DuckDuckGo Launches Anti-AI Browser Extensions
Quick Look
- DuckDuckGo introduces new browser extensions for Chrome and Firefox, allowing users to set its AI-free search engine as default.
- This move follows Google's AI-first search revamp, which has led to a significant increase in DuckDuckGo's traffic and app installs.
AI-generated summary
Why It Matters
DuckDuckGo has launched new browser extensions for Chrome and Firefox, allowing users to default to its AI-free search engine. This initiative comes as Google overhauls its search engine with AI-generated overviews, a move that has reportedly boosted traffic to alternative search engines.
As its traffic continues to climb, alternative search engine DuckDuckGo is leaning into anti-AI sentiment with the launch of new browser extensions that allow users to set its no-AI search experience, noai.duckduckgo.com, as their default search engine.
Once enabled, users will be directed to DuckDuckGo’s AI-free search page, where there are no AI-assisted answers, no chat prompts, and fewer AI images in the search results, the company claims. The extensions are currently available for Chrome and Firefox users. Meanwhile, people who have switched to the DuckDuckGo web browser already have their AI settings preserved, even if they clear their browser history.
The company says the extensions are meant to help people have a consistent AI-free search experience — something that’s harder to come by these days, especially after Google announced its AI-first revamp of its search engine at its developer conference earlier in May.
Since then, traffic to DuckDuckGo has been booming. Last week, the company noted that web visits to its no-AI search page were up nearly 30% week-over-week, and its U.S. app installs were also up 18.1% week-over-week, with U.S. iOS app installs peaking at 69.9% week-over-week growth.
Those trends followed news that Google was overhauling its search box in the biggest change to its search engine in more than 25 years. Now, instead of returning links at the top of the page, Google will favor sending users into AI-generated search overviews, which are becoming more interactive experiences capable of creating visualizations, charts, graphs, or even mini apps, as needed. Follow-up questions from AI Overviews will push users into an AI Mode chat experience. The traditional “10 blue links” that defined Google in its earlier days are more of an afterthought, appearing below all this AI-fueled productivity.
But not everyone is on board with having AI made the default, which is why some are making the move to alternative search engines like DuckDuckGo, Kagi, and others.
DuckDuckGo says traffic to its no-AI search page was up threefold on Thursday, May 28, 2026 — a new high-water mark since Google’s search announcement — and the numbers are still climbing. The growth is not coming in spurts either, the company points out. Instead, visits are averaging roughly 84% above the baseline, suggesting a more sustained shift.
In addition to the new “no AI” search Chrome and Firefox extensions, DuckDuckGo will soon update its original DuckDuckGo Privacy Essentials extensions for Chrome, Firefox, Edge, and Opera to offer controls for AI search settings, as well.
What to Watch
AI outlook — possibilities, not facts
DuckDuckGo will continue to see increased traffic and user adoption as long as Google maintains its AI-first approach.
Likely · Within months
Other alternative search engines may also introduce or highlight AI-free options to capture market share.
Possible · Within months
Google may face continued pressure to offer more traditional search result options alongside its AI overviews.
Possible · Within months
Open Questions
- Will DuckDuckGo's AI-free approach attract a significant long-term user base?
- What is the long-term strategy of other alternative search engines like Kagi in response to AI integration?
- How will Google's AI-first search strategy evolve and impact user behavior further?
- What are the privacy implications of AI-generated search results compared to traditional link-based results?






