Here’s What Changed and What It MeansΒ
What Happened Google Search Console?
Google launched new Search Generative AI performance reports in Google Search Console on June 3, 2026. The reports are designed to give site owners dedicated views of their impressions within generative AI features on Search β including AI Overviews and AI Mode β Google Search Console β as well as generative AI features in Discover.
This is not a minor update. For over two years, SEOs and content teams have been operating without any native way to measure how their pages perform inside Google’s AI-generated answers. Third-party tools existed, but nothing directly inside Search Console β the platform most teams use as their primary source of truth for organic performance.
The reports don’t replace the main Performance report. Google says generative AI data still sits inside the overall Search Console performance data β the change is that site owners now get a dedicated, separate view so they can isolate AI-driven visibility from standard organic results.

In short: the data was always there, blended into your totals. Now it has its own view, its own breakdowns, and its own reporting surface.
What Exactly Is Being Reported in Google Search Console?
The report tracks five dimensions: impressions (how often your URLs appeared inside generative AI features on Search and Discover), pages (which specific URLs appeared within AI features), countries (your AI visibility broken down by geography), devices (what devices people were using when your site appeared β available for Search results), and dates (performance tracked at hourly, daily, weekly, and monthly granularity).
The reports cover two distinct surfaces: generative AI features within Search β which include AI Overviews and AI Mode β and generative AI features within Discover.
The Discover report matters more than people expect. For publishers and brands that depend on Discover, this puts numbers on a distribution channel that has often been hard to explain β even when the traffic shows up in analytics.
To access it: go to Performance β Search results β Generative AI features for the Search version. A companion report covers Discover separately with Google Search Console.
The Critical Gap: No Click Data!
This is where the report falls short of what the industry actually needs β and it’s worth being direct about it.

The report shows impressions only. There are no clicks, no click-through rate, no average position, and no query data. Google has said more metrics may come over time, but clicks are not included today. So it answers “how visible am I in AI search?” but still not “how much traffic is AI search actually sending me?” The measurement gap is half-closed, not closed.
This creates a real problem for anyone trying to build business cases around AEO investment or report AI search ROI to stakeholders. High impression counts with no click attribution makes the commercial value of AI visibility nearly impossible to quantify right now.
When pressed on this, a Google Search Console spokesperson said: “We’re continuing to work with website owners to understand what insights will be most helpful to inform their strategies, and we’ll introduce additional metrics over time.”
That’s a holding answer β not a timeline. For now, AI impressions need to be treated differently from organic click data in your reporting frameworks.
Who Has Access β And When!
The new report is rolling out to a subset of website owners in the UK first Google Search Console, with a global expansion to follow at an unspecified future date.
If you don’t see it yet, you may not be in the rollout, your site may not have enough AI impressions, or you may have opted out of AI features. No action is required to get access β Google is managing the rollout centrally and will expand it after gathering feedback from early users.
There is no announced timeline for full global availability, which means teams outside the UK need to prepare their measurement frameworks now so they’re ready to act on the data as soon as access opens up.
The Opt-Out Question for Google Search Console
On the same day, Google published a wider update about website controls for AI search features, prompted by the UK Competition and Markets Authority’s consultation on Google Search Console. Google said it is exploring updates that could let sites specifically opt out of Search generative AI features, while trying to keep Search useful and understandable for users.
This is significant context. The reporting launch and the opt-out discussion happening simultaneously suggests Google is under regulatory pressure to give publishers more transparency and control over how their content is used inside AI answers. The reports are part of a broader response to that scrutiny β not just a product improvement made in isolation.
BuzzMora POV: Google Search Console
What This Actually Means for Your Strategy?
At BuzzMora, we’ve been treating GEO β Generative Engine Optimization β as a parallel channel to traditional SEO since AI Overviews started scaling in 2024. The launch of these reports is Google formally acknowledging that AI search is its own surface, deserving its own measurement layer.

That changes the brief for content and SEO teams in three concrete ways.
First, AI impressions are now a reportable brand metric. You cannot compare them to organic clicks, but you can track them over time, by page, by country, by device Google Search Console. Treat them the way you’d treat display impressions or share of voice β as reach signals, not conversion signals.
Second, the pages appearing in AI features are your highest-priority AEO assets. Once you have access to the report, pull the pages list immediately. Those are the URLs at Google Search Console has already decided are citation-worthy. They deserve deeper schema coverage, stronger FAQ blocks, and cleaner structured data β not because it might help, but because it already is helping and you want to protect and extend that.
Third, you need a new reporting framework before click data arrives. When Google eventually adds click metrics β and they will, because the pressure to do so is only going to increase β the teams with existing baseline impression data will be able to show the full trajectory. The teams starting fresh will have no historical context. Start tracking now.
The brands running AI + Funnelism content infrastructure today β answer-first content at TOFU, citation-optimized pages at MOFU, schema-complete service pages at BOFU β are already positioned to take advantage of this data the moment it’s available to them.
FAQs – Google Search Console
Q: What is the Google Search Console Generative AI performance report?Β
A dedicated report launched June 3, 2026 that shows how often your pages appear inside Google’s AI-powered features β including AI Overviews, AI Mode, and generative AI features in Discover β broken down by page, country, device, and date.
Q: Does it replace the existing Performance report in Google Search Console?Β
No. Your existing Performance report is unchanged. The generative AI data that was already blended into your overall totals now has a separate, dedicated view so you can analyze AI-specific visibility independently.
Q: Does the report show how much traffic AI search is sending my site?Β
No. The current version tracks impressions only β meaning how often your pages appeared inside an AI feature. Click data, CTR, average position, and query-level data are not included at launch. Google has indicated these may come over time.
Q: Who currently has access to these reports?Β
The rollout is limited to a subset of sites, currently starting with UK-based website owners. A global rollout is confirmed but no date has been announced. If you don’t see the report yet, you are not yet in the rollout.
Q: Can I opt out of having my content appear in Google’s AI features?Β
Google is actively exploring opt-out controls following a regulatory consultation by the UK Competition and Markets Authority. These controls are not yet available but were announced the same day as the reporting launch.
Q: How should I use AI impression data if there are no clicks attached to it?Β
Use it as a brand reach and visibility signal, similar to display impressions. Identify which pages are being cited in AI features and prioritize them for stronger AEO coverage β structured FAQs, JSON-LD schema, and answer-first content formatting. Build your baseline now so you have historical data when click metrics are eventually added.
It confirms that AI search is now a formally measurable channel inside Google’s own tools. Content optimized for citation β structured, answer-first, schema-complete β is no longer just a future-proofing strategy. It is actively generating impressions that Google is now tracking and reporting.






