GEO vs SEO: what's the difference?
Updated June 25, 2026 · 5 min read
SEO (Search Engine Optimization) optimizes a page to rank highly in a list of search results. GEO (Generative Engine Optimization) optimizes content to be cited as a source inside an AI-generated answer. They share most authority signals, so the smart play is to do both — not choose between them.
Key takeaways
- SEO competes for a ranking position; GEO competes to be the cited answer.
- Both reward authority, clarity, and structured, evidence-backed content.
- GEO leans harder on answer-first writing, structured data, and machine-readability.
- Run them together: a GEO-optimized page usually ranks well too.
The core difference
SEO's target is a position on a results page — ideally the top of the first page. GEO's target is a sentence inside an AI answer, with your brand or page named as the source. The user journey differs too: an SEO win earns a click; a GEO win earns a mention the user may act on without ever clicking.
Where they overlap
The signals that earn rankings and the signals that earn citations are mostly the same. Topical authority, quality backlinks, technical health, and clear content help in both worlds. That's why GEO is additive — improving for AI answers tends to improve classic rankings as a side effect.
- Authority and trust (E-E-A-T, links, consistent entity data).
- Clear information architecture and internal linking.
- Fast, crawlable, well-structured pages.
- Content that genuinely answers the query.
Where they diverge
GEO puts extra weight on a few things SEO treats as optional.
- An explicit, quotable answer near the top of the page.
- Structured data and an llms.txt surface for AI crawlers.
- Answer-shaped sections (questions as headings, concise responses).
- Verifiable facts the engine can attribute with confidence.
Which should you invest in?
Both, with the same content. The most efficient strategy is to write each important page answer-first and structure it well: you satisfy the AI engines and the ranking systems at once. Treating GEO and SEO as separate budgets usually means duplicated effort.
Frequently asked questions
Is GEO replacing SEO?
No. Traditional search still drives huge volume, and its ranking signals also feed AI answers. GEO is a layer on top of solid SEO.
Can one page be optimized for both?
Yes — and it should be. Answer-first structure, clean schema, and real evidence serve rankings and citations simultaneously.
Does GEO need backlinks like SEO?
Authority still matters. Links and consistent mentions build the trust that makes an engine comfortable citing you.
Put this into practice — free.
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