The Number Nobody in UAE Marketing Wants to Discuss
Here is the most important number in digital marketing right now: 360.
That is how many clicks reach the open web for every 1,000 Google searches performed in the United States, according to the landmark 2024 SparkToro/Datos study by Rand Fishkin; one of the most rigorous clickstream analyses ever conducted on Google search behaviour.[1]
In the European Union, where regulatory pressure has forced some of Google's self-preferencing behaviour to ease, the number is marginally better: 374 per 1,000. Nearly two-thirds of all searches in both the world's largest economy and its most regulated market never leave Google's ecosystem.
In 2025 and into 2026, with the rollout of AI Overviews accelerating, that 360 figure has declined further. Research by Ahrefs shows that Position 1 organic click-through rates drop by as much as 34.5% when an AI Overview appears above the results.[2] A separate Pew Research study confirms that Google users are significantly less likely to click any link at all when an AI summary is displayed.[3]
Now consider the UAE context. Mobile internet penetration in the UAE exceeds 99%. Smartphone usage is among the highest globally. Google Maps, Google Flights, Google Hotels, and YouTube are embedded into daily life. And Arabic-language searches, which lean heavily toward voice and AI-answered queries are growing faster than English searches in the GCC.
Our estimate, based on applying the established global patterns to UAE-specific mobile usage data: for every 1,000 Google searches in the UAE, approximately 320–340 clicks reach the open web. That is our floor estimate. The ceiling is not much higher.
The Anatomy of a Google Search in 2026
To understand why these numbers are what they are, it helps to visualise what actually happens after a user submits a query. Clickstream research — which follows real users across real devices rather than modelling from keyword databases — tells a far more sobering story than most SEO tools show.
Destination of 1,000 Google Searches (US Baseline, 2024)
SparkToro / Datos StudySession ends or
new search begins
YouTube, Maps,
Images, Hotels
Non-Google sites
and properties
Google Ads
clicks
The average Google search session lasts approximately 76 seconds. Within that window, 50% of users click a result within 9 seconds, and 59% visit just one page.[4] Only 0.44% of users ever reach page two of results. The window for your business to intercept a potential customer is narrow, brief, and shrinking.
"For every 100 searches on Google, roughly 30 clicks go to the open web, 9 go to Google services, and less than 1 goes to a paid ad. The remaining 60+ resolve inside Google itself."
SparkToro / Datos Clickstream Panel, 2024 [1]The Zero-Click Trajectory: 2020–2026
This is not a new problem. Zero-click searches have been growing consistently since 2020, when SparkToro first documented that two-thirds of Google searches ended without a click.[5] What has changed is the acceleration — and the mechanism driving it.
Zero-Click Rate Growth: 2020–2026
Sources: SparkToro 2020, 2021, 2024 [1][5] · Datos clickstream panel · Ekamoira/xictron 2026 estimates [6][7] · Dashed bars = projected
The 2024 SparkToro data showed a slight recovery in open web clicks compared to prior trend lines — likely a temporary effect of Google pulling back some AI Overview features after negative press coverage. By late 2025, the trend had resumed its decline. For 2026, estimates project zero-click rates approaching 61% on desktop and exceeding 75% on mobile.[6]
Almost half of all mobile searches end the browsing session entirely — the user gets an answer from the SERP and closes the browser. This compares to roughly 20% of desktop searches doing the same. In the UAE, where over 70% of searches are on mobile, this figure is structurally important for any business relying on organic traffic.
How AI Overviews Have Accelerated the Crisis
AI Overviews — Google's AI-generated answer boxes that appear above organic results — represent the most significant structural change to Google's SERP since the introduction of Featured Snippets in 2014. And unlike Featured Snippets, which often required a click to get the full answer, AI Overviews typically provide a complete response immediately.
The data on their impact is damning for organic traffic. Ahrefs found that the #1 organic result's CTR drops from approximately 7% to between 2% and 3% when an AI Overview appears — a decline of roughly 58%.[2] A study by eMarketer put the overall CTR reduction across affected queries at 34.5%.[8]
AI Overview Impact on Organic Click-Through Rates
Position 1 CTR: before and after Google AI Overviews appear in SERP
The UAE Estimation: Why Our Numbers Are Likely Worse
The SparkToro data is anchored in US and EU behaviour. Extrapolating to the UAE requires acknowledging three structural factors that push UAE open web click rates below the global average.
Factor 1: Mobile Dominance
UAE smartphone penetration exceeds 99%, with over 70% of Google searches happening on mobile devices. SparkToro's data shows that mobile searches result in zero clicks at nearly double the rate of desktop searches — almost half of mobile sessions end entirely after the SERP. A higher mobile search share in the UAE directly translates to a lower open web click rate than the US or EU baselines.
Factor 2: Google Property Penetration
Google Maps usage in the UAE is exceptional — restaurant discovery, navigation, clinic searches, and hotel research are dominated by Google Maps results. Google Hotels and Google Flights capture high-intent travel queries. In the US, approximately 27% of all Google search clicks go to Google-owned properties. In the UAE, we estimate this figure is closer to 30–32%, driven by Maps and YouTube's cultural dominance.
