After nearly 12 days of significant search volatility, the latest broad core update has concluded.

Google has officially concluded the rollout of its May 2026 Broad Core Update. According to the [Google Search Status Dashboard](https://status.search.google.com/), the update, which began rolling out on May 21, 2026, officially completed on June 2, 2026, taking approximately 11 days and 21 hours to fully deploy.

> The rollout was complete as of June 2, 2026.
> — Google Search Central (@googlesearchc) [June 2, 2026](https://x.com/googlesearchc/status/2061791196750528924?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw)

## Unpacking the May 2026 Core Update

As with [previous broad core updates](https://www.stanventures.com/blog/google-algorithm-updates/), the May 2026 update aims to improve the overall quality of Google’s search results by refining how the search engine evaluates and ranks content. Its primary goal is to surface the most relevant, helpful, and satisfying results for users.

Throughout the nearly 12-day rollout period, search engine optimization (SEO) professionals and site owners reported significant ranking volatility. Early observations across the SEO community indicate that the fluctuations caused by the May 2026 update were notably more pronounced than those experienced during the previous March 2026 core update.

## What Should Site Owners Do Now?

Now that the rollout is complete, webmasters and digital marketers are eager to assess the impact on their organic traffic. However, Google advises patience.

According to Google’s official documentation, site owners should wait at least a full week after a core update completes before conducting any deep analysis of their Search Console data.

_**Hold Off on Analysis:** Wait until at least June 9, 2026 before diving deep into your Google Search Console performance reports. This ensures that the search results have stabilized and you are looking at a “clean” post-update dataset._

For websites that experienced a drop in rankings, Google consistently maintains that there is no specific “fix.” Instead, the search giant recommends that creators focus on answering the questions in their core update self-assessment guide, which centers around producing high-quality, people-first content.

## Looking Ahead

With the May 2026 Core Update now in the rearview mirror, the search landscape is expected to settle into its new baseline. SEOs and content creators should spend the coming weeks analyzing their metrics, evaluating content performance, and ensuring their websites continue to meet Google’s ever-evolving quality standards.