The internet just crossed a remarkable threshold. Agentic AI internet traffic now exceeds that of real humans for the first time.
“Welp, that happened faster than I predicted,” Cloudflare CEO Matthew Prince said in a post on X on Wednesday. “Thought it would be [at the] end of 2027, then early 2027, but agentic traffic [is] growing so fast that bots have now passed human traffic online for the first time in the Internet’s history.”
He backed up his claim with a post to Cloudflare Radar, the company’s internet measurement system, showing that agentic bot usage is up to 57.4% of total traffic, while human traffic has dropped to 42.6%.
Prince said in another post that the data is “a bit messy” but “clearly on the other side now,” indicating this is a trend that isn’t going away.
Agentic AI traffic now exceeds that of real human users.
These are not the bots you’re looking for
It is important to clarify what Prince refers to regarding web traffic. Regular bots, like search engine scrapers and web performance tools, eclipsed human internet traffic well over a decade ago. There are reports that those same bots exceeded human traffic on small websites even sooner, which led to a lot of small website owners exceeding their hosting usage limits faster than expected.
The agentic bots Prince is referring to are the systems that search the internet on your behalf when you ask an AI chatbot a question and return the results. Those searches and visits generate real web traffic, even if it doesn’t look that way from your AI chat window. The data means that more AI agents are visiting these webpages than real humans. Humans still physically engage with content more than AI does, but AI visits webpages more often.
The compact British Overseas Territory of Gibraltar has some of the highest agentic AI web traffic usage of any country on Earth.
Digging into the data
The above numbers reflect worldwide traffic patterns, but they differ by region. North America as a whole skews more toward bot usage, with bots accounting for 68.6% of activity and humans 31.4%. If you zoom in on the American Midwest, the trend reverses, with humans leading at 54.5% versus 45.5% for bots. The trend is consistent across regions: Broader areas tend to be dominated by agentic bot traffic, while smaller areas within those regions often still show higher levels of human usage.
There are some outliers as well. During peak hours, up to 97% of traffic originating from tiny Gibraltar is bot traffic. Other countries, like Cuba and Laos, sit at the other end of the spectrum, with 80.8% and 84.7% of each country’s traffic coming from human users, respectively.
North America, Europe and Africa lean toward bots, while Asia, South America and Oceania still see more human internet use most of the time.
Dead Internet Theory
Interest in something called Dead Internet Theory has increased in recent years, fueled by perceptions that online activity is becoming less human-driven.
The idea behind Dead Internet Theory is that bots and AI generate most of the internet’s activity. The theory seemed far-fetched to many when it emerged in the late 2010s, but it’s becoming harder to argue against as data like Cloudflare’s becomes public.
The implications become more concerning with additional context: Forty percent of Facebook posts are estimated to be generated by bots. Music-streaming service Deezer announced in April that 44% of new music uploaded to its platform is now AI-generated. And a report from Axios posits that AI generates 52% of all online articles (though not this one — honest).

