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By Vicky Sidler | Published 30 December 2025 at 12:00 GMT+2
At this point, AI content warnings are starting to sound like urban legends.
Do not use AI, or Google will punish you.
AI content will tank your rankings.
Google can tell if a robot wrote your blog, and it will not be happy about it.
Meanwhile, many of the pages already ranking on page one are quietly using AI every day and doing just fine.
A new large-scale study has now put real numbers behind what many small business owners have suspected for a while. AI content is not the SEO villain it has been made out to be.
According to research published by Ahrefs, analyzing 600,000 web pages, Google neither rewards nor punishes content simply because AI was involved in creating it.
Most pages ranking on Google already use AI in some form
Google does not penalise AI content
Google does not reward AI content either
Fully AI-written pages rarely rank number one
Helpful content still matters more than how it was made
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AI Content Does Not Hurt Google Rankings New Study Finds
What This Study Actually Looked At:
Almost Everything Ranking Uses AI:
Google Does Not Care How Content Is Made:
Why Pure AI Content Struggles at the Top:
What This Means for Small Business Owners
The Real SEO Risk No One Talks About:
A Smarter Way to Use AI in Your Marketing:
1. AI Search Is Replacing Google Traffic Faster Than You Think
2. OpenAI’s $27B Loss Could Tank the Whole AI Industry
3. Schema Markup Boosts SEO Without Extra Content
4. Content Marketing Boosts Revenue More Than Ads
5. Ideal Client Profile The Marketing Shortcut Small Businesses Miss
Frequently Asked Questions About AI Content and Google Rankings
1. Does Google penalize AI-generated content?
2. Can Google tell if my content was written by AI?
3. Is fully AI-written content safe to publish?
4. Why do number one ranking pages usually use less AI?
5. Should small businesses stop using AI for content?
6. What kind of AI use is best for SEO?
7. Can AI help with SEO tasks beyond writing?
8. What does Google really care about when ranking content?
Before we jump to conclusions, it helps to understand what was tested.
The Ahrefs team pulled 100,000 random keywords from their database. For each keyword, they analyzed the top 20 ranking pages. That created a dataset of roughly 600,000 individual web pages.
Each page was then run through an AI content detector to estimate how much of the content appeared to be human-written, AI-written, or a mix of both.
This matters because AI detection is not perfect. These tools work on probabilities, not certainty. Still, when you analyze hundreds of thousands of pages, patterns start to appear.
Here is the first finding that makes SEO fearmongers uncomfortable.
Only 13.5 percent of top-ranking pages were classified as purely human-written.
That means more than 86 percent of pages ranking in the top results showed some level of AI assistance.
Most of that use was not robots typing full blog posts. It was far more boring and far more normal.
AI was used for spelling checks, editing, restructuring paragraphs, refining titles, improving clarity, and challenging ideas. Even tools like Google Docs now include built-in AI support.
If Google were actively punishing AI content, these numbers would not exist.
This is where things get very clear.
The study measured the relationship between how much AI was used on a page and where that page ranked on Google.
The result was a correlation of 0.011.
In plain English, that is basically zero.
There was no meaningful relationship between AI usage and ranking position. Pages with more AI did not rank better. Pages with less AI did not rank worse.
This strongly suggests that Google does not use AI detection as a ranking signal.
Which lines up with what Google has been saying publicly for years.
Google has repeatedly stated that it cares about content quality, usefulness, and relevance. Not whether a human or a machine helped produce it.
There was one interesting nuance in the data.
While AI content is clearly not penalized, pages ranking at number one tended to have slightly less AI-generated content than those lower down the page.
This does not mean Google is secretly punishing AI. The difference was small, and the correlation was weak.
A more likely explanation is quality.
Fully AI-generated content tends to sound generic. It repeats common ideas. It lacks lived experience, opinion, and judgment. These are the things that often separate a good page from the best page.
AI is excellent at producing average content quickly. Ranking number one usually requires something better than average.
If you run a service-based business, this study should be a relief.
You do not need to panic about using AI tools. You do not need to hide them. You do not need to apologize for them.
You also should not expect AI alone to carry your marketing.
Here is the simple rule.
Google does not reward effort.
Google rewards usefulness.
AI can help you be clearer, faster, and more consistent. It cannot replace your understanding of your customer, your service, or the real problems you solve.
From a StoryBrand and Duct Tape Marketing perspective, AI works best as an assistant, not an author.
Use it to sharpen your message. Use it to simplify your language. Use it to test clarity.
But do not use it to avoid thinking.
The real risk is not AI content.
The real risk is publishing content that says nothing useful.
Whether written by a human or a machine, content that exists only to fill space will struggle. Content that helps people make decisions will continue to win.
Google has spent decades trying to measure one thing: Did this page help the searcher?
AI does not change that question.
If you want AI to support your rankings rather than hold them back, keep it grounded.
Start with your own insight.
Use AI to improve structure and clarity.
Edit for real humans, not algorithms.
Most importantly, make sure your message is clear enough that a customer understands what you do in seconds.
That is where most small business marketing fails, with or without AI.
If you want help getting that clarity without overthinking it, start small.
Download the free 5-Minute Marketing Fix. It helps you create one clear sentence that explains what you do and why it matters.
This article looks beyond rankings and explains how AI tools like ChatGPT and Perplexity are changing how people find information. It shows why being understood and cited by AI may soon matter as much as traditional SEO.
You now know AI content is safe for SEO. This piece asks a harder question. What happens if the AI tools you rely on change pricing, access, or disappear altogether. A useful reality check for any business building systems around AI.
If Google cares about usefulness rather than authorship, this article shows how to make your content easier for Google to understand. It explains schema markup in plain English and why it is one of the easiest SEO wins for small businesses.
This article answers the why behind all this effort. It breaks down the data showing why consistent content marketing outperforms paid ads over time, making AI assisted workflows more valuable when used properly.
The current article explains why pure AI content often sounds generic. This one shows how to fix that by defining who you are actually talking to, so your AI assisted content sounds more human and more relevant.
No. Large-scale studies show no meaningful relationship between AI usage and Google rankings. Google focuses on whether content is helpful and relevant, not on how it was created.
Google can analyze patterns in content quality, but it does not rely on AI detection to rank pages. Even if Google suspects AI involvement, there is no evidence it applies penalties based on that alone.
It is not unsafe, but it is risky. Pure AI content often lacks original insight, lived experience, and clear opinion. That makes it harder to stand out, especially in competitive searches.
The highest-ranking pages tend to offer deeper insight, clearer answers, and stronger relevance. These qualities usually come from human judgment, even when AI is used to assist with editing or structure.
No. AI can be very useful for improving clarity, saving time, and maintaining consistency. The key is to use it as a support tool rather than a replacement for thinking.
AI works best for outlining content, simplifying language, improving readability, checking grammar, and refining headlines. It should support your ideas, not generate them from scratch.
Yes. AI can assist with keyword research, schema markup, content summaries, internal linking ideas, and technical explanations. These uses often deliver more value than full article generation.
Google cares about usefulness. It measures whether a page answers the searcher’s question clearly and accurately. AI involvement does not change that goal.
Only if the content feels generic or disconnected from your audience. When AI is guided by a clear message and strong understanding of your customer, it can actually improve credibility.
Start with a clear understanding of who you are talking to and what problem you solve. Add real examples, opinions, and practical advice. Use AI to polish the message, not to invent it.

Created with clarity (and coffee)