Fake Google Search Generator
Create a realistic fake Google search results page — custom query, results, URLs, and snippets. Preview in desktop or mobile layout, then download as PNG.
About 1,230,000,000 results (0.42 seconds)
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The Fake Google Search Generator that actually looks like Google
You know that feeling when you search something on Google and the results page just looks so unmistakably, distinctly Google? The clean white background. The four-colour logo. The blue title links. The grey breadcrumb URLs in that slightly smaller font. The little "About 1,230,000,000 results" line. Everyone on the planet recognises it on sight, without thinking. That instant recognition is exactly what makes a fake Google screenshot so useful — and so convincing.
This tool builds that page from scratch, in your browser, in under a minute. You type the search query, add however many results you want, write whatever title and description you like for each one, and the preview updates live. No Photoshop. No Figma. No downloading fonts or finding the exact shade of Google blue. It all just works.
And because we built both a Desktop and a Mobile preview, you get two completely different screenshot formats without changing your content. Switch between them any time — your results carry over.
Every field on the page, explained plainly
The settings panel on the left has two sections: Search Settings (the global bits at the top of the page) and Search Results (the individual cards). Here's what each one controls:
- ①Search Query — what appears inside the search bar. Type anything: a product name, a person, a question, or a niche long-tail phrase. This sets the "scene" for the whole results page.
- ②Results Count Text — the small grey line that reads "About 892,000,000 results (0.31 seconds)". Totally editable. You can make the query look incredibly popular or absurdly niche.
- ③Result Title — the large blue link at the top of each result card. Real Google titles are usually 50–70 characters. Keep yours in that range and they'll look natural. Go longer and they'll truncate, just like the real thing.
- ④Display URL — the domain and breadcrumb path shown below the title. Use the › character to separate path segments. The tool auto-pulls the domain from your URL to generate a favicon initial circle — so www.reddit.com › r › technology will show an "R" circle.
- ⑤Description / Snippet — the two or three grey lines of body text under the title. Write a compelling meta description, a partial quote, a news teaser, or anything that fits the mood of the result.
You can add as many result cards as you want using the "Add" button in the Search Results panel. Remove any card by clicking the "Remove" link in its header. The order you add them is the order they appear in the preview.
Fake Google Ads — the Sponsored results section
Real Google search pages almost always show one or two sponsored results at the very top, before the organic listings. They look nearly identical to normal results, except for the small grey "Sponsored" label and the slightly different URL treatment. This tool replicates that exactly.
Open the Sponsored Ads panel (below the Search Results section) and hit Add. A sponsored result will appear above the organic ones in both the desktop and mobile previews — separated from them by a thin divider line, just like real Google ads. Each ad has its own Title, Display URL, and Description.
This matters for realism. A real Google results page for a commercial query — something like "best noise-cancelling headphones" or "project management software" — almost always has ads at the top. A screenshot without them can look suspiciously clean to anyone who actually uses Google daily. Click "Load Demo" to see a full example with two sponsored ads for a sci-fi movie search.
Desktop mode vs Mobile mode — which one to use
The toggle in the preview toolbar switches between two completely different layouts. Neither is "better" — they serve different situations.
Desktop mode is the wide-format classic: Google wordmark on the left, a full-width search bar, navigation tabs (All, Images, Videos, News, Maps, More, Tools), and a single-column results area with comfortable padding. This is the format you'd use for a presentation slide, a YouTube video thumbnail, a blog post hero image, or any context where you want the full Google page visible. It exports as a wide PNG starting at 800px — sharp enough for any use case.
Mobile mode wraps the same content inside a phone mockup: a status bar showing 9:41, the iconic coloured-G search bar with mic icon, horizontally scrollable filter tabs, compact result cards, and a home indicator bar at the bottom. For mobile, you get two export buttons. "Download with Frame" includes the black phone bezel — good for sharing in a chat or story. "Download without Frame" gives you the pure screen content, which pastes cleanly into design files or other mockups.
Both export at 2× resolution. Both scroll during export — meaning if you've scrolled down inside the mobile preview to see a specific result, the downloaded image captures exactly that scroll position.
Who actually uses a fake Google search screenshot generator
Honestly, it's a wider list than most people expect.
- →YouTubers and video creators — using the screenshot as B-roll or showing "what comes up when you search X" as a visual hook in the first 10 seconds of a video.