Factor 3: Arabic Voice and AI-Answered Queries
Arabic-language search queries in the UAE — particularly among Emirati users — skew heavily toward voice search and conversational AI queries, both of which have substantially higher zero-click rates. A question asked in Arabic to Google Assistant or via voice search is answered directly without a SERP visit at all.
Open Web Clicks Per 1,000 Google Searches — Regional Comparison
UAE figures are Titan Digital estimates based on mobile usage rates and Google property penetration data
Estimation Methodology: UAE figures are Titan Digital estimates. No UAE-specific clickstream study currently exists in public literature. Our estimates apply SparkToro's US mobile vs. desktop differential to UAE's 70%+ mobile search share, then adjust upward for Google property penetration. We conservatively estimate UAE blended open web clicks at approximately 300 per 1,000 searches. We welcome challenge to this methodology — nobody in the UAE market has published rigorous clickstream data, and that itself is a problem for informed digital strategy.
The DOJ Antitrust Case: Why Regulation Has Not Fixed This
A reasonable question: if Google's self-preferencing is this severe, why haven't antitrust authorities fixed it? The answer is instructive for understanding the structural permanence of this problem.
The US Department of Justice's antitrust case against Google produced rulings through 2025, focused primarily on distribution defaults — Google's exclusive agreements with Apple, Samsung, and others to be the pre-installed search engine. The court mandated data sharing and banned exclusive default deals.[12]
What the ruling did not do: alter any SERP features. AI Overviews, Knowledge Panels, Featured Snippets, Google Maps pack dominance, Google Flights, and Google Hotels remain entirely intact. The court's remedies target market access, not the mechanics by which Google retains users within its ecosystem.
The European Union's Digital Markets Act has had a measurable — though modest — effect. The EU's 374 vs US's 360 open web click rate represents a 3.9% improvement, likely attributable to reduced Google self-preferencing in comparison shopping and travel.[1] It is better. It is not materially different.
For UAE businesses, neither the US DOJ ruling nor the EU Digital Markets Act provides any direct relief. UAE has no equivalent legislative framework targeting Google's self-preferencing behaviour. The structure of the UAE search economy — Google-dominated, mobile-first, heavy Google property usage — will remain unchanged by external regulatory action for the foreseeable future.
Is ChatGPT Actually Stealing Google's Users?
The media narrative that Google is losing its dominant position to AI tools like ChatGPT, Perplexity, and Microsoft Copilot is compelling but overstated by the data.
Google currently holds approximately 83% of global search market share.[13] Perplexity processes approximately 780 million queries per month — impressive growth of 340% year-over-year — but this represents less than 1% of Google's daily query volume.[13] ChatGPT's search feature is gaining adoption but has not displaced Google for the high-intent commercial queries that drive most business revenue.
This matters for strategy because it means the zero-click problem is Google's problem to own, not a transition problem to a new search ecosystem. You cannot solve "Google is not sending me clicks" by optimising for Perplexity — the volume isn't there yet for most UAE SME markets.
"Google isn't losing the search war. It's winning it so completely that nobody else's traffic even needs to go to the open web anymore."
Kaan Bozoglu — Titan Digital UAE, 2026What UAE Businesses Must Do Differently in 2026
The zero-click reality does not mean SEO is dead. It means the definition of SEO success must change. Ranking #1 for a query that generates an AI Overview response and delivers 2% CTR is a hollow victory. Being cited inside that AI Overview — receiving the 35% CTR uplift that cited sources enjoy — is the new ranking.[10]
Here are the strategic adaptations that matter most for UAE businesses in this environment:
The Uncomfortable Conclusion
The structural reality is this: Google has built the world's most efficient attention capture machine, and it is increasingly efficient at keeping that attention within its own ecosystem. For every 1,000 searches performed in the UAE, our best estimate is that approximately 300 clicks reach a non-Google-owned, non-Google-ad-paying website.
The antitrust case will not fix this. ChatGPT will not replace this. The trend line is downward and the pace is accelerating.
The businesses that thrive in this environment will be those that adapt their definition of digital visibility — from "ranking on page one" to "being cited, featured, and referenced by the systems that answer searches before a user even needs to click." That means structured content, named expertise, entity-level authority, and a diversified channel strategy that does not treat Google organic traffic as a stable foundation.
It is a harder game. It is a more expensive game. And it is the only game being played.
This article synthesises published clickstream research (SparkToro/Datos 2024), CTR impact studies (Ahrefs, eMarketer, Search Engine Land, Pew Research), zero-click trend analyses (multiple sources, 2023–2026), and DOJ antitrust case documentation. UAE-specific estimates are Titan Digital's own modelling based on publicly available UAE mobile usage and Google penetration data. All sources are cited and linked in the references section below. We encourage verification, challenge, and disagreement — this topic benefits from more rigorous local research.
