How to Recover from a Google Algorithm Update: 2026 Playbook

Traffic dropped after a Google core update? Here's a step-by-step recovery playbook: diagnose the drop in Search Console, fix the right things first, and set realistic timeline expectations.

Quick Answer

Open Google Search Console → Performance → compare the 28 days before the update vs. after. Identify which pages lost the most impressions. Check the Coverage report for new indexing errors. Then ask: is the drop from thin content, weak E-E-A-T, technical issues, or stronger competitors? Target fixes in that order. Average recovery window after a core update is 2–4 months — full recovery usually arrives with the next core update cycle.

TL;DR

StepWhat to doWhere to do it
Confirm the dropMatch your traffic cliff to Google’s update timelinesearch.google.com/search/status
Find affected pages28-day comparison, sort by impressions dropSearch Console → Performance
Check indexingLook for new “Crawled — not indexed” errorsSearch Console → Pages
Diagnose root causeContent thin? E-E-A-T weak? Technical failure?See 4-question audit below
Fix highest-leverage firstContent → E-E-A-T → technicalIn that order
Track week-over-weekWatch the 10–20 hardest-hit pagesSearch Console, weekly

Recovery timeline: 2–4 months for most sites with substantive improvements. 6–12 months for YMYL (health, finance, legal) topics.


Step 1 — Confirm It’s Actually an Algorithm Update

Not every traffic drop is an algorithm hit. Before you rewrite your entire site, verify the cause.

Check the official timeline first. Google publishes all confirmed updates at search.google.com/search/status. Match your traffic cliff to an update date. If your drop happened weeks before any announced update, a different cause is more likely: a competitor refreshed their top pages, a technical error broke crawling, or seasonal patterns shifted.

Updates worth knowing in the 2025–2026 cycle:

UpdateDatesPrimary focus
March 2025 CoreMarch 13–27, 2025Broad quality re-evaluation
June 2025 CoreJune 30–July 17, 2025Content helpfulness
December 2025 CoreDecember 11–29, 2025E-E-A-T enforcement
March 2026 CoreMarch 27–April 8, 2026One of the most volatile core updates in years per industry trackers; thin AI-paraphrased content was widely reported as the hardest hit
May 2026 CoreMay 21–June 2, 2026Broad quality re-evaluation; rolled out in under 12 days

If your drop matches an update date, proceed to the diagnostic below. If not, run a technical SEO audit first — a crawl error or sitemap issue may be the simpler culprit.


Step 2 — Find Which Pages Were Affected

Open Google Search Console → Performance → Search Results. Set the date range to a comparison view: 28 days pre-update vs. 28 days post-update (use the exact update completion date as your split point).

Sort the Pages tab by Impressions (Difference), descending. Export this list. These are your recovery targets.

What you’re looking for:

  • Pages that lost >40% of impressions — highest priority
  • Clusters of pages on the same topic (signals a topical authority issue, not just a few thin pages)
  • Your highest-revenue or highest-conversion pages regardless of percentage drop

Also check the Coverage report → Not Indexed section. New “Crawled — currently not indexed” URLs are a direct signal that Google visited a page after the update and decided it wasn’t indexable. This is distinct from crawl errors — it means Google made a quality judgment call against the page.


Step 3 — Diagnose the Root Cause

Google’s core updates re-evaluate the entire quality of a page against everything else that serves that query. A drop means one of four things:

  1. Thin or paraphrased content — Google assessed your page as less complete or original than competitors it now prefers
  2. Weak E-E-A-T — no demonstrated experience, expertise, or trust signals on the page or site
  3. A technical failure — Core Web Vitals or mobile usability degraded user experience enough to drag down the quality assessment
  4. Competitors improved — your content didn’t change, but the pages now outranking you did

For each of your top 10 impacted pages, run this four-question audit:

Q1. Does this page answer the searcher’s real question above the fold? Open the page on mobile. What does a first-time visitor see in the first 400px of screen? Is it a direct answer, or preamble and background? If the answer is buried, rewrite the lead.

Q2. Is the content original — or is it paraphrase? The March 2026 update was widely reported by industry trackers to hit AI-paraphrased content especially hard — sites that simply restated publicly available information in different words took the steepest losses. Original content means first-hand testing data, real client examples, specific numerical evidence, or a perspective genuinely not available elsewhere.

Q3. Is there a named author with verifiable credentials? Anonymous content or thin author bios are a trust deficit Google’s quality raters specifically flag. A named author with a linked bio, credentials, and real professional history repairs this. For YMYL topics (health, finance, law), this is non-negotiable.

Q4. Does the page have a Core Web Vitals failure? Check at PageSpeed Insights for the current Google thresholds:

MetricGoodNeeds ImprovementPoor
LCP (load time)< 2.5s2.5–4.0s> 4.0s
INP (responsiveness)< 200ms200–500ms> 500ms
CLS (visual stability)< 0.10.1–0.25> 0.25

Technical failures alone rarely cause a core-update drop, but they compound content quality signals. Fixing a 4-second LCP while also improving content depth produces faster recovery than either fix alone. See our Google PageSpeed improvement guide for specific implementation steps.


