OpenAI announced on Monday that its ChatGPT-powered internet search feature is now available to all users, marking a significant escalation in its competition with Google.
While OpenAI had previously introduced search capabilities in October, the feature was limited to paid subscribers. Now, the expanded rollout allows all ChatGPT users, including those on the free tier, to access “fast, timely answers” supplemented with links to relevant web sources—eliminating the need for traditional search engines.
The upgrade enables ChatGPT to deliver real-time information from the web, bridging the gap that previously limited AI chatbots like ChatGPT and Anthropic’s Claude to outdated knowledge due to time cutoffs.
How the Feature Works
“We’re bringing search to all logged-in free users of ChatGPT,” said OpenAI’s Chief Product Officer Kevin Weil in a YouTube announcement video. “This means it will be available globally on every platform where ChatGPT is used.”
The updated search interface shares similarities with Google’s search results and Google Maps but notably excludes clutter from advertisements. It also mirrors Perplexity, an AI-powered search engine, by providing conversational answers while referencing sources directly.
“We’re really just making the ChatGPT experience better with up-to-date information from the web,” said Adam Fry, ChatGPT Search product lead. “We’re rolling this out to hundreds of millions of users, starting today.”
Users can activate the search functionality via a web search icon or enable it by default.
AI Search Versus Traditional Engines
The addition of real-time search raises questions about OpenAI’s relationship with Microsoft, its largest investor. Microsoft has been pushing its Bing search engine to challenge Google’s dominance, while OpenAI continues to integrate cutting-edge capabilities into its products.
Unlike Google and Microsoft, which combine AI-generated answers with traditional web results, OpenAI has chosen to integrate search directly into ChatGPT, offering users a seamless and ad-free experience.
OpenAI’s Rapid Rise
The move is part of OpenAI CEO Sam Altman’s broader strategy to position the company as an internet powerhouse. OpenAI recently reached a $157 billion valuation during a fundraising round, which included investments from Microsoft, SoftBank, and AI chipmaker Nvidia.
This expansion reinforces OpenAI’s intent to dominate the AI and search landscape, directly challenging Google’s long-held supremacy while reshaping how users access information online.