- →SEO consultants and agencies — mocking up how a client's new title tag and meta description would look in search results before pushing changes live. Way faster than waiting for Google to crawl and re-index.
- →Teachers and media literacy educators — showing students how misinformation spreads, how result rankings can be manipulated, or how to critically read a search results page rather than trusting whatever shows up first.
- →Product managers and designers — building user research materials, wireframes, or demo decks that need a "realistic search" context without taking a live screenshot that could change or reveal sensitive data.
- →Meme makers and birthday roasters — "I Googled [friend's name] and this is what came up" is a perennial format that lands in any group chat. The phone frame version is especially effective because it looks like a genuine screenshot.
The tool is free for all of these. No account, no watermark, no usage cap. What you build stays in your browser — nothing is sent anywhere.
One thing to be clear about: this tool is for creative, educational, and entertainment use. Do not use generated screenshots to present fake search results as real ones, to mislead audiences about what ranks on Google, or to fabricate evidence of any kind. Screenshots are obviously fictional — they should stay that way when you share them.
Three quick tips for making your screenshot look genuinely real
The layout is already accurate — but the content you write determines whether the screenshot looks believable or obviously made-up. A few things that help:
1. Keep titles under 65 characters. Real Google title tags get cut off around that length. If your title is suspiciously long and complete, it reads as fake. Truncation actually adds realism.
2. Use real-looking domains for your display URLs. Something like www.techradar.com › best › headphones-2026 looks right. Something like totallyrealdomain.info › results doesn't. Use brands and publication names people recognise.
3. Mix organic results with a sponsored ad on commercial queries. If someone is searching for a product, service, or software — there are almost always ads. A results page with zero ads for "buy noise-cancelling headphones" looks suspicious to anyone who uses Google regularly. Even one sponsored result at the top adds a lot of realism.
Frequently asked questions
Is this tool completely free? Any hidden limits?
Yes, fully free — no account, no watermark, no rate limit, no catch. You can generate and download as many fake Google search screenshots as you want. Nothing is stored on any server; the image is created entirely in your browser and exists only until you close the tab or navigate away.
How many results and ads can I add?
There's no hard cap. You can add as many organic results and sponsored ads as you want. Practically speaking, 3–6 results mirror a real above-the-fold Google page most closely, but if you need 10 results for a long screenshot, go for it. The mobile preview scrolls, so all results are always accessible.
Will the downloaded image look blurry or pixelated?
No. The tool exports at 2× pixel ratio (roughly equivalent to a Retina screenshot), so the PNG you get is sharp and clean at normal display sizes. It holds up in presentations, video thumbnails, and social media posts without looking compressed or blocky.
What's the difference between Download with Frame and Download without Frame?
'Download with Frame' gives you the full phone shell — black bezel, rounded corners, the complete device look. It's perfect when you want the image to look like someone literally took a photo of their phone. 'Download without Frame' strips the bezel and gives you just the Google screen itself, which is better for compositing into design mockups, websites, or anywhere you want a pure UI crop.
Can I edit the Sponsored ads label text?
The 'Sponsored' badge text itself is fixed — that's part of what makes an ad look like a real Google ad. But everything else on each ad (the title, display URL, description copy) is fully editable. You can make the ad appear to come from any domain and say anything you want.
Does this work for Google search screenshots in languages other than English?
Yes. The search query, result titles, display URLs, descriptions, and the results count line all accept any Unicode text. You can type in Hindi, Arabic, Japanese, Spanish — whatever you need. The font used in the preview (Arial/Helvetica) covers most scripts. Some special characters in very niche scripts may not render if the system font doesn't have those glyphs, but for the major world languages it works fine.
Is this affiliated with Google?
No. FakeMockup is an independent tool and has no affiliation with Google LLC. The Google name, logo, and search interface are trademarks of Google LLC. This tool is intended solely for creative, educational, and entertainment use.
Disclaimer
This tool is provided for creative, educational, and entertainment purposes only. The generated images are fictional and should not be used to deceive, defraud, or misrepresent real search results to others. FakeMockup is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or connected to Google LLC in any way. "Google", the Google logo, and the Google Search interface are registered trademarks of Google LLC. This page may contain third-party advertising served by Google AdSense; the presence of ads does not imply any relationship between FakeMockup and Google beyond the standard AdSense publisher agreement.