Most search operators are easy to remember. It's a short command that sticks in your mind.Using them effectively, however, is another matter altogether.
Search Operators on Google: The Complete Guide
Force an exact-match search. Use this to refine results for ambiguous searches, or to exclude synonyms when searching for single words.
Search for X or Y. This will return results related to X or Y, or both. Note: The pipe (|) operator can also be used in place of “OR.”
Search for A and B. This will return only results related to both A and B. Note: Regular searches don't really matter, since Google defaults to "AND". But it’s very useful when paired with other operators.
Exclude a term or phrase. In our example, any pages returned will be related to gates but not Microsoft (the company).
Example: gates-microsoft
Acts as a wildcard and will match any word or phrase.
Example: Bill * microsoft
A search can be controlled by combining multiple terms or search operators.
Search for prices. Also works for Euro (€), but not GBP (£) 🙁
Basically, Google has a dictionary built in. A card-like result will appear in the SERPs showing a word's meaning.
Example: define:knowledge
Returns the most recent cached version of a web page (if it's indexed, of course).
Restrict results to those of a certain filetype. E.g., PDF, DOCX, TXT, PPT, PPTX, etc. Note: The “ext:” operator can also be used—the results are identical.
Limit results to those from a specific website.
Find sites related to a given domain.
Find pages with a certain word (or words) in the title. In our example, any results containing the word “apple” in the title tag will be returned.
Similar to “intitle,” but only results containing all of the specified words in the title tag will be returned.
Find pages with a certain word (or words) in the URL. For this example, any results containing the word “apple” in the URL will be returned.
Similar to “inurl,” but only results containing all of the specified words in the URL will be returned.
Find pages containing a certain word (or words) somewhere in the content. For this example, any results containing the word “apple” in the page content will be returned.
Similar to “intext,” but only results containing all of the specified words somewhere on the page will be returned.
Proximity search. Find pages containing two words or phrases within X words of each other. For this example, the words “apple” and “iphone” must be present in the content and no further than four words apart.
Find the weather for a specific location. This is displayed in a weather snippet, but it also returns results from other “weather” websites.
See stock information (i.e., price, etc.) for a specific ticker.
Force Google to show map results for a locational search.
Find information about a specific movie. Also finds movie showtimes if the movie is currently showing near you.
Convert one unit to another. Works with currencies, weights, temperatures, etc.
Find news results from a certain source in Google News.
Not exactly a search operator, but acts as a wildcard for Google Autocomplete.
Example: apple CEO _ jobs
Here are the ones that are hit and miss, according to my testing:
Search for a range of numbers. In the example below, searches related to “WWDC videos” are returned for the years 2010-2014, but not for 2015 and beyond.
Find pages that are being linked to with specific anchor text. For this example, any results with inbound links containing either “apple” or “iphone” in the anchor text will be returned.
Similar to “inanchor,” but only results containing all of the specified words in the inbound anchor text will be returned.
Find blog URLs under a specific domain. This was used in Google blog search, but I’ve found it does return some results in regular search.
SIDENOTE. Google blog search discontinued in 2011
Find results from a given area.
SIDENOTE. Not officially deprecated, but results are inconsistent.
Find news from a certain location in Google News.
SIDENOTE. Not officially deprecated, but results are inconsistent.
Here are the Google search operators that have been discontinued and no longer work. 🙁
Force an exact-match search on a single word or phrase.
SIDENOTE. You can do the same thing by using double quotes around your search.
Include synonyms. Doesn’t work, because Google now includes synonyms by default. (Hint: Use double quotes to exclude synonyms.)
Find blog posts written by a specific author. This only worked in Google Blog search, not regular Google search.
Example: inpostauthor:”steve jobs”
SIDENOTE. Google blog search was discontinued in 2011.
Similar to “inpostauthor,” but removes the need for quotes (if you want to search for a specific author, including surname.)
Example: allinpostauthor:steve jobs
Find blog posts with specific words in the title. No longer works, as this operator was unique to the discontinued Google blog search.
Example: intitle:apple iphone
Find pages linking to a specific domain or URL. Google killed this operator in 2017, but it does still show some results—they likely aren’t particularly accurate though. (Deprecated in 2017)
Searches #hashtags. Introduced for Google+; now deprecated.
Example: #apple
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