On July 31, 2025, Google will officially discontinue support for the SpecialAnnouncement structured data, a web feature launched during the early stages of the COVID-19 pandemic.Β
This once-critical tool, used to surface urgent updates in search results, will no longer be recognized or indexed by Google after the cutoff date.
Introduced in March 2020 as a rapid response to global public health needs, the schema enabled organizations to highlight timely announcements, such as lockdowns, testing site openings, or school closures, directly in Google Search.Β
Five years later, the tech giant is phasing it out, without ceremony or a formal blog post. Just a one-line notice, added to its developer documentation:
βUpcoming deprecation: This feature is being deprecated and its support will be dropped from July 31, 2025.β

While the feature served a clear purpose during an unprecedented global crisis, Googleβs latest move underscores how the platform is transitioning away from pandemic-specific tools and toward more scalable, AI-driven information delivery.
A Pandemic-Era Tool Approaches Retirement
The SpecialAnnouncement schema was designed to meet a specific need during a chaotic time, giving health organizations, governments, and essential services a way to bypass traditional SEO and reach users directly with life-saving information.Β
Implemented correctly, it allowed urgent updates to appear prominently on search result pages.
However, as the frequency of emergency alerts dwindled, so did the relevance of the tool.Β
Today, far fewer websites rely on it, and Google has signaled that it no longer fits into the evolving priorities of its search ecosystem.
Why Google Is Pulling the Plug
The retirement of SpecialAnnouncement is strategic. The structured data was highly specific, with narrow use cases tied to temporary global emergencies.Β
As the urgency of the pandemic recedes, so does the need for a dedicated channel for COVID-related or crisis alerts.
Google is moving toward automated content understanding and AI-enhanced search that prioritizes context, authority, and real-time relevance without relying as heavily on markup.
If You Still Use It β Hereβs What to Do
Webmasters, developers, and digital communication teams should cease using the Special Announcement schema. Google will no longer index it. Retaining it in your site’s code will provide no advantages and may complicate your structured data strategy.
Hereβs what you should do now:
- Audit your site: Use tools like Google Search Console or Screaming Frog to identify pages using the schema.
- Remove or replace the markup: Delete deprecated tags or replace them with currently supported schema types (e.g., Event, FAQ, or NewsArticle) that better fit your content.
- Monitor your structured data: Watch for any schema warnings or errors as you transition.
- Refocus your strategy: If you still share urgent updates, use standard web publishing methods, submit to Google News Publisher Center, or invest in mobile push alerts and email communications.
While Google wonβt penalize sites for keeping the schema post-deprecation, it will ignore it completely. Donβt confuse valid structured data with outdated code.
What It Says About Googleβs Future Direction
This retirement is part of a larger shift in how Google handles information. Structured data remains valuable, but Google increasingly leans on machine learning to interpret urgency and context, rather than relying on tags to flag it.
The company is focused on systems that reward authority, timeliness, and clarity, not schema shortcuts. The takeaway for publishers? Strong, relevant content with trustworthy sourcing is now your best chance at visibility, not just technical markup.
Moreover, the move reflects a consolidation in Google’s feature set. The pandemic led to a flurry of rapid tool launches. Now, with the crisis stabilized, Google is streamlining its services to match todayβs information needs.
Key Takeaways
- Google will stop supporting SpecialAnnouncement structured data on July 31, 2025.
- The feature was introduced in 2020 for urgent pandemic-related announcements.
- Google will no longer index or display this schema in search results after the cutoff.
- Removing the code wonβt harm rankings, but leaving it will serve no purpose.
- Web publishers should shift to supported schema types and strengthen their core content strategy.
Dileep Thekkethil
AuthorDileep 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 Googleβs 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.