Google AI Overviews, the AI-generated summary that now sits above traditional results for a large share of searches, doesn't run a separate ranking algorithm from the one Google has always used. It draws its candidate sources from the same index and the same core ranking signals, then runs a second pass to decide which of those already-strong pages get pulled into the summary itself. That second pass is where the real difference lives.
You have to rank well before you can be cited at all
This is the part people skip past. Google's own documentation and independent studies of AI Overview citations agree on one thing: pages that don't already perform reasonably well in classic organic results almost never show up as a citation. AI Overviews is not a parallel path around traditional SEO. It's an additional filter on top of it.
What the second pass seems to reward
Once a page clears that bar, a few things correlate strongly with getting pulled into the summary:
- A directly extractable answer near the top of the page. Pages that bury the actual answer under three paragraphs of preamble get skipped in favor of competitors that state it plainly.
- Clear factual claims with specifics attached. A statistic with a number, a date, and a named source outperforms a vague claim like "many experts agree."
- Content that matches the query's actual intent, not just its keywords. A page targeting "best running shoes" that's actually a brand comparison performs differently than one that's a buying guide, depending on what the query implies the user wants.
- Freshness, for time-sensitive queries specifically. For evergreen topics, freshness matters less than people assume.
What doesn't seem to matter as much as people think
Schema markup helps Google understand your content faster, but it isn't a direct citation trigger by itself. We've seen pages with extensive schema and no AI Overview presence, and plain HTML pages with strong, direct answer text that get cited regularly. Schema is infrastructure, not a magic switch.
If you're not showing up at all
Start by checking whether you rank in the top ten organic results for the query in question. If you don't, fix that first; nothing else here will help. If you do rank well but still aren't cited, look at how your answer is structured. Pull up the page and ask whether someone skimming just the first two sentences after your heading would actually get the answer, or whether they'd need to read three more paragraphs to find it. That gap is usually the fix.
A reasonable way to track this
Most rank trackers still report classic position only. To see whether you're actually appearing inside AI Overviews for your tracked terms, you need a tool checking the AI Overview box specifically, not just blue-link position. RankMesh's AI Visibility Tracker runs this check daily across your keyword set, since "ranking well" and "getting cited" have become two different things worth measuring separately.
