Google search results in Europe may start to look a little different in the coming weeks in order for Google to comply with a new regulation called the Digital Markets Act (DMA), the company announced. This means that Google will show more comparison sites within its search results for European users and that some of the vertical search units, like Google Flights, will no longer show up in the main search results.
What Google said. Google explained these changes in their blog post:
What it might look like. Last July, I spotted comparison sites units in the search results; I covered them at the Search Engine Roundtable.
Here is a screenshot from Kovi on Twitter and Frank Sandtmann on Mastodon from several months ago:
Some history. In 2020, Google tested a similar feature to list other local search engines; here is what that looked like.
In June, 2017 the EC fined Google roughly $2.7 billion for alleged abuse of market position in vertical (shopping) search. Following that decision, which Google is in the process of appealing, Google implemented a number of changes to provide “equal treatment” for rival Comparison Shopping Engines (CSEs) in Europe. In 2018, this group said it was only getting worse.
Why we care. If you currently show up in some of these vertical search units that Google shows often at the top of the page, this might impact your traffic and metrics. This should only impact the European search results right now. This also may mean that you need to focus on other vertical search engines, more than you do now.