Google has been synonymous with search for years, and Bing—poor Bing—quickly became synonymous with sarcasm about why anyone would ever use Bing. Believe it or not, though, the two search engines aren’t as different as the jokes would have you believe.


We’ve talked about Bing’s biggest strengths before, but people often ignore that Bing also does a lot of things just about as well as Google. Is it better? Probably not, but I decided to give the two a real side-by-side comparison to find out how they stacked up.

The Contenders

You’re probably familiar with the two search engines already, but just for a refresher, here’s what we’re talking about:

Google : By far the most used search engine in the world, Google Search has been around since 1997 and is constantly improving with new smart results, advanced features, and integration with other Google products. As of February of this year, Google currently has 64.5% of the US’s search market share

: By far the most used search engine in the world, Google Search has been around since 1997 and is constantly improving with new smart results, advanced features, and integration with other Google products. As of February of this year, Google currently has Bing: Bing is the latest name for Microsoft’s search engine, previously called Windows Live Search and MSN Search. Bing brands itself as a “decision engine”, aiming to present results with more real-world context than just finding text on a page. Bing also powers Yahoo’s search, which, coupled with Bing, serves 32.6%


Basic Layout and Search Features

Both sites look and feel remarkably similar when it comes to basic search results. In fact, except for the font and the logo at the top of the page, it’d be easy to confuse one for the other. Here are the main differences I’ve noticed after poking around in each:

Bing’s video search is significantly better than Google’s. This is the biggest difference between the two (and why Bing has a bit of a reputation as “the porn search engine”). Instead of giving you a vertical list of videos with small thumbnails, it gives you a grid of large thumbnails that you can click on to play without leaving Bing. For some videos, it’ll even give you a preview if you hover over.

Bing gives more autocomplete suggestions than Google does in most cases. Google only gives four, while Bing gives eight. This is particularly useful if you’re using autocomplete to find alternative products get wildcard suggestions

Google’s shopping suggestions show up more often than Bing’s do, and they’re generally much better. So if you’re trying to find out which stores carry a certain product, or where to find the best price online, Google will be better than Bing.

Google’s Image Search interface feels a bit smoother when you use it, though Bing has one or two more advanced options like “Layout” (which lets you search for portrait or landscape images). Bing’s image search also lets you remove certain parts of your search term with one click, which is kind of cool (I wish it did this for all searches).

Bing puts related searches and related image searches to the right of your search results, while google puts them near the bottom. This isn’t really a good or a bad thing; it’s just a difference.


Bing has also adopted many of Google’s “smart searches”, like movie showtimes, unit conversions, local weather, information about famous people, and stuff like that. Most of this stuff is remarkably similar, though Google has a few things that Bing doesn’t, like health info and release dates for movies and video games. If you’re relying on smart searches, go with Google. (One exception: if you’re searching for flights, Bing has a neat feature that predicts whether ticket prices will go up or down.)


Advanced Features and Nerdy Stuff


Surprisingly, the two engines are pretty comparable when it comes to advanced operators. The syntax might be a bit different between each (here’s a list of Google’s advanced operators, and here’s a list of Bing’s), but there’s a lot of overlap. Google has more, though, and is going to be better for advanced searches except for two searches that only Bing can do:

contains: , which allows you to search for pages that contain a certain filetype (for example, PDF). On Google, this will only link you to the PDF files themselves, but on Bing, it’ll give you pages that contain links to PDF files, which can be useful.

, which allows you to search for pages that contain a certain filetype (for example, PDF). On Google, this will only link you to the PDF files themselves, but on Bing, it’ll give you pages that contain links to PDF files, which can be useful. linkfromdomain: , which shows you the best-ranked pages linked to from a certain site (for example, the best sites Lifehacker has linked to on a certain subject).

, which shows you the best-ranked pages linked to from a certain site (for example, the best sites Lifehacker has linked to on a certain subject). feed: , which lets you search for RSS feeds on a particular subject.

Google also has a few extra niceties built-in to its search, like reverse image search (which is incredible), instant search (which shows results as you type), voice search (which lets you search with your microphone), and—of course—integration with Google services like Gmail, Google Now, and Google Contacts. If you use a lot of Google stuff, it’s hard to ever want to pull away from its search.




Bing Rewards is also worth a mention: if you sign up for this neat service, you can rack up points for every search you perform on Bing, which you can eventually redeem for gift cards to Amazon, Starbucks, GameStop, or even donate to your favorite charity.

Lastly, and this is a minor quibble, but an interesting one: if you do a site-specific search on Google, it won’t show you any Knowledge Graph information. Bing will.


Clever Uses for Reverse Image Search Reverse image search is one of those handy innovations that's often hard to come up with specific… Read more

Quality of Search Results


Now we get to what really matters most: the actual search results. None of the above features really matter if one site doesn’t give you what you’re looking for.

When it comes to basic searches, I found that both engines, even if they displayed different results, generally gave me what I wanted. One search might be a little better on Bing (“ raspberry pi ”), while another might be better on Google (“ avengers age of ultron ”), but overall neither produced horrifically bad or largely different results. I was surprised to find that Bing did a better job with some, but only mildly so.


The real differences shined through when searching for something really specific, like technical issues (“ project64 mario kart too fast ”). If the answer to your question is buried in a large forum or blog somewhere, Google is probably going to do a better job of finding it and organizing the results. And the more specific the question, the more Google wins.

The Winner: Google (but By Less Than You’d Think)

I don’t think anyone’s surprised that, objectively, Google is the better search engine. It’s been around longer, it’s by far the most popular, and it’s constantly innovating. I was surprised at how similar the two search engines were in terms of features. Bing even does a few things better, like video. But, while I occasionally preferred Bing’s results to Google for general searches, Google’s ability to dig things out of the darkest corners of the internet is just too valuable. It’s a closer call than I expected, but Google is still the best search engine around.