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Google Updates Search Quality Raters Guidelines: AI Overviews & Clearer YMYL Definitions

On Thursday, September 11, 2025, Google released an update to its Search Quality Raters Guidelines.Β The last revision of the document came in January 2025, more than seven months ago. This new update adds examples for rating AI Overviews, clarifies YMYL (Your Money, Your Life) content definitions and fixes minor typos across the document.Β 

On the surface, these changes may seem incremental but beneath them lies an important signal: Google is adapting its rater framework to an AI-driven search environment.

So, what exactly changed and why should businesses, SEOs and content creators care? Let’s see.

What Changed in the Guidelines?

According to Google’s change log, the September 2025 update focused on three key adjustments:

  1. Updated YMYL definitions
  2. Added AI Overview examples for clarity
  3. Minor changes and typo fixes

The inclusion of AI Overviews is particularly noteworthy.

These overviews, which summarize content at the top of search results, are increasingly becoming a central feature of Google Search.

By adding examples of how raters should evaluate AI Overviews, Google is signalling that this feature is no longer experimental but one of the mainstream.

For context, the examples provided resemble earlier guidance for featured snippets and knowledge panels, suggesting Google sees AI Overviews as part of the same ecosystem of β€œdirect answers.”

What Are AI Overviews and Why Do They Matter?

AI Overviews, launched widely in 2024, are generated summaries that appear at the top of search results.

Instead of simply listing links, they synthesize content into a concise overview, pulling from multiple sources.

Google search quality

Let’s take an example.

If a user searches for β€œWhat’s the best diet for heart health?”, instead of giving just blue links, Google might show an AI Overview summarizing findings from Mayo Clinic, Harvard Health and the American Heart Association, all within a few sentences.

From a user perspective, it is convenient. From a publisher’s perspective, it is a double-edged sword.

On one hand, AI Overviews can increase visibility if your content is cited. On the other, they might decrease clicks as users could get their answers without visiting your page.

raters ai overview example

By including rating examples in the guidelines, Google is telling raters and by extension, the SEO world, that the quality and trustworthiness of sources feeding into AI Overviews will be scrutinized just as much as traditional snippets.

How Did YMYL Definitions Change?

The other significant update relates to YMYL (Your Money, Your Life) content. These are topics that, if inaccurate or misleading, could seriously impact people’s health, safety, finances or trust.

Previously, the guidelines defined β€œSociety” under YMYL as:

β€œTopics that could negatively impact groups of people, issues of public interest, trust in public institutions, etc.”

The new definition reads:

β€œYMYL Government, Civics & Society: Topics that could negatively impact groups of people, issues of public interest, trust in public institutions, election and voting information and any other informational topics about government, civics or society that impacts people’s lives.”

The addition of β€œelection and voting information” is no small thing. In a world of misinformation and polarized politics, Google is making it explicit: content about elections, governance and civic trust will be held to the highest quality standards.

For publishers, this means accuracy, sourcing and transparency are more important than ever.

A poorly cited political blog post could easily be flagged as low-quality YMYL content.

For governments, NGOs and media outlets, the message is clear: your role in shaping trust online is under scrutiny.

Why Do Quality Raters Matter?

Here is the catch that quality raters don’t directly impact rankings.

Their job is to test how well Google’s algorithms are performing against the guidelines. But the feedback they provide helps train and refine Google’s systems over time.

Google explains it this way:

β€œThe guidelines share important considerations for what content is helpful for people when using Google Search.

While raters’ evaluations don’t directly influence rankings, they help us measure and improve our systems.”

In other words, if your content aligns with what raters are trained to value, like helpfulness, trustworthiness, and expertise, it is more likely to be rewarded by future algorithm updates.

Think of it like this: raters are the focus group for Google Search. Their judgment doesn’t change the SERP today but it shapes what the SERP will look like tomorrow.

The Historical Context: How Often Does Google Update This Document?

The Search Quality Raters Guidelines have evolved steadily since their introduction. Updates tend to arrive every 6–12 months, often in response to changes in search features or global events.

Some key milestones include:

  • December 2019: Expanded focus on E-E-A-T (Experience, Expertise, Authoritativeness, Trustworthiness).
  • July 2022: More detailed instructions for rating misinformation.
  • March 2024: First mentions of AI-generated content in rater instructions.
  • January 2025: Updates to health-related YMYL content.
  • September 2025: The current update, introducing AI Overview examples and expanded YMYL scope.

Each update reflects a snapshot of where Google is headed. This latest one shows a future where AI answers and political trust are at the center of search quality.

What Does This Mean for SEOs and Content Creators?

For SEO professionals, the implications are immediate. If AI Overviews are being rated, then they are here to stay.

That means your content strategy should account for not just ranking in the β€œ10 blue links,” but also being selected as a trusted source for AI summaries. Structured data, authoritative backlinks and clear E-E-A-T signals will be critical.

For YMYL publishers, particularly in finance, healthcare and politics, the pressure is higher than ever.

Transparency, citations and demonstrating expertise are non-negotiable. Google’s addition of election-related content under YMYL makes it clear that misinformation in civic life is an existential threat they intend to combat.

And for everyday businesses? The guidelines still matter. Even if you are writing about safe topics like home decor or cooking, aligning with rater standards like clarity, trustworthiness, and helpfulness will keep your content in good standing as algorithms evolve.

Key Takeaways

  • Google updated its Search Quality Raters Guidelines on Sept 11, 2025, expanding from 181 to 182 pages.
  • The update adds examples for rating AI Overviews, aligning them with snippets and knowledge panels.
  • YMYL definitions expanded to explicitly include government, civics, and election information.
  • Quality raters don’t directly affect rankings, but their feedback trains Google’s systems.
  • For SEOs, this signals the importance of optimizing for AI Overviews and doubling down on E-E-A-T signals.
  • For publishers in health, finance and politics, accuracy and transparency are more critical than ever.
Dileep Thekkethil

Dileep Thekkethil is the Director of Marketing at Stan Ventures, where he applies over 15 years of SEO and digital marketing expertise to drive growth and authority. A former journalist with six years of experience, he combines strategic storytelling with technical know-how to help brands navigate the shift toward AI-driven search and generative engines. Dileep is a strong advocate for Google’s EEAT standards, regularly sharing real-world use cases and scenarios to demystify complex marketing trends. He is an avid gardener of tropical fruits, a motor enthusiast, and a dedicated caretaker of his pair of cockatiels.

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