AI SEO & GEO

Bing AI Performance Metrics: What Do Cited Pages, Grounding Queries and Citation Share Show?

Rankings alone are no longer enough. We show how to read the Bing Webmaster Tools AI Performance report to understand whether your website actually appears in Microsoft Copilot answers — and what to do with the data.

📅 Updated: July 2026 ⏱️ Reading time: approx. 10 minutes 🎯 Topic: Bing Webmaster Tools, AI visibility, GEO

Imagine this situation: your website performs well in the traditional Google results list, yet something still feels missing from the picture. When you ask Microsoft Copilot about your field of expertise, not a single sentence in the answer cites you. Then there is the opposite case as well: one professional subpage regularly appears as a source in AI-generated answers, while the number of clicks barely moves. Confusing, isn’t it?

These two phenomena show exactly why it is no longer enough to think only in rankings. Generative search engines — whether Bing, Copilot or their partner surfaces — do not simply return a list of results. They merge the content of several sources into one direct answer and attach citations to it. Organic traffic simply cannot show this type of visibility.

This is where Bing AI Performance enters the picture: first-party data showing when, in what context and how frequently an AI system cited your content. Microsoft launched the Bing Webmaster Tools AI Performance report in public preview in February 2026, then expanded it on June 16, 2026 with new features: intents, topics, Citation Share and period comparison. The report shows aggregated citation data from Bing, Microsoft Copilot and certain partner AI surfaces in one place.

To interpret this dataset correctly, however, you first need to separate four concepts: number of citations, the set of cited pages, grounding queries and Citation Share. In this article, we do exactly that — step by step, with practical examples and a small interactive calculator at the end that lets you immediately test your own data.

For a deeper look at the differences between classic SEO, AEO and GEO, we have also created a separate guide: A practical framework for AI SEO, GEO and AEO.

1. What is the Bing AI Performance report?

AI Performance is a separate report inside Bing Webmaster Tools. It does not examine classic search rankings; instead, it shows how and to what extent a website becomes a source in AI-generated answers. In other words, it does not measure where you rank in the list, but whether you enter the small set of sources the AI actually uses.

MetricWhat does it show?
Total citationsHow many times one of the website’s URLs appeared as a source
Average cited pagesHow many unique pages, on average, participated in AI answers per day
Page-level citation activityWhich URLs were cited most frequently
Grounding queriesWhich phrases the AI used to retrieve the cited information
Citation ShareWhat percentage of all citations for a given query came from the website
Change over timeHow citation activity increased or decreased
Important: total citations alone do not show the order or emphasis with which the source appeared in the answer. Page-level data should not be treated as a classic ranking position either — it is an observation layer, not a score.

It is therefore worth moving away from the reflex that “the higher the number, the better.” The real value of the report lies in the patterns it reveals: which pieces of content, in which topics, and how often become reference points. For a broader understanding of this AI visibility concept, we recommend this overview: What does AI visibility really mean?

2. Cited pages: which content does AI consider a usable source?

The truly important question is not how many pages are indexed on the domain. What matters is how many of those actually enter the source set of AI answers. A 500-page online store may have only four or five pages that are genuinely “citable” — and that is exactly the number worth watching.

Examining the list of cited pages answers several questions:

Topical authority

In which topics does the domain already have visible AI presence?

Citable format

Which content types actually prove to be citable?

Page-type performance

Do product pages, category pages or guides perform better?

Concentration

Does one strong page generate most citations, or is the base broader?

It is important to distinguish between two similar-sounding metrics. “Average cited pages” is a site-level average: how many unique URLs appear as sources per day in aggregate. “Page-level citation activity”, on the other hand, shows citation counts assigned to specific URLs. Microsoft also emphasizes that these metrics are not authority scores or rankings — they are meant for observing citation patterns, not for grading pages.

Practical example

An accounting firm’s website has 150 indexed pages, but according to AI Performance, only three guides receive regular citations. That is not necessarily a bad thing — in fact, it is often a good sign. It may indicate that these three pages are properly focused, contain concrete and verifiable claims, and are built from clearly separated answer blocks. The other 147 pages, by contrast, are probably too generic or overlap with one another too much — and therefore do not become independent citation points.

For more on technical accessibility — in other words, why an AI bot may not “see” your content at all — read this article: Why is content marketing invisible to AI bots?

