What each letter means on-page
E-E-A-T isn't a single score you can flip on — it's the sum of signals that tell an engine your content is trustworthy. Translating the abstract framework into concrete on-page elements is what matters.
Experience means showing first-hand use: original screenshots, specific details, results you actually observed. Expertise means naming the author, stating credentials, and linking to a real author bio. Authoritativeness means earning citations and links from recognized sources in your field. Trust means accurate facts, visible dates, transparent ownership, a working contact, HTTPS, and clear policies.
Why it matters more for AI search
When an engine writes an answer and attaches a source, it's putting its credibility on the line. It strongly prefers sources it can defend as reliable. That makes E-E-A-T signals — clear authorship, sourced claims, demonstrable experience — disproportionately important for getting cited, more so than for simply ranking a link.
Trust signals also overlap with structured data: Organization and Author markup, accurate publish dates, and clear contact pages all reinforce that your site is a real, accountable entity rather than anonymous content.
The on-page checklist
Most E-E-A-T improvements are quick to make and compound across every page on your site.
Add a named author with a bio and credentials to every substantive page; cite primary sources with dates for every factual claim; show original experience through your own data, screenshots, and examples; publish clear About, Contact, and policy pages and ship Organization JSON-LD; and keep content current with a visible last-updated date.
frequently asked
- Is E-E-A-T a direct ranking factor?
- Not a single measurable factor — Google describes it as a concept its systems and quality raters use to assess content. But the signals that demonstrate it (authorship, sourcing, accuracy, trust pages) are concrete and do influence how content is ranked and cited.
- Does E-E-A-T matter for every type of content?
- It matters most for YMYL (your-money-or-your-life) topics like health, finance, and safety, where accuracy is critical. But experience and trust signals help any content compete, and they're essential for being cited by cautious AI engines.
- How do I show 'experience' specifically?
- Include things only someone who actually did the thing would know — original screenshots, specific numbers, edge cases you hit, before/after results. Generic, paraphrased content signals the opposite of experience.
Published March 24, 2026 · Last updated June 16, 2026