We independently review every app we recommend in our best apps lists. When you click some of the links on this page, we may earn a commission. Learn more.
It often feels like Google search has gotten worse. While the issue is complicated, online search has never felt like such a chore. Not only do you have to hop through numerous links to pinpoint what you're searching for, but you also have to navigate a maze of ads, spam, and pop-ups. Even then, how often do you find the answers you need? AI search engines claim they're the solution, so let's see.
The new breed of AI search engines combines the tech behind AI chatbots like ChatGPT with traditional search methods to fetch answers to your queries. They find the links most relevant to your queries, read through them, and summarize the results. You don't have to scroll through a list of URLs or scan entire websites to find a little piece of information.
From large platforms like Google to new startups, lots of search engines now offer the ability to generate AI-assisted answers. Each one works differently to ensure (or at least try to ensure) its results are accurate and from reputable sources.
I've been covering AI since the mid-2010s, and as a tech writer, have an unhealthy relationship with search engines and web traffic. For this article, I tested all the top AI search engines to see which ones are best—here's what I found.
The best AI search engines
Perplexity for the best AI search experience
Brave for combining traditional search with AI
Consensus for scientific and academic research search
Google for if you're already in the Google ecosystem
What makes the best AI search engine?
Traditional search engines rely on algorithms that combine things like keyword relevance, how often a page is referenced on other websites, the quality of the content, how much users engage with the page, and how fast the page loads (including on mobile)—among other things. When you look up a query, the search engine gives you what it thinks will be the most helpful response as well as ads, quick answer boxes, flight suggestions, and a whole lot more.
An AI search engine goes a step further. It still uses this basic system, but instead of showing you a list of pages, it tries to answer your question itself. It passes the information it collects through the AI model it uses, which then summarizes it in a couple of paragraphs—while citing its sources. These citations were a key part of the criteria, as they allow you to verify the accuracy of the AI results. AI's ability to understand natural language means it can interpret your questions really well, even if you don't use certain keywords (though many traditional search engines have this kind of AI built in too).
For you, the process remains identical for the first half. You'll still put your query in an empty box, but now, the search engine will try to produce an answer right at the top. If you're not satisfied with it or would like to explore more, you can scroll down and continue to visit some web links like you would before. How they're presented varies from engine to engine. In some cases, you can ask a follow-up question. It will remember what you were looking for and be able to build on it, something a traditional search engine can't do.
All this comes with a healthy caveat: AI search engines have to produce the goods. Because they're summarizing the results instead of showing you them directly, if they misinterpret something, it can be hard for you to spot. Accuracy really matters. To that end, I tested each AI search engine with a number of challenging queries.
Two that really tripped up a lot of the options I considered were:
What US Open Games are on today? This required the AI to filter out all the extra noise and just tell me who was playing and at what time. A surprising number couldn't do it.
Compare the most recent iPhone, Samsung Galaxy, and Google Pixel flagships in terms of camera performance, battery life, and software update policies. This required the AI to gather up-to-date results and create a useful summary. Strangely, what caused the most issues was identifying the latest flagship phones. Some AI search engines (that aren't on the list) gave me specs for the iPhone 15 (last year's model) and even hypothesized specs for the iPhone 17 (which hasn't been announced yet). I wanted specs for the iPhone 16 Pro and the iPhone 16.
I felt these queries were a good approximation of how I want to use an AI search engine. It still has to do search engine things, like tell me up-to-the-minute sports info, but it should also be able to do more than a regular search engine. If it's reading all the articles to give me a summary, it should be able to pay attention to the specific parts I request.
While I was testing AI search engines, I was also looking for anything that improved on the traditional search experience. If it required more clicks, didn't produce helpful results, or had unnecessary pop-ups or a generally bad user experience, it didn't make the cut. In the end, that left me with four AI search engines that I feel confident recommending.
