The internet had a lot of search engines once. It does not anymore.
Ask.com officially shut down its search business on May 1, 2026, parent company IAC said. The site started as Ask Jeeves in 1997. It came with a butler mascot and a "type your question in plain English" pitch.
Now the butler is hanging up his suit.
A Brief History Of A Long Decline
Ask Jeeves launched at the height of the dot-com boom. It was one of the first search engines built around full questions, not keyword strings.
IAC bought the company in 2005. It rebranded the site Ask.com a year later. The hope was to reach more users.
Around 2010, Ask stopped building its own search tech. It moved to a question-and-answer site as bigger rivals pulled ahead.
The shift never closed the gap with Google. The site limped along on ads and Q&A traffic for 16 more years. Then IAC pulled the plug.
IAC Is Cleaning House
In its goodbye notice, IAC said the move "reflects a broader strategic shift away from legacy search operations."
The company has been trimming its lineup of brands for years. It is also looking for higher-margin spots in digital media. A higher margin just means more profit kept on each dollar of sales.
Ask.com thanked users in its goodbye message and signed off with one line. "Jeeves' spirit endures."
The closure ends one of the early dot-com names. It managed to stick around for 30 years on borrowed time.
The Bigger Picture For Investors
Search is one of the most one-sided markets on the web. Google handles the bulk of US search traffic. Bing and a handful of smaller sites split the rest.
AI search tools from OpenAI, Perplexity, and Anthropic have started taking pieces. But mostly from the same Google share. None of that traffic was flowing to Ask.com.
Old-school brands like Ask.com had no path forward. The cost to run a real search engine has gotten higher each year. And the ad dollars only flow to the top.
When IAC says "legacy search," that is the polite way of saying "no longer worth running." It is also a signal to other niche search sites that the math has caught up.
What This Means For The Search Market
The Ask.com shutdown is part of a bigger trend. Smaller search brands are closing. AI search is picking off Google's edges.
Investors who own internet stocks should watch how Google responds. The company has been pouring money into AI Overviews, its own answer-style results.
If those results start beating ChatGPT and Perplexity, Google holds the lead. If they don't, the cracks at the top get bigger.
What To Watch
Watch how IAC reinvests. The company has owned plenty of web brands, from Match Group to Vimeo. It has shown a willingness to spin off what is no longer growing.
The Ask.com shutdown frees up engineers, ad space, and a small but real chunk of brand traffic. Where that money goes next is the real story for shareholders.
A smart redeploy could lift IAC's stock. A weak one could keep it stuck.
