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Google Search Console Bug: Job Listing Data Logging Issue Confirmed

by theanh May 7, 2026

Overview of the Reporting Glitch

Google has officially acknowledged a technical bug within Google Search Console (GSC) that is causing a significant data gap for websites utilizing job posting features. The issue specifically affects the performance reports for the “Job listing” and “Job details” search appearance filters. Since April 16, 2026, many webmasters have noticed that their reports are showing zero clicks and zero impressions for these specific categories, leading to concerns about a sudden loss of visibility in Google Jobs.

The Core of the Issue: Logging vs. Ranking

In an official statement, Google clarified that this is strictly a logging and reporting error. The bug is preventing the Search Console interface from recording and displaying the data, but it is not affecting how Google indexes or ranks job listings.

According to Google: “A logging error is preventing Search Console from reporting impressions and clicks for ‘Job listing’ and ‘Job details’ Search appearance types from April 16, 2026 onward. We’re working to resolve this issue. This issue affects data logging only.”

Community Impact and Evidence

The issue came to light after several SEO professionals and digital marketers reported discrepancies across social media. A notable observation was that while GSC reported zero activity, internal analytics showed that traffic was still flowing. Some users noted that traffic continued to arrive via google_jobs_apply UTM parameters, proving that users were still finding and clicking on job listings in the SERPs, despite the reporting blackout in GSC.

What This Means for Website Owners

If you manage a job board or a corporate careers page and have noticed a sharp decline in overall impressions or clicks within your Search Console performance report, first check the ‘Search Appearance’ filter. If the drop is isolated to “Job listing” and “Job details,” you can rest assured that your organic visibility is likely intact.

Key Takeaways for SEOs:

  • Do Not Panic: A reported drop to zero in these specific filters is a result of a Google-side bug, not a penalty or a ranking drop.
  • Verify via Other Tools: Use Google Analytics or UTM tracking to confirm that traffic is still reaching your job pages.
  • Wait for the Fix: Google is actively working on a resolution to restore the logging capabilities.

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