Google Search breaks all-time record for queries per second — thanks to the World Cup
Google Search logged the most queries per second in its nearly 28-year history, right after Argentina's stoppage-time comeback against Egypt at World Cup 2026.
Nearly 28 years of internet history, and Google had never been asked so many questions at once. The company has confirmed that Search hit its all-time record for queries per second — and the exact moment it happened tells you everything about this World Cup.
What sent Google searches through the roof?
Football, obviously. The historic spike came immediately after Argentina’s wild comeback against Egypt, settled by Enzo Fernández deep in stoppage time. Millions of people reached for their phones at the same instant to confirm what they had just watched — and that second became the busiest in the company’s history, according to Google search executives Nick Fox and Robby Stein.
What was the most searched query?
“Argentina vs Egypt”, unsurprisingly, followed closely by searches about the next match for Messi’s side and questions like “how many World Cup goals does Messi have”. Google didn’t publish hard numbers or methodology — it announced the record and kept the accounting to itself — but the message it wanted out there is clear: in an era when chatbots are eyeing the throne, the old search box is still the planet’s reflex when something extraordinary happens. The official highlights roll out on Google’s blog.
Not bad for a tournament that hasn’t even reached the semi-finals. If a last-16 game broke the counter, wait for 19 July.
By Oliver Grant
Image: Google / Wikimedia Commons (public domain)