TL;DR
- Traffic Spike: DuckDuckGo says its AI-free page logged 22.7% more visits from May 20 through May 25 after Google I/O 2026.
- AI Contrast: AI Mode had already passed 1 billion monthly users, while DuckDuckGo kept an opt-out, privacy-focused search pitch.
- Market Limit: Download gains and faster iPhone installs suggest a real bump, but DuckDuckGo still accounts for only about 2% of search.
DuckDuckGo is drawing more traffic since Google I/O 2026. Its AI-free page noai.duckduckgo.com logged 22.7% more visits across May 20 through May 25, and U.S. app installs rose 18.1% from the prior week. AI Mode had already passed 1 billion monthly users within a year of launch.
Google I/O timing does not prove Google’s AI push sent users elsewhere. DuckDuckGo still found a clearer opening as Google’s AI Mode scale and monetization moved deeper into Search. Visits also peaked at 27.7% growth on May 24, which makes the lift harder to dismiss as a one-day wobble.
Gabriel Weinberg, DuckDuckGo CEO, cast the jump as a reaction against mandatory AI layers in search and argued that results are getting worse, not better.
“Google is force-feeding AI with no way to opt out. … their results are getting worse, not better. We want to be the place that puts users in charge and allows them to decide how much or how little AI they want.”
Gabriel Weinberg, DuckDuckGo CEO
DuckDuckGo is not trying to match Google on AI scale. It is trying to turn frustration with default AI features into a reason to test another search engine. User choice, not model size, is the center of that pitch.
Google’s AI Search Push Set Up the Contrast
At I/O 2026, Pichai argued that people love Search’s AI Mode, and Google’s April 2026 earnings remarks tied stronger Search usage to AI Mode and AI Overviews. In February 2026, Google argued search usage was still rising as AI features expanded, which kept the same growth message in circulation.
AI Overviews are the summaries that sit above ordinary links, while AI Mode pushes search further toward a chat-style exchange. An AI-powered Search box now per default invites longer prompts and follow-up questions, while DuckDuckGo kept pushing control and privacy instead.
In DuckDuckGo’s pitch, searches and chats stay private, and “nothing is used for AI training”.
That framing asks users to decide when AI is useful instead of making an AI summary the default starting point.
Google’s answer-first design also changed where search activity can end. More answers now arrive inside AI-generated summaries or follow-up flows instead of a plain list of blue links. DuckDuckGo’s anti-default-AI message reads more sharply in that setting because it offers a simpler interface rather than another AI layer.
What the New Traffic Numbers Add
Outside download data pointed in the same direction. A 12% global download increase suggests the reaction extended beyond one no-AI page on DuckDuckGo’s site. App behavior also reaches into future search habits, not just one week of curiosity clicks.
U.S. iPhone installs were up 33% week over week on average. Overall installs still rose 18.1%.
That wider mobile response points to a sharper reaction in the market where Google remains strongest and default settings still shape a large share of search behavior.
Late-May momentum accelerated through Memorial Day weekend, a period when traffic often softens, yet it still accounts for about 2% of the market. Google remains near 90%, so the late-May lift looks more like a measurable protest wave than a change in the market order.
Prior Positioning and What Comes Next
DuckDuckGo had already started building this case when it launched privacy-first AI tools in March 2025, introducing Duck.ai and casting optional AI as a feature rather than a default layer on every search. More than a year of that positioning let the company define AI as something users could accept selectively instead of something forced into every result page.
Google’s Search revenue grew 19% in Q1 2026 as AI features expanded. Comparable traffic and install readings over the next few weeks will show whether DuckDuckGo found a durable niche or only a brief protest click wave after I/O 2026.

