> ## Documentation Index
> Fetch the complete documentation index at: https://docs.mentioned.com.au/llms.txt
> Use this file to discover all available pages before exploring further.

# Citation Score: How AI Engines Attribute Your Content

> Citation Score tracks how often AI engines cite your website as a source with a brand mention — a key signal of content authority in AI responses.

Citation Score measures how often AI engines not only mention your brand but also cite your website or content as a source within their response. It's the difference between an AI engine simply naming your brand and actively pointing a user to your content — and that distinction is one of the strongest signals of authority available in AI search visibility.

## What it measures

A citation occurs when an AI engine links to or directly attributes a piece of information to your domain as part of a response that also mentions your brand. Citation Score tracks the proportion of your brand mentions that come with this kind of source attribution.

This matters for two reasons. First, a cited mention actively directs users to your content, creating a real traffic opportunity. Second — and more importantly from a visibility standpoint — when an AI engine cites your website, it's signalling that it treats your content as a trustworthy, authoritative source. That's a stronger form of AI presence than an uncited name-drop, and it reflects well on your brand's standing with AI systems over time.

## How to read it

Citation Score is displayed as a percentage of your total brand mentions that include a citation. A higher score means a greater proportion of your brand mentions come with a direct link or attribution to your domain — not just a name-drop, but an active pointer to your content. That makes it a meaningful quality signal, not just a quantity one: AI engines are actively directing users to you to support their answers.

You can view Citation Score broken down by AI engine, which is particularly useful because citation behaviour varies significantly across platforms. Perplexity and Copilot tend to cite sources far more frequently than ChatGPT or Gemini, so you should expect a naturally higher Citation Score from those engines.

<Note>
  Not all AI engines provide citations in their responses, so this metric is most meaningful for engines that do — primarily Perplexity, Copilot, and Gemini when it's operating in Search mode. For engines that rarely cite sources, a low Citation Score does not necessarily reflect poorly on your content.
</Note>

## What to do when it moves

**If it rises:** AI engines are treating your content as an authoritative reference. Keep publishing high-quality, well-structured content that directly answers the questions your audience is asking. Consistent publishing signals to AI engines that your domain is a reliable, up-to-date source.

**If it falls:** check whether any of the pages being cited have changed recently — restructured URLs, removed content, or significant rewrites can cause AI engines to stop attributing information to those pages. Also consider whether competitors have published newer or more comprehensive content on the same topics, which may have displaced yours as the preferred source.

**If it's consistently low:** the most effective way to improve Citation Score is to invest in content that answers specific questions AI users are likely to ask. How-to guides, comparison pages, FAQ sections, and authoritative explainers tend to attract citations because they provide clear, attributable answers — exactly what AI engines look for when they need to back up a claim.

<Tip>
  Well-structured content — particularly FAQs, step-by-step guides, and content with clear headings that match common search queries — tends to earn more AI citations than general marketing copy. If improving Citation Score is a priority, consider auditing your existing content for structure and specificity before creating new pages.
</Tip>
