# Google's March 2026 Core Update Explained: What Changed and What Indian Brands Must Do Now

> By Rajkumar Tahalani · Published 2026-06-30 · Source: https://www.howlmedialabs.com/blog/google-march-2026-core-update-india

**TL;DR:** Google's March 2026 Core Update rewarded credibility and penalised AI-generated thin content. Here's exactly what changed and a recovery checklist for Indian websites.

# Google's March 2026 Core Update Explained: What Changed and What Indian Brands Must Do Now

In March 2026, Google rolled out one of its most consequential algorithm updates in recent years. The update — now confirmed as a significant core ranking shift — fundamentally changed what Google rewards and what it penalises in search results. Brands that understood what Google was looking for gained ranking ground. Brands that had been publishing AI-generated content at scale, or operating websites with thin information and no genuine expertise signals, lost it.

If your organic traffic dropped in late March or April 2026, this article explains why, and more importantly, what you need to do about it.

## What Google's March 2026 Update Actually Changed

At its core, this update strengthened Google's ability to assess **credibility at the page and author level**, not just at the domain level. Previous updates had moved in this direction — every Google core update since 2022 has placed more emphasis on E-E-A-T (Experience, Expertise, Authoritativeness, Trustworthiness). The March 2026 update accelerated this significantly.

What the update rewarded: pages where a clearly identified expert author demonstrably drew on real experience; content that contained original data, case studies, or specific examples that couldn't have been generated by an AI without real-world knowledge; pages with strong user engagement signals (low bounce rate, high time on page, return visits); and structured, well-organised content that matched the actual search intent precisely.

What the update penalised: generic AI-generated content that rephrases publicly available information without adding a distinct perspective; pages with no clear author attribution or verifiable author credentials; content farms publishing high volumes of superficially SEO-optimised pages with no original insight; and websites where content exists purely for ranking purposes rather than genuine user value.

## Who Got Hit in India

Indian websites heavily affected by this update tend to fall into a few categories. Affiliate and comparison sites that were producing large volumes of AI-generated product reviews without genuine hands-on testing were significantly impacted. Marketing agency blogs that published AI-written "top 10 tips" content without substantive expert commentary saw ranking drops. E-commerce category pages that had thin, templated descriptions across thousands of product listings lost ground on informational queries.

Conversely, Indian brands that maintained active blogs with content authored by named, credible individuals — and that included real client data, original analysis, or distinctive takes on industry trends — largely held or improved their positions.

## The Recovery Checklist

Recovery from a Google Core Update is not instantaneous. Google's guidance has consistently been that improvements need to be made and then re-assessed in the next update cycle, typically every few months. However, starting the work immediately is essential.

**Audit your existing content.** Pull your GSC data and identify pages that lost the most impressions and clicks. Sort your content into three buckets: keep and improve, consolidate with another page, or remove entirely. Pages with thin content and low organic traffic are often better removed (with proper 301 redirects) than left to drag down your overall site quality score.

**Add author expertise signals.** Every blog post and article on your site should have a clearly identified author with a bio that demonstrates their relevant credentials. For HML, this means bylines from our team members specifying their areas of expertise, client results they've worked on, and professional background.

**Add original data and first-hand perspective.** The fastest way to escape the "generic AI content" bracket is to include something no AI could have generated without your real-world experience. A specific client result. A counter-intuitive observation from working with 25+ brands. A data point from your own campaigns. These signals tell Google — and increasingly AI discovery systems — that this content comes from genuine expertise.

**Improve E-E-A-T page by page.** Add verifiable credentials to author pages. Link your content to external evidence (industry reports, Google's own documentation, research studies). Ensure your contact information, office address, and founder profiles are complete and consistent across your site and directory listings.

**Target conversational, specific queries.** This update aligned closely with Google's AI Mode and AI Overviews direction — rewarding content that gives precise, direct answers to specific questions rather than broad overviews of topics.

## Future-Proofing: The Credibility Standard Going Forward

The March 2026 update is not an anomaly. It is a signal of the direction Google and all AI search systems are moving. The era of ranking through content volume is over. The era of ranking through demonstrable credibility and genuine expertise has arrived.

For Indian brands, this is actually good news — if you are genuinely expert at what you do and willing to publish content that reflects that expertise honestly. You now have an advantage over brands that were gaming the system with AI content farms.

The SEO playbook for 2026 and beyond is straightforward: publish less, make each piece demonstrate more, and ensure every page on your site reflects the genuine expertise and experience your team has accumulated.

If you want a full SEO audit of your website to understand your post-update position, [our team can walk through this with you in a 15-minute call.](https://calendly.com/pankajtahalani-info/15min)

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**Related reading:** [SEO Services for Indian Brands](/digital-marketing) | [Website Development](/website-development)

## Frequently Asked Questions

### What was Google's March 2026 Core Update?

Google's March 2026 Core Update was a broad ranking algorithm change that significantly increased the weight given to content credibility, author expertise, and first-hand experience signals (E-E-A-T). It simultaneously penalised pages with thin AI-generated content, low engagement metrics, and generic information without a distinct expert perspective.

### Did the March 2026 update affect Indian websites?

Yes. Core updates are global. Indian websites with content that lacks expert authorship, original data, or genuine user engagement signals saw ranking drops. Conversely, sites with strong E-E-A-T signals, original insights, and high engagement metrics gained visibility.

### How do I know if my website was hit by the update?

Open Google Search Console and compare your organic traffic and impression data from the period before March 2026 versus after. A drop in organic clicks and impressions across multiple pages, coinciding with the update rollout period, indicates you were affected.

### What is the fastest way to recover from a Google Core Update?

There is no overnight fix for a core update. The path to recovery involves improving content quality — adding genuine expert perspective, original data, clear author credentials, and stronger E-E-A-T signals. Google typically re-evaluates affected sites in the next core update cycle, which historically is every 3-6 months.

### Should I delete AI-generated content from my website after this update?

Not necessarily. The update penalised thin, low-value AI content — not AI-assisted content that has genuine expert insight added. Review your AI-generated pages: if they contain original analysis, real examples, and expert perspective, they may be fine. If they are generic summaries of publicly available information with no unique angle, they are candidates for improvement or consolidation.