3. What are grounding queries?

The Hungarian phrase for “grounding query” can be described as a source-grounding retrieval query, but since the English term is increasingly used in professional language, we keep both concepts in this article.

Put simply: a grounding query is the keyword phrase or search formulation the AI system used when it retrieved the web information needed to support its answer. According to Microsoft’s definition, these are the important phrases with which the AI found the content that was later cited — and the displayed data represents a representative sample of total citation activity.

It is not the same as the user’s question

This is the most important and most commonly misunderstood point. A grounding query does not necessarily match what the user actually typed into Copilot or Bing.

Example

The user asks: “What search engine optimization strategy does a Hungarian B2B company need in 2026?”

To answer this, the AI may run several independent background retrievals, such as:

  • “B2B SEO strategy Hungary”
  • “AI SEO metrics”
  • “Microsoft Copilot visibility”
  • “GEO optimization for B2B companies”

This decomposition shows exactly how AI breaks one complex user question into smaller, independently answerable information tasks. Once you understand this, you can adapt your own content planning to the same logic — instead of building around a single keyword, you should cover an entire question space.

Analyzing grounding queries can therefore reveal:

  • which question areas the AI considers the website relevant for;
  • which terminology it associates with the content;
  • whether it connects the content to informational, commercial, local or research intent;
  • which related topics are worth creating new content for;
  • where there is a gap between the intended positioning and the topics the AI actually perceives.

The latest version of the Bing report also groups grounding queries into broader intent categories — such as informational, commercial, navigational, research, local, creative or problem-solving categories — which gives an even more detailed picture of how content fits into the user journey.

You can read more about how source selection, authority and content structure work together here: How do source selection, authority and content structure work together?

4. What does Citation Share mean?

Citation Share shows what percentage of all displayed citations for a given grounding query came from your website.

Formula: Citation Share = (your website’s citations / all citations for the given query) × 100

Let’s look at a concrete case: in AI answers connected to a specific grounding query, 100 source citations appeared in total. Of these, 18 citations pointed to your domain, while 82 belonged to other sources. In this case, your Citation Share is 18 percent.

Why is this more valuable than citation count alone? Because it adds context. Twenty citations can be an outstanding result in a narrow professional subtopic, but insignificant in a topic area where thousands of citations are generated daily. Citation Share shows exactly this relative weight.

At the same time, Microsoft clearly indicates that this is an observational metric — nothing more.

Not a ranking system

It contains no ranking or position, only a ratio.

Not a quality score

It does not measure the linguistic or professional quality of the content.

Not traffic share

It has no direct relationship with clicks.

Not a complete market view

It does not show all competitor domains.

Citation Share also moves continuously: user interest, model updates, content freshness, partner data sources and changes in the entire web source pool all affect it. This is not a system error — it is the nature of generative search.

🧮 Try it: Citation Share calculator

Enter your own citations and the total number of citations for the query — the calculator immediately shows your share.

0%

Enter the data above.

You can read more about Citation Share and the logic of measuring AI citations on our homepage: AI SEO and AI citation measurement.

5. The three metrics must be interpreted together

The metrics introduced so far tell only half-truths when viewed separately. Only when they are placed next to one another does the real picture of a domain’s AI visibility emerge.

SituationCited pagesGrounding queriesCitation ShareInterpretation
Few pages, high shareLowNarrow topic areaHighStrong but concentrated expert presence
Many pages, low shareHighDiverseLowBroad coverage, but strong competition
Many pages, growing shareHighRelevant clustersRisingStrengthening topical authority
Many citations, irrelevant queriesHighImpreciseVariableSemantic positioning problem
Declining page count and shareDecliningNarrowingDecliningFreshness, technical or content problem

A simple rule of thumb is useful:

  • citation count shows activity;
  • number of cited pages shows content breadth;
  • grounding queries show semantic context;
  • Citation Share shows relative presence;
  • period comparison shows direction.

With Bing Compare, for example, you can compare the current 30 days with the previous 30 days, or compare two custom periods. However, caution is important: a shift is not necessarily the result of a single optimization action — model updates, competitor movement and demand seasonality can all shape the numbers.