The best AI search engines at a glance
| Best for | Standout features | Pricing |
|---|---|---|---|
The best AI search experience | Conversational interface with follow-up questions and the ability to organize searches | Most features are free; starts at $20/month for premium features | |
Combining traditional search with AI | High-quality AI answers integrated into search results, with option to fall back on traditional links | Free; $3/month for Search Premium (no ads) | |
Scientific and academic research | Searches, summarizes, and cites academic papers; shows scientific consensus clearly | Free plan (15 Pro searches/month); from $10/month for unlimited Pro | |
If you're already in the Google ecosystem | Deep integration with Maps, Shopping, and YouTube; conversational AI Mode with follow-up questions | Free |
The best AI search engine experience overall
Perplexity (Web, macOS, Windows, iOS, Android)

Perplexity pros:
Great user experience
Ability to organize your searches
Perplexity cons:
Lots of duplicate features can be confusing
Generates some controversy
Perplexity is a search engine built with AI from the ground up. It swaps out the conventional blue links for a chatbot-like interface and allows you to converse with search results.
When you look up a query, you'll find a textbox to ask a follow-up under the generated answer. You don't have to repeat the details you punched in initially—since Perplexity remembers the context, you can simply ask it another question about the topic. Say you originally asked about the iPhone's camera specs. You can follow up with "how is its battery life," and it'll answer.
This basic idea is repeated in a few different forms. You can have Perplexity do Research and Labs searches, which both take longer and allow the AI to comb through more resources. You can also have it search just academic papers, financial statements, or social sites like Reddit. It's a lot of different buttons for the same core idea, but it does give you more control.
Perplexity has also improved how it handles live events and breaking news. It now fetches results in real time. You may have to throw "what's happening right now?" on the end of your prompt, but it can fetch live updates.
Perplexity also offers a few different ways to keep track of your previous searches. They stay in the sidebar as threads, and they can be organized into Spaces or published as Pages. I'm sure there's a few more I'm forgetting: Perplexity goes all in on repeating the same features in slightly different ways with different names.
Perplexity isn't without controversy. It has been criticized for making up information, plagiarism, and ignoring requests not to be included in its results. So as with all AI tools, be careful about taking anything they tell you at face value without verification. I found it to be accurate in my testing, but I didn't fact-check every single line in every single summary.
While Perplexity still has a lead in AI search, other tools are catching up, so the company also does things to generate headlines, like offering to buy Google Chrome and TikTok, neither of which it can afford. Comet, Perplexity's AI-powered browser, is now available to everyone for free.
Still, Perplexity is a powerhouse. And because it integrates with Zapier, you can tap into always-on research and route answers to all your other business tools, automatically. Learn more about how to automate Perplexity.
Perplexity pricing: Free plan with quick searches and limited access to advanced search tools and models. From $20/month for Pro plan with unlimited Pro searches. From $200/month for Max plan with access to Comet Plus, advanced frontier models, and its most powerful features.
The best AI search engine for combining traditional search with AI
Brave (Web)

Brave pros:
Best AI answers of any search engine
Still get traditional results
Brave cons:
You probably don't use Brave as your search engine
Brave is a privacy-focused browser and search engine. The browser is based on Chromium and is pretty solid, but it's the search engine I'm going to talk about here.
Search engines like Google and Bing are adding AI answers to the top of their search results, but only Brave has so far pulled it off well enough that I'm happy to recommend it.
Since Brave is free and doesn't require an account, I suggest you just go and try it. When you enter a search, you have the option to select Answer with AI, though in my testing, Brave did so whether I ticked the box or not.
Anyway, at the top of your Brave results, you'll now see the AI answer, and in my testing, I found they were really good. They were far more accurate than the ones I've experienced with Google, they're clearly cited, and you can ask follow-up questions. Best of all, if the AI doesn't answer your question to your satisfaction, you can scroll on down to the regular search results.
Brave also respects your privacy. It doesn't track search information or build a profile about you. Any ads you see are related to your search query, and not targeted at you.
Having said all that, most other search engines are also doing something similar, so give them a try if you don't want to switch to Brave.
Brave pricing: Free; $3/month for Search Premium, which has no ads.
The best AI search engine for scientific papers
Consensus (Web)

Consensus pros:
Searches, summarizes, and cites academic papers
Clearly displays the scientific consensus around different issues
Consensus cons:
Too niche for most uses
Consensus is an AI search engine for academic papers. Plug in some scientific question, and it will comb the literature and present a handy summary of the current scientific consensus.
