What Google’s Navboost System Reveals About CTR and Rankings

What the DOJ antitrust trial revealed about Google’s click-based ranking system.

The DOJ v. Google antitrust trial made internal documents public — and revealed a system called Navboost that uses click data to adjust search rankings.

Publicado el : Marzo, 12 2026 Autora : William Scotia 4 min read

In our last issue, we shared evidence that CTR is a Google ranking factor — patents, engineer quotes, sworn testimony. But one piece of that evidence deserves a much closer look.

The DOJ v. Google antitrust trial in 2023 was the biggest tech antitrust case in a generation. And buried in the testimony and internal documents that became public, we got something the SEO industry had been waiting decades for: a name.

It’s called Navboost.

Navboost is Google's internal system that uses click data to adjust search rankings. It was revealed during the trial through internal documents and witness testimony. And according to that testimony, it's been running since around 2005.

Let that sink in. Google has had a system specifically designed to use click signals to influence rankings for roughly twenty years.

This wasn’t a leak or a rumor.

This came out in a federal courtroom. Under oath. With internal documents entered as evidence. We're not talking about a former employee speculating on a podcast or an anonymous source on a forum. This was the United States Department of Justice presenting Google's own records in open court.

What the testimony confirmed.

Witnesses testified that Navboost uses click data — specifically, data about which results users click on and how they interact with those results — to adjust search rankings. The system looks at user click patterns to determine which results are actually useful for a given query and promotes them accordingly.

Eric Lehman, a senior Google engineer, confirmed during testimony that click data is “the main signal used by Navboost” and that the system directly affects how results are ranked. This isn't an ambiguous reference to “user experience signals” or “engagement metrics.” It's a direct, sworn confirmation that clicks move rankings.

Why this matters more than any other evidence.

There's a hierarchy of proof in the SEO world. Blog posts and theories sit at the bottom. Case studies and experiments are better. Patent filings are strong but don't prove what's actually in production.

Sworn testimony in a federal antitrust trial, backed by internal documents? That's about as high as it gets.

Before this trial, the idea that Google uses click data for rankings was widely believed but technically unconfirmed. Google had been careful for years to avoid directly saying it. The antitrust trial removed any remaining ambiguity.

What this means for your SEO strategy.

If Google has been using click data to adjust rankings since 2005, then CTR isn't some fringe tactic or experimental signal. It's a core part of how Google has been ranking pages for most of the search engine's history.

That said, CTR is still one factor among many. We're not suggesting you ignore content quality, technical SEO, or backlinks. But the Navboost revelation makes it very hard to argue that clicks don't matter. And if clicks matter, then your click-through rate on the SERP is worth paying attention to.


SerpClix uses an army of over 400,000 real human clickers to boost your organic CTR. Get started with a free trial or log in to your dashboard to set up your next click order.

Tenga en cuenta que no existen garantías en la optimización de motores de búsqueda. Hay innumerables factores que pueden afectar las clasificaciones de los motores de búsqueda y, siendo realistas, la mayoría de los sitios deberían centrar sus esfuerzos en el SEO tradicional antes de pensar siquiera en utilizar técnicas no tradicionales como SerpClix. Todos los esfuerzos de SEO pueden implicar un elemento de riesgo. Algunas técnicas son ciertamente más riesgosas que otras. SerpClix emplea clickers humanos reales, por lo que creemos que nuestro servicio es mucho menos riesgoso que intentar utilizar métodos de clics automatizados o robóticos. Pero, como todas las estrategias de SEO, existe un elemento de riesgo porque el algoritmo de Google es desconocido y está sujeto a cambios en cualquier momento. Para obtener más información, consulte nuestras Preguntas frecuentes para compradores.

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