Google Search Revenue Grew 19% In Q1, Pichai Cites AI via @sejournal, @MattGSouthern
Alphabet's Q1 2026 earnings put Google Search revenue at $60.4 billion, up 19% YoY, as Pichai tied AI experiences to higher Search usage. The post Google Search Revenue Grew 19% In Q1, Pichai Cites AI appeared first on Search...
Alphabet reported Q1 2026 earnings, with Google Search & Other revenue rising 19% year over year to $60.4 billion. CEO Sundar Pichai tied the quarter’s Search performance to AI Overviews and AI Mode, saying people are “coming back to Search more.”
Q1 revenue was lower sequentially than Q4 2025, when Search & Other came in at $63.1 billion, but year-over-year growth increased from 17% to 19%. Total Alphabet revenue reached $109.9 billion, up 22%.
Chief Business Officer Philipp Schindler noted Google Services “benefited from a strong FX tailwind” this quarter, which boosted the reported numbers above constant-currency growth.
What Pichai Said About Search
In his prepared remarks, Pichai connected the Search number to AI experiences, stating:
“People love our AI experiences like AI Mode and AI Overviews, and they’re coming back to Search more.”
Pichai also said, “queries are at an all-time high.” He described “strong growth in both users and usage of AI Mode globally” without sharing an exact figure. Past Google disclosures put AI Mode at roughly 100 million monthly active users and 75 million daily.
Pichai said AI Overviews “are driving overall Search growth.” Liz Reid made a similar engagement argument on Bloomberg’s Odd Lots earlier this month, describing AI Overviews as reducing low-value clicks rather than reducing useful traffic.
Chief Business Officer Philipp Schindler offered a more specific read on what drove the Search number. He said Search & Other growth was “primarily driven by retail and finance,” with health also contributing.
In the Q&A, Schindler added that “the strength we saw in Search was not due to a single driver, but was really the result of many parts of our business showing strength and working very well together.”
New Data On Search Speed And AI Costs
Pichai shared two efficiency figures.
The first was latency. Pichai said:
“Even as we’ve brought new AI features into our results page, we’ve reduced Search latency by more than 35% over the past five years.”
The second was the cost of running AI responses. He continued:
“Since upgrading AI Overviews and AI Mode to Gemini 3, we’ve reduced the cost of core AI responses by more than 30% thanks to continued hardware and engineering breakthroughs.”
Search Updates Pichai Highlighted
Pichai highlighted three Search rollout items from the quarter.
Personal Intelligence “expanded broadly in the U.S.,” referring to Google’s March expansion of Personal Intelligence to free U.S. users.
Agentic experiences shipped to new countries. Pichai cited restaurant booking as one of the early examples of what Pichai has called “search as an agent manager.”
Search Live multimodal capabilities went global.
Why This Matters
Over the past year, SEO professionals have watched whether AI Overviews reduce clicks by satisfying more intent on the results page. Alphabet’s Q1 results don’t settle that question.
Google reported higher Search revenue, and Pichai said queries are at an all-time high. Schindler also said Search strength was not driven by a single factor, citing retail, finance, and health as contributors.
That matters because Google’s business can grow while publisher click patterns change. “All-time high queries” doesn’t mean all-time high outbound clicks. Google hasn’t disclosed click-through rates for AI Overviews or AI Mode, or how revenue splits between AI and traditional search ads.
The Q1 numbers show Google’s Search business is still growing. They don’t answer whether websites are receiving more or fewer clicks from AI-influenced results.
Looking Ahead
Google’s earnings show Search revenue is still growing, but key questions remain about how AI features affect monetization and click-through rates.
Pichai said more info about Search will be shared at Google I/O in May and Google Marketing Live.
FrankLin