria. Core updates consistently reward content that demonstrates direct experience, genuine expertise, and clear usefulness to the reader.
  • 4 Strengthen your internal linking structure. During periods of index recalibration, clear internal links help Google re-evaluate the relative authority and relevance of your pages accurately.
  • 5 Do not conflate algorithmic volatility with a manual action. If your Search Console shows no manual action notice, address this through sustained content and authority improvements — not reconsideration requests.

The bigger picture: quality signals are non-negotiable

Every major Google update over the past twelve months has pointed in the same direction. As PPC Land's analysis noted, the structural loss of organic traffic is compounding with AI Overviews reducing click-through rates — meaning even a rankings recovery may not fully restore previous traffic levels. Sites producing genuine value, topical depth, and real user utility are consistently positioned to absorb these shifts better than sites built around volume alone.

Building a recognisable brand around your site has also become a measurable factor in practice. Branded search volume, citations on credible sites, and consistent user engagement patterns are all signals that Google's systems are weighing more heavily. This is no longer a supplementary strategy — it sits alongside technical SEO and content quality as a foundational requirement.

For SEO professionals especially, personal authority online now feeds directly into client outcomes. I wrote about this recently in my piece on personal branding for SEO professionals, which covers how building a credible public presence strengthens the trust signals that search engines increasingly look for.

Staying ahead when the ground keeps shifting

Google's ranking algorithm in 2026 is not something you optimise once and leave. Periods of elevated volatility like the one we are in now are uncomfortable — but they also create real openings for sites that have built genuine authority to gain ground while competitors scramble.

The playbook has not changed: strong technical foundations, content that genuinely serves your audience, real E-E-A-T signals, and a brand presence that extends beyond a single channel. That combination does not make your site immune to volatility, but it consistently positions you to recover faster and improve further when the dust settles.

I will keep tracking this situation and share further updates here as the picture becomes clearer. In the meantime, monitor your data closely, stay calm, and focus on the fundamentals.

References & Further Reading

Google Algorithm SEO 2026 Ranking Volatility Core Update Search Rankings E-E-A-T

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The Author

Darrel

Darrel Pontejo is an SEO Specialist focused on SEO and AI platforms strategy, helping brands increase visibility across search engines and AI-driven ecosystems through technical SEO, content structuring, and authority building.

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