Your traffic didn’t disappear. It moved.
If your organic traffic has been quietly declining for the past two years, you’re not imagining it — and it’s not your fault. A new Chartbeat dataset published by Axios on March 17, 2026 tells the story clearly:
The drop is real, it’s accelerating, and it’s structural — not a Google algorithm penalty you can recover from by fixing your H1 tags.
Where did the traffic go?
It went into AI answers.
Google AI Overviews, ChatGPT, Perplexity, and Gemini now answer the same informational queries your blog posts used to capture. A user asks “how do I reduce churn in my SaaS” — they get a four-paragraph AI answer. They don’t click your article. You ranked #1. You got zero traffic.
Meanwhile, Matomo’s 5.8 release (March 18, 2026) found something that will reframe how you think about your analytics dashboard:
Up to 50% of your website visitors are already AI bots. Five companies control 84.5% of all AI crawler traffic. AI crawler traffic grew 4× in just 8 months — from 2.6% to 10.1% of all web traffic.
That’s not future-state speculation. AI crawlers from OpenAI, Anthropic, Google, Perplexity, and others are scanning your site right now. Your Google Analytics doesn’t count most of them. Your traffic is down on paper — but your site has never been busier.
The implication is counterintuitive
You have more visibility into your site than ever before — just not from humans. AI engines are reading your content, deciding whether it’s citable, and either including it in their answers or skipping it.
If they skip you: a competitor who has structured their content for AI extraction gets cited instead. Your traffic drops. Theirs grows. Neither of you changed your SEO.
If they cite you: you start getting referrals from AI answers. You appear in ChatGPT recommendations, Perplexity sources, and Google AI Overviews. That traffic is growing — eMarketer projects AI search referrals will account for 12–18% of web traffic by end of 2026.
What decides whether AI cites you?
Three factors matter most:
Disallow: / rule meant to block only legacy crawlers.This is Generative Engine Optimization (GEO) — and it’s the discipline that determines whether the traffic you’ve lost to AI ends up at your competitors or comes back to you as AI citations.
What to do now
Disallow: / blocks that apply to AI crawlers. If they can’t read you, they can’t cite you. Look specifically for rules that block GPTBot, ClaudeBot, PerplexityBot, and Google-Extended.Find out where AI sees you — and where it doesn’t
Free GEO audit. No account required. Results in 48 hours.
Run your free GEO audit →The bottom line
Your traffic isn’t gone. It moved into AI answers. The question is: when someone asks ChatGPT about your topic, do they get your answer — or your competitor’s?
The Chartbeat data shows the cost of not answering that question. The Matomo data shows the window is open right now: AI is already reading your site. Give it a reason to cite you.
Start with a free GEO audit to see where you stand. Or explore the full GEO service if you want this done for you.
Frequently Asked Questions
Sources
Chartbeat traffic data via Axios, March 17, 2026
Matomo 5.8 release blog — AI crawler traffic analysis, March 18, 2026
eMarketer AI search referral projections, 2026