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How-To & TutorialsTECH 2 min read May 23, 2026

Perplexity AI vs google search — is AI search finally better than google?

I ran the same searches through both for three weeks. Here is where each one actually wins, with honest results for each type of query.

Detective studying a corkboard with red string connections representing different research methods

I ran the same fifteen searches through Perplexity and Google every week for three weeks — a mix of factual questions, current events queries, product research, how-to questions, and local lookups. The results were more differentiated than I expected in both directions.

Here is what I found.

Grand library hallway with two reading rooms as archways representing different search paths

The nuance on accuracy

Perplexity’s synthesis layer introduces a failure mode that Google does not have: hallucination. On a small but non-trivial number of queries, Perplexity confidently synthesised information that was inaccurate or that mixed details from two different sources incorrectly. The citations were there, but the synthesis was wrong.

The rule of thumb I arrived at: always click through at least two of Perplexity’s source citations on anything where accuracy matters. The answer it gives you is a starting point, not a verified conclusion. Google’s links are honest about what they are — links, not conclusions. Perplexity presents synthesis as if it is a conclusion. That framing demands more verification than it usually prompts.

Which one should you use?

The honest answer is both, for different queries. Perplexity is a research tool. Google is a discovery and navigation tool. They are not the same thing wearing different interfaces.

If I had to keep only one: I would keep Google, because its coverage of local, navigational, and e-commerce queries is irreplaceable right now. But I use Perplexity for research and technical how-to queries every day, and it saves me a meaningful amount of time on exactly those tasks.

The clearest sign that Perplexity is genuinely useful: after three weeks of testing, I kept using it. That is a more reliable signal than any benchmark.


About the author

Shahid Saleem writes PickGearLab — a practical blog about AI tools, tutorials, and automation workflows for people who want real results, not another listicle. Certified in Microsoft AZ-900, CompTIA Security+, and AWS AI Practitioner, with 10+ years in enterprise IT.

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