Core Update Still Driving the Storm
Google's March 2026 core update is still rolling out on April 6, 2026, now on day 10 of what Google said could be a two-week rollout. Search Engine Land and Search Engine Roundtable both flagged the launch, and SEJ added useful context from John Mueller: core updates often move in waves, not one clean flip of a switch. In plain English, rankings can jump, dip, then jump again before things settle.
That lines up with the live SERP picture. The tracker shows today's score at 6.2/10, but that is only a partial reading from 3 of 12 providers, so the safer read is the past week, which stayed elevated and hit 7.2/10 on April 5. The broader pattern matters more: rankings ran very hot through early and mid-March, cooled off from extreme levels, but never really returned to calm. This is not a normal quiet patch. It is an active storm with some uneven pockets.
What Is Actually New Today
There does not appear to be a major brand new Google Search Central announcement posted today. Google's official Search Central surfaces still point site owners toward ongoing documentation and guidance rather than a fresh April 6 bulletin, which makes the active core update itself the real breaking story.
The other useful signal from the last few days is credibility. SEJ reported how easy it was for false SEO update claims to rank in Google and even appear in AI-generated answers. That is a reminder to verify update chatter against official Google channels and trusted trade coverage before changing a site in panic.
What to Do
- Do not redesign your site mid-rollout - that muddies the signal.
- Watch pages, not just total traffic - losers and winners often sit side by side.
- Check usefulness first - thin, recycled, or commodity content is vulnerable in core updates.
- Verify rumors - if Google did not announce it and multiple trusted outlets are not confirming it, treat it cautiously.
Bottom Line
SEO weather is stormy, not catastrophic. The main force is the still-active March 2026 core update, and the ranking turbulence fits that pattern. For site owners, the smartest move today is patience, careful monitoring, and resisting the urge to "fix" everything before the rollout is finished.