Claim
Google's May 2026 Core Update concentrated visibility around the source type most closely matching the dominant intent, market, and expected result format for each query. Canonical reference sites gained. Aggregators and derivative layers lost. Authority was not the primary deciding factor: sites with the right source type for their queries won even against higher-authority alternatives.
Mechanism
The update functions as an "intent-destination reset." For each query cluster, Google elevated the source type users most likely intend to reach: canonical references for informational queries, local market entities for local-intent queries, task-completion destinations for transactional queries. Authority still mattered, but only within the correct source type. A high-authority aggregator lost to a lower-authority canonical reference when the query's dominant intent pointed to the original source.
Conditions
Holds when: the site's source type either matches or mismatches the dominant expected destination for its target query clusters. The pattern is clearest in mature verticals with established canonical sources.
Fails when: no dominant source type exists for a query cluster, or query intent is ambiguous enough that multiple source types satisfy it equally.
Evidence
Solis analyzed SISTRIX visibility data for UK and US markets, measuring window May 26 to June 2, 2026:
- Canonical reference brands gained +24% (UK) and +10% (US)
- Reference aggregators fell -29% (UK) and -13% (US)
- Forums and Q&A sites contracted -24% (UK) and -12% (US); Reddit fell approximately 408 visibility points in the UK and 361 in the US
- UK local-market ecommerce rose +20%; US .com international marketplaces fell -55% in the UK
- Jobs and travel marketplaces gained +21% (UK) and +17% (US)
"Source type fit mattered more than authority alone."
Signals
- High-authority competitor sites in your category are losing visibility despite strong link profiles.
- Sites you would not consider authoritative peers are gaining because they are the canonical expected destination for the query intent.
- Traffic losses concentrate in queries where your site operates as a derivative or aggregator layer rather than the original source.
Counter-evidence
Solis cautions against reading "UGC lost" as a blanket conclusion. Larger social and video platforms held flat to positive. Big marketplaces like trip.com and indeed.com gained, so aggregators did not uniformly lose. The update appears to have rewarded fit within source types rather than penalizing any single type categorically.
Cross-references
- AI search visibility is an off-site corroboration problem with an on-site quality floor, not the inverse: Solis's prior frame that AI citation visibility is structurally an off-site corroboration problem. The May 2026 Core Update adds a parallel organic search dimension: source type mismatch is now penalized in rankings as well.
- More AI answer links do not automatically mean more traffic; track six AEO signals separately, not blended into one score: Solis's AEO measurement framework. The same principle of fit over volume applies to AI citation sourcing as it now does to organic search.