A rich result in Google takes up more visual space than a normal one, includes additional information that stands out from neighboring results, and offers the user valuable information before they click. The result: significantly higher CTR. Industry studies show improvements of 20–30% in CTR for pages with active rich results. Schema markup is the mechanism that activates them.
What exactly are rich results?
Rich results (previously called rich snippets) are Google search results that include additional visual elements: star ratings, images, prices, author names, dates, numbered steps, expandable questions, or event information. Google generates them from the schema markup it detects on the page.
Important: schema markup is a necessary but not sufficient condition for rich results. Google also evaluates page quality, data accuracy, and content guidelines. A technically correct schema on a low-quality page may not activate the rich result.
Available rich results by schema type
FAQPage: the highest CTR impact for informational content
The FAQPage schema generates an expandable list of questions and answers directly in the SERP, enormously expanding the visual space of the result. It is especially valuable for blog articles, support pages, and product pages with a FAQ section. Each question and answer visible in the SERP is an additional opportunity to capture the user's attention.
Product: essential for ecommerce
The Product schema can activate the display of star ratings, price, and stock availability directly in the search result. For an organic result in a SERP dominated by shopping ads, having stars and price makes the organic result compete visually with paid ads.
HowTo: step-by-step in the SERP
The HowTo schema shows the steps of a guide directly in the search result, with optional images for each step. It is especially effective for "how to do X" searches where the user wants direct instructions.
Recipe: the most visually rich
The Recipe schema activates results with image, preparation time, difficulty level, calories, and ratings. In Google's recipe carousel, pages with well-implemented Recipe schema have a clear competitive advantage over those without it.
How to measure the impact of rich results on your CTR
- 1.Before implementation: note the current CTR of target pages in Google Search Console (performance → pages).
- 2.Implement the schema and wait for Google to process it (days to weeks depending on crawl frequency).
- 3.Verify in Google's Rich Results Test tool that the rich result is active.
- 4.Compare CTR in Search Console before and after the activation period.
- 5.Note: CTR changes can be due to multiple factors. To isolate the schema effect, compare similar pages with and without schema.
Google's guidelines for keeping rich results active
- •Don't mark content not visible to the user: if the schema describes data the user can't see on the page, Google may penalize you.
- •Don't use schema for misleading content: false ratings, incorrect prices, or descriptions that don't match reality can result in a manual action.
- •Keep schema updated: a Product schema with an incorrect price or an Event schema with a past date are signals of low quality.
- •One schema per type per page: don't repeat the same schema type on the same page with contradictory data.
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