If you ran a PageSpeed Insights test before May 2026 and run one today, you will notice something new sitting alongside your familiar Performance, Accessibility, Best Practices, and SEO results. There is a fifth category now: PageSpeed Insights Agentic Browsing. It does not show a number out of 100. It shows a ratio,3/3, 2/3, or 1/3. And most website owners have no idea it is there.
This guide covers everything you need to know about it and how to pass it.
What Is Agentic Browsing?
So, what is PageSpeed Insights agentic browsing exactly? It is Google’s way of measuring whether your website is readable, navigable, and usable by AI agents, not just human visitors or search crawlers.
AI agents like ChatGPT’s Browse mode, Google’s Project Mariner, Perplexity, and Anthropic’s Computer Use do not read your site the way a person does. They interact with the accessibility tree, a structured, machine-readable map of your page’s buttons, links, inputs, and headings. If that tree is poorly built, the agent fails. It cannot click the right button. It cannot complete a form. It cannot extract your content reliably.
PageSpeed Insights Agentic Browsing is Google’s first public attempt to put a diagnostic number on this exact problem.
When Did PageSpeed Insights Agentic Browsing Launch?
Google first experimented with the feature in Lighthouse 12.5 in late 2025. The real shift happened on May 7, 2026, when Lighthouse 13.3.0 moved it from experimental into the default configuration. That means every PageSpeed Insights test run from May 21, 2026 onward now returns PageSpeed Insights Agentic Browsing results automatically, no toggle, no setup.
Lighthouse agentic browsing is now part of every standard audit, which means your clients, prospects, and competitors can all see your ratio whether you prepared for it or not.
AI SEO & Traditional SEO
Not Sure Where Your Site Stands With AI or Search?
From agentic browsing readiness to on-page fundamentals, SEO in 2026 covers a lot of ground. Explore our full service offering to see how we handle both the technical side and the AI-visibility side, so your site performs for humans and machines alike.
Explore Our SEO Services →How Is It Scored?
This is where PageSpeed Insights Agentic Browsing behaves differently from every other Lighthouse category. There is no weighted 0 to 100 score. Instead, you get a pass/fail ratio across a set of checks, typically shown as 3/3, 2/3, or 1/3 in your report.
Google made this deliberate choice because the standards for the agentic web are still evolving. The PageSpeed Insights agentic browsing score is designed to be an actionable signal, not a ranking grade you can chase or game. Think of it as a readiness checklist, not a report card.
The three default checks are:
1. Accessibility Tree Quality: Every interactive element on your page needs a real programmatic name. Buttons need descriptive text. Form fields need proper labels. Links need anchor text that explains where they go. If an AI agent cannot read what a button does from the accessibility tree, it fails, and so do you.
2. Cumulative Layout Shift (CLS): AI agents interact with pages faster than humans. If your layout shifts while the agent is reading it, due to ads loading, images popping in, or fonts swapping, the agent may click the wrong target or miss content entirely. Keeping CLS low matters for humans and machines alike.
3. llms.txt File: This is the newest requirement. An llms.txt is a plain Markdown file placed at your domain root (yoursite.com/llms.txt) that gives AI agents a quick summary of who you are, what your site covers, and links to your key pages. It is written for a machine to read, not a human to browse. The audit checks that the file exists, contains at least one H1 heading, has meaningful content, and includes links.
There is a fourth check, WebMCP, but it is experimental and currently marked as “not applicable” for most content and marketing sites. It matters more for transactional sites with booking forms, checkouts, or complex interactive actions.
Does It Affect Your SEO Rankings?
No. Google has stated clearly that PageSpeed Insights Agentic Browsing results do not feed into Search rankings or AI Overviews. Your Performance, Accessibility, Best Practices, and SEO scores are calculated exactly as before. This category runs separately and does not touch them.
That said, PageSpeed Insights Agentic Browsing is a strong directional signal from Google. A growing share of web traffic is now agents, not humans. Sites that are easier for agents to read are more likely to be cited, quoted, and recommended by AI systems, which is the core of GEO (Generative Engine Optimization).
How to Score 3/3
The fixes are not exotic. Most of them are things good websites should already be doing:
- Use semantic HTML with real headings (H1, H2, H3 in logical order)
- Give every button, link, and form field a clear accessible name
- Keep CLS low by reserving image dimensions, stabilizing ad slots, and controlling font loading
- Create a well-formed llms.txt at your domain root with your business summary and key page links
- Skip WebMCP for now unless you run a booking, ecommerce, or membership site
The Bottom Line
PageSpeed Insights Agentic Browsing is not an alarm. It is a directional signal from Google that the web now has two kinds of visitors, humans and agents, and quality means serving both.
The category is experimental and will evolve, but the fundamentals it checks are things worth doing regardless: clean structure, stable layout, and a file that tells machines who you are. A 3/3 is within reach for almost any well-built site, and right now, most of your competitors are not even looking at it.