6. Practical Bing AI Performance analysis workflow

Set a baseline period

Review the previous 30 or 90 days and record the baseline values:

  • total citations
  • average cited pages
  • most frequently cited URLs
  • leading grounding queries
  • strongest topics and Citation Share

Group the cited pages

Organize the URLs that receive citations into categories: service page, product or category page, expert guide, case study, concept explainer, comparison, research/proprietary data, FAQ page. This quickly shows which content type actually “works.”

Connect pages with queries

Collect the most important data points in one table: URL — grounding query — intent — citations — Citation Share — action. This table becomes the foundation for the next content cycle.

Find content opportunities

Pay special attention to these patterns:

  • high citation count but low share;
  • high share but only one cited page;
  • relevant grounding query without dedicated content yet;
  • declining share in a previously strong topic;
  • indexed page that receives no citations at all.

Compare with traditional SEO data

The classic Bing Webmaster Tools reports still show impressions, clicks and average positions. AI Performance does not replace this; it adds a second visibility layer.

You can read more about the relationship between classic search engine optimization and search marketing here: Search marketing and search engine optimization.

7. How can the number of cited pages and Citation Share be increased?

01

Independently citable information units

Content that is easy for AI to extract: short definitions, concrete numbers, comparison tables, step-by-step guides, expert conclusions, question-and-answer blocks and clearly identified sources.

02

Avoid overly generic claims

“Our service is high quality.”
“The technical audit covered 147 URLs, of which 38 had indexing issues and 21 had canonicalization problems.”
03

Build intentional topic clusters

Grounding queries reveal related questions for which new subpages should be created — for example, as an interconnected subpage network organized around a pillar page.

04

Update facts regularly

Freshness is crucial in grounding systems: outdated data may not only produce weaker visibility, but also inaccurate AI answers. Factual accuracy, clear sourcing and the handling of contradictions are fundamental expectations.

Do not forget IndexNow: important content changes should be signaled immediately. According to Bing, this helps search and AI systems learn faster when content has been created, updated or deleted.

You can find a full presentation of the optimization process covering technical SEO, GEO and AEO here: AI visibility guide: technical SEO, GEO and AEO.

8. The most common interpretation mistakes

“The page with the most citations is the strongest SEO page.”

Not necessarily. Citation count is not a ranking or quality score.

“High Citation Share means high traffic.”

Citation Share is not a click or traffic metric; it measures relative presence within a specific query.

“The grounding query is the same as the user’s typed question.”

A grounding query is part of the AI’s internal information retrieval process, so it may be a rephrased or decomposed version of the original question.

“One week of growth proves optimization success.”

AI citations move dynamically. At least 30–90 day trends should be analyzed, and several metrics should be interpreted together.

“Bing AI Performance replaces Search Console and analytics.”

It does not. AI citation, organic appearance, click, referral traffic and conversion remain separate measurement layers that must be reviewed together.

Summary: AI visibility is becoming a measurable business process

The most important strength of Bing AI Performance is not that it provides one final AI visibility score. Quite the opposite: through several separate signals, it shows where, in which topics and at what relative share your content is being used to support AI answers.

Cited pages show which pieces of content actually become sources. Grounding queries reveal how AI interprets the website’s topics. Citation Share puts appearance counts into context — showing what share your own domain holds in the competition for a given topic.

The future SEO question is therefore no longer only “where does the page rank in Google?” — but just as much:

When AI systems answer which questions, do they rely on our website?

Frequently Asked Questions

It is a report in Bing Webmaster Tools that shows how often a website’s pages appear as sources in generated answers across Bing, Microsoft Copilot and certain partner AI surfaces.
It is a URL that the AI system displayed as a source next to a generated answer.
A retrieval phrase the AI used to find web information supporting its answer — and it is not necessarily identical to the user’s original question.
It shows what percentage of all citations for a given grounding query came from the analyzed website.
No. It does not measure traffic share or business market share, and it should not be treated as a complete competitor ranking.
By creating well-structured, factual, fresh, technically accessible and clearly citable content, and by consistently expanding topical coverage through a cluster-based approach.

Strength in unity: technical SEO + AEO + GEO

To increase AI citations, classic technical SEO, content authority, AEO and GEO should be managed as one unified system. Discover OnlineMarketing101’s AI SEO approach.

Discover our AI SEO approach →

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