The 2-Month Refresh Rule: Why AI Search Cites Newer Content First

If your evergreen library hasn’t been touched in a year, AI search is quietly skipping past it.

Server-log studies across 2025 and 2026 show that 65% of AI bot crawl activity targets pages published in the past 12 months, and pages updated within the last 2 months earn 28% more citations than older pages. ChatGPT, Perplexity, Google AI Overviews and Gemini are not running the same retrieval logic Google search ran in 2018. They lean toward fresh — sometimes aggressively — because their training is anchored in a fixed date and their live retrieval layer is the only place they can pick up “what’s true now.”

That has practical consequences for any agency or operator who built a content library on the assumption that an evergreen post written in 2022 still pulls weight. It does in classic organic. It does not in answer engines.

The mechanic

LLM-driven search splits into two phases. First, the model has its training cutoff — a frozen snapshot of the web. Second, when a user asks a current question, the system retrieves live pages from a search index and uses those as grounding sources for the answer.

The retrieval layer is where freshness wins. The retrieval index is biased toward recently published or recently updated URLs because (a) crawlers reprioritize pages with new lastmod dates, (b) embedding pipelines reweight chunks tied to current entities and timestamps, and (c) ranking models inside the retrieval stack treat staleness as a soft negative signal — the older the page, the more likely it has been superseded.

Add to this that LLMs prefer to cite sources that look authoritative right now. A page dated 2021 introducing GA4 reads differently than a page updated last month covering the same ground with current screenshots and current numbers. The retrieval layer sees both. The citation usually goes to the second.

This is also why “publish and forget” content programs underperform. A 200-article library with 6 fresh pieces a year will lose visibility to a 50-article library refreshed continuously.

What to do this week

Pick the 20 pages on your site (or your client’s site) that earn the most organic traffic and should be earning AI citations. For each one:

1. Update the lastmod date — but only after a real edit. Stamping a page without changing the body is a short-lived trick and AI retrieval systems are already discounting it. Add a fresh stat, a new example, a 2026 link.

2. Change the intro. 44.2% of LLM citations come from the first 30% of the page. If the lede still references “in the post-COVID landscape” or any 2022-flavored framing, rewrite it.

3. Add or refresh dated proof. Replace 2023 numbers with 2025/2026 numbers. Cite a recent named study with its publication date in the sentence — LLMs love that pattern because it makes provenance clean.

4. Touch the page every 60 days going forward. Calendar it. The 2-month window is the operational sweet spot the data supports.

5. Rebuild your sitemap weekly. Refreshed pages need a re-crawl trigger or the freshness signal sits unused.

For agencies running multi-client portfolios, this is the easiest “look how AI SEO is different” demo you can run. Pick a high-value page, refresh it, watch the citations pick up over the following month, screenshot the lift. Clients understand that loop instantly.

The deeper point is that AI search rewards maintenance in a way classic SEO did not. Classic SEO let you ship a comprehensive guide and ride it for years. Answer engines pay you for being the most current source on the question. The work is no longer front-loaded; it’s continuous.

The agencies that are going to win the next 24 months of this shift are the ones who quietly fold a refresh cadence into every retainer — not the ones still pitching one-and-done content sprints.


If you’re a brand that wants to be the answer LLMs reach for (not just rank on Google), Paris Roussos has been engineering search visibility for 30 years and now runs done-for-you AI SEO. Flat-rate, no-fuss. Email parisroussos@gmail.com.

Refresh isn’t a chore. It’s the lever.

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