Search Console noise is the big story
The most useful thing site owners should know today is that a lot of SEO chatter is still orbiting Google Search Console data weirdness, not a fresh ranking shock. Search Engine Roundtable and Search Engine Journal both covered a mistaken email Google sent telling some site owners that Google only started collecting Search impressions on April 12, 2026. John Mueller said it was a messaging system glitch, not a sign that your site suddenly only just appeared in Google.
That matters because this came right after Google disclosed a separate impression reporting bug that had been inflating Search Console impression counts since May 13, 2025. Search Engine Land reported that fixes are rolling out over the coming weeks, and that could make impressions look lower even when clicks and actual search demand have not changed.
The rankings weather is calming down
The broader search results picture looks cooler, not stormier. Your live tracker shows Google volatility sliding into a normal range, with 4.6 on April 18 and today’s partial 4.5, after a long stretch of moderate turbulence through late March and early April. Because today’s score is still partial and providers are split, this looks more like leftover pockets of movement than a market-wide shakeup.
Search Engine Land’s analysis from April 15 is still the clearest recent context: the March 2026 core update aftermath was rough, with nearly 80% of top-3 results shifting and much heavier churn than December’s update.
Quiet Google docs, small practical signals
Google Search Central’s freshest visible change is a documentation update on April 19 adding guidance for getting started with signed exchanges in Google Search. That is not a mass-market SEO earthquake, but it is a reminder that Google is still refining technical guidance while the SERPs cool down.
Bottom Line
- Do not panic over impression drops until you rule out Search Console reporting fixes.
- Check clicks, queries, and rankings, not impressions alone.
- If traffic is down, compare it to April 8 onward, not just yesterday, because the bigger volatility wave hit earlier and is now fading.