Step 4 — Fix in the Right Order

Content first. The most common reason for a core update drop is that Google now prefers a better answer to the same query. Fix this before anything else:

  • Expand thin pages to genuinely answer every dimension of the searcher’s intent — not word-count padding, but missing sub-questions and nuance
  • Add original observations: specific numbers, first-hand testing outcomes, real examples from your own work or clients
  • Cut filler (“In today’s fast-paced world,” “Look no further”) that dilutes the signal-to-noise ratio
  • Consolidate two overlapping thin pages into one comprehensive one — merged authority concentrates ranking signals

E-E-A-T second. Once content is solid:

  • Add or upgrade author bios with named credentials, professional history, and a headshot
  • Cite sources for factual claims — link to the primary source (a .gov page, a study, an official standard), not a blog post that cites it
  • Add a “Last reviewed” date and who reviewed it — especially for YMYL content
  • For health/finance topics: have a licensed professional review and byline the content

Technical third. Fix Core Web Vitals failures on impacted pages — particularly LCP and INP, which are the most common failures. See our guide to improving PageSpeed scores for a checklist. If mobile usability is broken, fix it before requesting re-indexing — Google indexes the mobile version.


Step 5 — What to Avoid After a Drop

Don’t make random “SEO fixes.” Adding keyword density, changing title tags, or rebuilding internal links without addressing the underlying content quality issue will not recover a core-update drop. Google’s own guidance is explicit: “There aren’t specific actions to take to recover. A negative rankings impact may not signal anything is wrong with your pages.”

Don’t delete content in bulk. Mass deletion as a “cleanup” strategy signals to Google that your site has contracted. Delete only content that genuinely cannot be improved and was created for search engines rather than humans.

Don’t evaluate results during rollout. Google core updates take 1–3 weeks to fully roll out. Search Console data also lags 48–72 hours. Wait until at least one full week after the update’s confirmed end date before drawing conclusions or making major changes.


How Long Does Recovery Actually Take?

This is the question nobody wants to give a straight answer to. Here’s the honest picture from the 2025–2026 update cycles:

Content typeTypical recovery window
General informational content2–4 months
E-commerce / affiliate4–8 months
Health / finance / legal (YMYL)6–12 months
News and time-sensitive content2–4 months

The pattern is consistent: sites that make substantive, not cosmetic improvements see partial recovery in the 60–90 days between core updates. More complete recovery — Google fully re-evaluating and re-ranking the improved content — typically arrives with the next core update cycle.

Google itself acknowledges there’s “no guarantee that changes you make to your website will result in noticeable impact.” Some ranking drops are comparative: your content didn’t decline, but the pages now above you improved.

The practical implication: the most important thing you can do is watch your impacted pages weekly and track direction of travel, not fixate on full recovery arriving on a specific date.


Monitoring So You Catch the Next Drop Early

Core updates now run every 3–4 months. The sites that recover fastest are the ones monitoring weekly — so a ranking shift triggers investigation within days, not months.

Google Search Console is the free baseline: a weekly check of the Performance report’s week-over-week position changes on your top 20 pages takes under 10 minutes and will surface meaningful drops before they compound. For a broader site health scan, run a free SEO audit to identify technical gaps that could amplify the next quality re-evaluation.

The core principle: an algorithm update doesn’t change what good content is — it changes how effectively Google can detect which content is good. The sites that consistently outperform through updates are the ones making content humans actually want to read, not the ones chasing the specific signals each update appears to reward.


Keep Reading

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I know if a Google algorithm update hit my site?
Two signals: (1) A sudden, broad traffic drop across many pages within a day or two of a confirmed Google update announcement. (2) The drop correlates with an update date on Google's official update timeline (search.google.com/search/status). If traffic dropped weeks before any announced update, the cause is likely something else — a competitor refresh, seasonality, or a technical error. Cross-check your Google Search Console Performance report against the exact update dates.
What's the fastest thing I can do to start recovering?
Run a content quality audit on the 5–10 pages with the biggest impression drops. For each: does it have a named author with demonstrated expertise? Does it contain original observations or data, or is it paraphrasing what's already out there? Is the answer to the searcher's question above the fold, or buried? Improving the top 5 pages with these questions often produces measurable signal faster than a broad site-wide cleanup.
How long does it take to recover from a Google core update?
Recovery windows vary significantly. Google's own documentation says 'there's no one-size-fits-all timeline.' In practice, sites that make consistent, substantive improvements typically see meaningful gains in 2–4 months. For YMYL topics (health, finance, legal), recovery has taken 6–12 months in many documented cases. The pattern is: partial recovery comes in the weeks between updates; more complete recovery arrives with the next core update cycle once Google re-evaluates the improved content.
What's the difference between a core update and a spam update?
Core updates re-evaluate overall content quality and relevance across the entire web — they affect any site, not just ones doing anything wrong. Your rankings can drop in a core update even if your site is perfectly clean, simply because competitors improved or Google recalibrated what 'helpful' means for certain queries. Spam updates target sites violating Google's spam policies (cloaking, link schemes, auto-generated content) and are about cleanup, not quality reshuffling. If you got a Manual Action penalty in Search Console, that's separate from both.
Should I delete thin content to recover faster?
Deleting is a last resort. Google's guidance explicitly says deletion should only apply to content that 'was created for search engines first, and not people' and cannot be meaningfully improved. The better default is to improve: deepen the content, add original observations or data, clarify the author's credentials, and remove filler. Consolidate two thin pages into one comprehensive one before deleting either. Mass deletion can temporarily signal to Google that your site has shrunk, which can worsen things before they improve.