How to Read the GSC Performance Report
The Performance report is GSC's most important feature. Here's how to interpret clicks, impressions, CTR, and position data correctly.
The Performance report is where you’ll spend most of your time in Google Search Console. It shows every query and page that appeared in Google search results, along with clicks, impressions, CTR, and position data.
Getting there: Search Console → Performance (left sidebar). You’ll see a graph at the top and a table below with tabs for Queries, Pages, Countries, Devices, and Search Appearance.
Understanding this report is fundamental to using GSC effectively. Here’s how to read it correctly.
The four metrics explained
GSC tracks four metrics for search performance:
| Metric | What it measures | How to use it |
|---|---|---|
| Clicks | Times users clicked your result | Primary traffic indicator |
| Impressions | Times your result appeared | Visibility indicator |
| CTR | Clicks ÷ Impressions | Click efficiency (heavily affected by position) |
| Position | Average ranking position | Where you appeared in results |
Important: These are averages and totals across the selected date range. A single day’s data can be noisy — look at trends over weeks.
How to read the Queries tab
The Queries tab shows every search term that triggered your site in results:
- Click “Queries” below the graph
- Add columns — click the column headers to show Clicks, Impressions, CTR, Position
- Sort by any column to find patterns
What to look for:
- High impressions, low clicks → Ranking too low or poor title
- High clicks, rising position → Successful content
- Declining clicks, stable impressions → Position probably dropped
Filter queries to focus your analysis. Click ”+ New” to filter by query content, page, country, or device.
How to read the Pages tab
The Pages tab shows performance aggregated by URL:
- Click “Pages” below the graph
- Sort by Clicks to see your top traffic pages
- Click any page to see which queries drive traffic to it
Pro tip: After clicking a page, click back to “Queries” to see only queries for that specific page. This reveals what keywords each page ranks for — including unexpected rankings.
Using date comparison
The comparison feature reveals changes over time:
- Click “Date” filter (shows current range)
- Click “Compare”
- Select two periods — last 28 days vs. previous 28 days works well
- Apply — you’ll now see change columns
Compare same days of the week to reduce noise. Week-over-week comparisons are more reliable than arbitrary date ranges.
Applying filters effectively
Filters narrow your data to specific segments:
Useful filter combinations:
- Query + Page → See how one page performs for specific keywords
- Device + Country → Understand mobile vs. desktop by market
- Query “not containing” [brand] → Isolate non-branded performance
Filter syntax:
- “Queries containing” — partial match
- “Exact query” — exact match only
- “Queries not containing” — exclude terms
See branded vs. non-branded tracking for filtering strategy.
Common mistakes when reading this report
Mistake 1: Reacting to daily data. Single days have high variance. A 20% drop on Tuesday might reverse by Thursday. Look at weekly trends.
Mistake 2: Ignoring the position context. Low CTR at position 2 is a problem. Low CTR at position 15 is expected. Always check position when evaluating CTR.
Mistake 3: Mixing branded and non-branded. Your brand name queries inflate overall performance. Filter them out to see actual SEO results.
Mistake 4: Forgetting the data delay. You’re looking at data from 2-3 days ago. “Today” in GSC isn’t actually today. Check GSC data delay for details.
Making the report actionable
Don’t just look at data — extract decisions:
Weekly: Check top 10 pages by clicks. Any significant position changes?
Monthly: Compare months. Which pages grew? Which declined? Why?
When you see problems: Dig deeper before acting. A single metric change often has multiple explanations.
For automated monitoring instead of manual checking, SerpDelta tracks your GSC data and surfaces what needs attention.