Post-update wobble, not a storm
Google is not running a new confirmed algorithm update today, and the March 2026 core update officially finished on April 8 after a 12 day rollout. Google Search Central has not posted a fresh blog announcement for April 15, and Search Engine Journal is also pointing to the same status: rollout done, no new core update live.
That said, rankings are not exactly resting. The last two completed days, April 13 and 14, cooled to 4.7 and 4.6, after a long hot stretch that stayed elevated from late March into April. Today’s partial score has ticked back up to 5.3, which suggests the calm may be temporary, not settled. With no live update from Google, this looks more like aftershock volatility than a fresh earthquake.
The most notable fresh item today
The clearest breaking item from today is a Google Search Console messaging glitch. Search Engine Journal reports that some site owners received a message claiming Google only started collecting their search impressions on April 12, 2026, which is obviously alarming if a site has been in Search Console for years. In plain English: this appears to be a reporting or notification issue, not proof that your site vanished from Google overnight.
What site owners should do
According to Google’s own Search Central updates pages, there is no new official Search Central blog post or documentation change today driving this movement.
- Do not panic over one weird Search Console message
- Check clicks and impressions over the next several days, not just today
- Compare rankings after April 8, when the core update finished
- Hold off on drastic site changes unless traffic losses are sustained
Bottom Line
Today feels cloudy, not catastrophic. Google’s confirmed update cycle is over, but the SERPs still look unsettled, and a Search Console glitch is adding noise. For most site owners, the smart move is simple: verify, wait, and avoid overreacting to a single day of weird data.