We pulled anonymized Google Search Console data from over 400,000 websites and measured the real organic CTR for each.
In a nutshell: for a whole website, a good organic CTR usually falls between 1% and 2%. But that figure varies a lot by industry, authority, and website size.
Below, we break down median organic CTR by industry, by Domain Rating (DR), and by website size—then look at why CTR is falling across the board, thanks to AI Overviews and AI search.
Methodology
This article is updated with fresh data every month by Agent A.
- This is data from real websites. These benchmarks are built from anonymized, aggregated Google Search Console data from 422,421 real websites. We take each site’s actual clicks and impressions straight from GSC, aggregate them, and report the figures for the latest complete month.
- This is whole-site CTR, not position-1 CTR. For each site we divide its total clicks by its total impressions for the month. That’s why these numbers (low single digits) sit far below the “position 1 ≈ 30–40%” figures you’ll see elsewhere, and why they (sadly) match the CTR in your own Search Console overview.
- We report the median, not the average. A few giant sites (think Wikipedia or Amazon) pull averages up and flatter the typical site. The median—the site in the middle of each group—is the better benchmark. (We show the mean alongside it for contrast.)