Consensus is obviously aimed at students and researchers, but if you're science-curious, it's equally useful. I found it did a really great job of clearly presenting the main scientific findings of the papers it reviewed.
Consensus offers three levels of analysis or search (the branding is inconsistent). Quick uses the top 10 papers, Pro the top 20, and Deep the top 50. In all cases, it evaluates and clearly displays the key finding of each paper it uses, cites its work well, and allows you to ask follow-up questions. I was really impressed.
Obviously, Consensus can still hallucinate and make errors—but the team behind it are clear about the mitigations they're taking. If you use it sensibly, it can be a really powerful tool.
Consensus pricing: Free plan with 15 Pro Searches per month; from $10/month for Pro with unlimited Pro Searches and more features.
Elicit is a similar tool, though it feels less like a search engine, which is why it didn't make the list.
The best AI search engine if you're already in the Google ecosystem
Google (Web, iOS, Android)

Google pros:
Unmatched integration with Maps, Shopping, and YouTube
Follow-up questions and conversational format in AI Mode
Available everywhere you already search
Google cons:
AI Overviews can still be inconsistent and occasionally wrong
AI Mode is a separate tab, not the default experience—easy to miss
Three overlapping AI products (Gemini, AI Mode, AI Overviews) create real confusion
It wouldn't feel right to have a list of the best AI search engines and not mention Google. It's the most widely used search engine in the world, and it now offers AI search features. That said, recommending it comes with a few caveats.
Google's AI rollout has been uneven. AI Overviews—the summaries that appear at the top of regular search results—launched to mixed reviews and have been criticized for producing inaccurate or even dangerous responses. They've improved since then, but they remain inconsistent. Not every search triggers an AI overview, and quality can vary significantly depending on the query.
The more capable offering is AI Mode, which gives you a conversational, Perplexity-style interface powered by a custom version of Gemini 2.5. You can ask follow-up questions, get cited answers, and tap into Google's deep ecosystem that includes Maps, Shopping, and YouTube. Results in AI Mode are noticeably richer than what you'd get from a standalone AI search tool, especially for local searches, shopping, and anything where Google's structured data shines.
The catch is that AI Mode doesn't show up by default. It lives in a separate tab that many users never notice. There's also the naming mess: Gemini, AI Mode, and AI Overviews all use similar technology but do different things, and Google hasn't done a great job of explaining the differences.
If you're open to switching tabs, AI Mode is impressive, especially given everything it can pull in. But if you want a cleaner, more predictable AI search experience out of the box, the other tools on this list are still easier to rely on.
Google pricing: Free
What about ChatGPT, Gemini, and other chatbots?
Chatbots like ChatGPT, Gemini, and Claude can all search the web to answer your questions—and they're all pretty good at it. The catch is that they don't feel like a search engine even if you might end up with the same answer.
Yes, this is a pretty arbitrary line to draw, but I was looking for AI search engines that could replace Google in your day-to-day use, and I just don't feel chatbots reach that bar. I use ChatGPT all the time, but it hasn't replaced search.
What's the future of AI search?
AI search has a lot of promise, but it's not yet a complete replacement for regular search. Even the best tools like Perplexity still have their quirks. Traditional search engines are going to keep integrating AI features, and Google and Bing should soon catch up with Brave's implementation. Perhaps the most interesting use of AI search is in niche applications. Although Consensus was the least useful tool overall, it excelled at searching scientific papers.
At the same time, search engines are the web's engine rooms and are responsible for driving traffic and revenue to websites. AI search takes that away and doesn't reward the websites it extracts information from—although some companies, like Perplexity, claim to be trying to change that. Without the systems in place, AI search potentially threatens the internet's foundations and could have major repercussions for how it functions.
For now, I feel AI search is an area worth keeping an eye on. Don't delete Google just yet, but the options are definitely getting better.
Related reading:
Our best apps are selected by app testers who personally retest apps every year. This article was originally published in July 2024 and was last updated by an app tester in September 2025. Because these tools change frequently, we also review it for accuracy on a regular basis. It was last reviewed in June 2026.









