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Some users may be giving Google's AI search the bird, and DuckDuckGo is benefiting

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DuckDuckGo saw a surge in installs and visits after Google's AI-heavy search overhaul, suggesting some users are seeking alternatives.

Some users may be giving Google's AI search the bird, and DuckDuckGo is benefiting
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The Big Picture

Following Google's May 19 announcements at its I/O conference, which integrated AI Mode directly into the main search box, DuckDuckGo reported a significant spike in usage. US installs rose an average of 20.8% week over week, peaking at 37.6% on May 26, while iOS installs climbed 33% on average, reaching nearly 70% growth on May 25. Visits to DuckDuckGo's no-AI page also increased 22.7%. DuckDuckGo CEO Gabriel Weinberg criticized Google for forcing AI without an opt-out, positioning DuckDuckGo as a user-controlled alternative. The spike is described as unprecedented in recent memory, though broader search behavior shifts are hard to measure.

Why It Matters

Google's aggressive push of AI into its core search experience is driving a measurable user backlash, with DuckDuckGo seeing a 20-70% surge in installs. This signals that a segment of users prioritizes control and simplicity over AI features, potentially reshaping the search market as privacy-focused alternatives gain traction.

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Isack Hadjar of Oracle Red Bull Racing gives a middle finger to the camera in the paddock during final practice ahead of the F1 Grand Prix of Australia on March 7, 2026.
Isack Hadjar of Oracle Red Bull Racing gives a middle finger to the camera in the paddock during final practice ahead of the F1 Grand Prix of Australia on March 7, 2026.
Isack Hadjar of Oracle Red Bull Racing gives a middle finger to the camera ahead of the F1 Grand Prix of Australia on March 7, 2026.

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  • DuckDuckGo sees a surge in installs after Google's major AI search overhaul.
  • Google changed its search box recently to incorporate AI Mode a lot more.
  • DuckDuckGo's "no AI" search engine also sees a spike in installs.

DuckDuckGo has seen usage surge after Google unveiled its biggest Search overhaul in decades, suggesting some users may be looking for alternatives as the internet giant pushes deeper into AI.

DuckDuckGo, a privacy-focused search engine, said US installs rose an average of 20.8% week over week in the seven days after Google's May 19 announcements at its I/O conference.

Growth peaked at 37.6% on May 26, according to DuckDuckGo. On iOS in the US, installs climbed an average of 33% during the same period, reaching nearly 70% growth on May 25.

DuckDuckGo also said visits to its noai.duckduckgo.com page, where AI features are disabled by default, rose 22.7% on average week-over-week.

The timing is notable, though it's unclear whether Google's changes directly caused the increase.

At I/O, Google announced a sweeping redesign of Search that brings more AI features into the core search experience. The company is integrating capabilities from AI Mode directly into the main search box, allowing users to ask longer, conversational questions and upload images, videos, files, and browser tabs. Google is also adding AI-generated suggestions and follow-up conversations directly within Search.

DuckDuckGo executives argued that some users are pushing back against that approach.

"Google is force-feeding AI with no way to opt out," DuckDuckGo CEO Gabriel Weinberg said in a statement. "We want to be the place that puts users in charge and allows them to decide how much or how little AI they want."

A usage spike this steep is pretty unprecedented in recent memory, according to DuckDuckGo spokesperson Kamyl Bazbaz.

"There hasn't been a news event that created this kind of jump in a long time," Bazbaz told Business Insider. "I would have remembered one."

Still, the data is limited to DuckDuckGo's internal figures, and broader shifts in search behavior remain difficult to measure.

Sign up for BI's Tech Memo newsletter here. Reach out to me via email at abarr@businessinsider.com.

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Some users may be giving Google's AI search the bird, and DuckDuckGo is benefiting | TechCulture