When you search Google for something topical, you might see a cluster of headlines from news outlets, reporting breaking stories related to your search query. If you want to focus on those results, you can click to see More news, or navigate to the News tab at the top of the screen.
How these news sources are chosen depends on a variety of signals and factorsâjust the same as any other Google resultsâbut you now have the ability to set âpreferredâ sources that will always show up first.
Maybe you want more New York Times and less CNN, or vice versaâGoogle will let you pick your favorites (which hopefully include Popular Science). This can also help you surface content from news sources you wouldnât otherwise see in Google, like a local website covering your area.
How to set preferred sources
If you run a Google search on the web for something in the news, topical enough that the Top stories box comes up in your results, you can then click the small icon next to the Top Stories heading to pick your sources. The icon looks like a couple of rectangles with a plus symbol on top.
This brings up a new dialog, where you can pick specific sources. Just start typing the name of the website you want to read more often, and select it when it appears. You canât add any website on the internet though, only those that are regularly updated (and therefore qualify as news sites).
While thereâs no specific set of rules about how often preferred sources show up, Google says youâll see them âmore oftenâ than other outlets. As you add more sources, youâll see the option to Reload results based on your last search. This should now include your selected sources, as long as theyâve published something related to your search recently.
You can head back to this dialog via the Top stories box whenever you want, and add new preferred sources or remove existing onesâthereâs actually no limit to the number of sources you can add, so youâre able to cover a full gamut of perspectives and topics. You can also head to google.com/preferences/source directly in your web browser.
Many news websites have now started adding Add as a preferred source on Google badges on their articles, which you can click directly to jump to the preferred sources dialog. In our articles, youâll find itâs labeled Add Popular Science, just under the headline and sub-headingâclick the link to add us.
Preferred sources and Google News

Google hasnât officially said anything about how preferred sources in Google search relates to the dedicated Google News website and apps for Android and iOS, but there is some overlap here.
If you head to Google News on the web and then open the Following tab, youâll see that the preferred sources youâve selected via search are also listed under Sources. However, thereâs no way (at the moment) to add new sources from Google Newsâyou need to go through Google search.
On the dedicated Google News portal, if you click the three dots next to any story, you can opt to see more stories or fewer stories like itâbut you canât specifically request to see more of a particular publisher. You can block an outlet though, by choosing Hide all stories from⊠on the same menu.
There are other factors that affect your Google News selection as well, and if you scroll down the front page of Google News to the Your topics section, thereâs a Customize button to the right. Click on this, and you can tell Google News which topics you want to see more of (like sports, entertainment, and business, for example).
We may well see a closer connection between preferred sources and Google News in the future, but for now there are a variety of ways to customize the stories you get served up inside Googleâs portals. If youâre spending a lot of time reading news, itâs worth making sure your favorite publishers appear first.
