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Google's New Guidance Claims Authority Over SEO, Tools, And AEO/GEO

Commentary on a Search Engine Journal announcement

Summary

Google published new Search Central guidance positioning itself as the canonical authority on SEO, AEO, and GEO best practices, while explicitly distancing itself from third-party SEO tools and services.

Search Engine Journal reports that Google has published new documentation on Google Search Central that asserts Google as the single authoritative source for SEO guidance — extending that claim to cover AI-related optimization practices like AEO (Answer Engine Optimization) and GEO (Generative Engine Optimization). The guidance also takes direct aim at third-party SEO tools and services, urging businesses to “think critically” before relying on them.

What’s actually new

The new page does five things. First, it positions Google’s own documentation as the baseline against which all third-party SEO advice should be evaluated. Second, it explicitly states that “third-party tools don’t have access to our internal ranking data” and that their predictions “may not happen.” Third, it warns against vendors who imply their services are “acceptable” or “approved” by Google, clarifying that “Google doesn’t evaluate third-party services.” Fourth, it extends this framing to AI search optimization — specifically name-checking AEO and GEO as areas where third-party advice should be weighed against Google’s official guidance. Finally, it closes by “strongly encouraging” the use of Google Search Console as a first-party alternative to third-party data tools. The tone throughout is noticeably more assertive than past Google documentation on the topic of third-party tooling.

What it means for your config

This is a policy and messaging shift, not a technical one. There are no new APIs, schema requirements, config changes, or Search Console features announced in this guidance. If you maintain structured data configs, robots.txt files, sitemap generators, or any SEO-adjacent tooling pipeline, nothing here requires you to change anything today.

That said, the subtext matters for anyone building or configuring tools that interact with Google Search data. If your tooling surfaces metrics like “SEO scores,” ranking predictions, or optimization recommendations, Google is now on record saying those outputs shouldn’t be mistaken for Google’s own data or endorsement. Teams that maintain internal dashboards pulling from third-party SEO APIs should be aware that Google is drawing a sharper line between its data and everyone else’s. Whether this foreshadows tighter enforcement — say, cracking down on sites that follow non-Google optimization playbooks — remains an open question the guidance doesn’t answer.

Read the original Search Engine Journal analysis for the full quoted passages from Google’s new page. If you rely on third-party SEO tools in your development or content workflows, it’s worth reviewing what claims those tools make about Google alignment and understanding that Google is now publicly distancing itself from all of them. For direct data, Google’s recommendation is clear: use Search Console. None of this requires urgent action, but if your team quotes third-party SEO metrics in stakeholder reports, now is a reasonable time to add a disclaimer about data provenance.


Read the full announcement on Search Engine JournalGoogle’s New Guidance Claims Authority Over SEO, Tools, And AEO/GEO