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These Google Search Alternatives Actually Let You Control Your AI Experience

Source: LifehackerView Original
lifestyleMay 21, 2026

It's no secret that Google, like most big tech companies, has gone all-in on AI. The company believes it is the future, and, as such, has injected the technology into every one of its products, none more visibly than Google Search. Over the past two years, Google has introduced AI summaries that seek to answer your questions, pulling the information from websites that fewer and fewer users are actually visiting and reading for themselves.

Given this trend, it should hardly come as a surprise that during I/O 2026, Google announced "a new era for AI Search." This "era" essentially marks an expansion of its investment in AI in Search: In addition to rolling out its new Gemini 3.5 Flash model to Search, Google is making it even easier to use its AI-generated results (or, perhaps, harder to avoid them). You can now expand an AI Overview to continue the conversation in AI Mode, and keep receiving answers without engaging with any primary sources yourself. Google will also soon offer select users access to Search "agents," which can take actions on your behalf on the web.

Google's goal is to make Search synonymous with AI, which will no doubt please Google's investors, but will also alienate some users. Many of still search Google seeking good results for our queries, and not AI-generated summaries and chats. Personally, I'm not interested in "continuing the conversation" with Google's AI: I want to find relevant websites to read and explore. As such, I went looking for Google Search alternatives that either don't use AI, or let you disable all AI features entirely. Here are five of your best options.

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Kagi

Credit: Lifehacker

Kagi is a favorite among tech fans who want more control over their search experience. It includes perks like ad-free search and a high level of customization, but the real benefit for this discussion concerns its AI features: Kagi has them, and you can use them if you want to, but you can also avoid them entirely—and even use the browser to fight back against AI results on the web.

By default, Kagi keeps its AI "Quick Answer" setting behind a keyboard shortcut. If you want to use it, you'll need to enter a question mark at the end of your query. If you don't use question marks, you'll never see Kagi's version of AI Overviews, but you can also disable the feature entirely from Kagi's settings. That way, even if you ask Kagi a more formal question, you'll get the usual website links—not an AI-generated answer. Kagi also includes an option (appropriately called SlopStop) to block certain results that the search engine believes are AI-generated. That applies to both image and video results, too.

Kagi not only allows you to return to a simpler time of endless blue links and zero AI-generated answers, but it actively works to block any known AI content from entering your feed. The only downside is that Kagi isn't free: With other search engines, you pay for your use by being shown ads, but with Kagi, you pay with actual money. Your first 100 searches are free, and paid plans start at $5 per month.

Startpage

Credit: Lifehacker

Startpage's shtick is all about user privacy. According to the company, this search engine removes your personally identifying information each time you search. Rather than sending your request from you directly, Startpage will anonymously send the query to its search providers on your behalf and return the results to you without sharing your data. The search engine doesn't save your search history, and its measures should prevent your searches from being tracked across sites.

These privacy perks aside, Starpage has few AI features to worry about. By default, you shouldn't have to deal with them at all on the web app, but you can check under settings for any that may appear—Startpage says it has an optional Summary feature that uses AI to generate result synopses, but I don't even have the option in my Startpage settings. (Summary appears to be separate from Startpage's Instant Answer feature, which doesn't seem to use AI, but which can also be turned off in settings.) It's a similar story on mobile: If you're using the iOS app, the company says it offers optional AI features, but I don't see them in my settings there either. The company also offers a private AI app called Vanish, but that's unrelated to its search engine.

Startpage isn't as feature-filled as other search engines, but that might be to its benefit. In my experience, it offers a standard search experience out of the box, without much (if any) AI.

Qwant

Credit: Lifehacker

Qwant, as far as I can tell, has only one AI feature to speak of, called Flash Answer. Like other search engine, this

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