The best content strategy uses both evergreen and seasonal content, not as an either/or choice, but as complementary investments with different return profiles. Evergreen content compounds over time, earning authority and citations for months or years. Seasonal content drives short-term traffic, earns topical links, and signals that a brand is current and engaged with its industry. The strategic question isn't which type is better. It's how to allocate between them and how to maintain each type to perform in AI search as well as traditional search.
The simplest test for evergreen content: would this article still fully answer the reader's question a year from now? If yes, it's evergreen. If the answer depends on a specific moment in time, an event, a trend, a season, it's seasonal.
Evergreen content is timeless material whose underlying information remains stable and accurate regardless of when it's accessed. A guide to how marketing attribution works is evergreen. An explainer on the 5 Cs strategic framework is evergreen. A case study showing how a client grew from point A to point B is evergreen, because the methodology documented in it doesn't expire even if the numbers eventually look modest by future standards.
Seasonal content is tied to a specific window of relevance: a season, an industry event, a news cycle, or a product cycle. Year-end roundups, trend predictions, holiday gift guides, event recaps, and reactive commentary on industry developments are all seasonal. These pieces earn high short-term engagement and can drive strong link acquisition during their peak window, but their search value decays after that window closes.
| Dimension | Evergreen | Seasonal |
|---|---|---|
| Traffic pattern | Slow build, then steady compounding over months/years | Sharp spike during relevant window, then decline |
| Return profile | Compounding, high long-term ROI, lower short-term | Front-loaded, high short-term, limited residual value |
| Backlink profile | Earns links continuously over time from new content referencing it | Earns links during peak window; link rate drops sharply after |
| AI citation behavior | High citation potential, but requires active maintenance to stay within 13-week freshness window | Strong during peak; AI systems deprioritize outdated seasonal pieces quickly |
| Production effort | Higher upfront investment; lower maintenance cost per unit traffic | Faster to produce; higher total production cost over time at same traffic volume |
| Refresh requirement | Quarterly updates recommended; substantive updates 3.8x more valuable than timestamp-only | Annual refresh or archive decision after window closes |
| Best formats | How-to guides, framework explainers, glossary entries, case studies, research papers, FAQs | Year-end roundups, trend predictions, event coverage, product launches, holiday campaigns |
Before AI search, "evergreen" largely meant "set it and forget it." A well-optimized guide on a stable topic could maintain rankings for years with minimal intervention. That model is no longer accurate for AI-generated visibility.
Arcalea's AEO research (March 2026) found that AI systems including ChatGPT, Perplexity, Google AI Overviews, and Claude heavily weight content recency as a citation signal. Pages updated within 30 days receive 3x more AI citations than pages older than 90 days. More critically, the effective shelf life for AI citation purposes is approximately 13 weeks, after which, a page that hasn't been substantively updated starts losing citation priority regardless of how strong its underlying content is.
The key distinction: Substantive updates, adding a current data point, updating a statistic, expanding a section based on new examples, earn 3.8x more AI citations than timestamp-only refreshes. Simply changing the "Last Updated" date without changing the content provides minimal lift. The content itself needs to evolve.
This creates a new operational definition for evergreen content. A piece isn't truly evergreen if it just sits unchanged for years; it's only evergreen in the traditional SEO sense. For AI visibility, even the best-structured, most accurate evergreen content needs a quarterly maintenance cadence to stay within the freshness window that AI systems prefer.
Seasonal content, paradoxically, has a built-in freshness signal, it's being published during its peak relevance window, which means it naturally falls within the 30-day freshness window that AI systems reward. The challenge for seasonal content is the opposite: what to do after the window passes. Options include archiving with a redirect to a related evergreen hub, converting the piece into a maintained annual resource (turning a "2024 Trends" article into a "20XX Trends" evergreen format), or simply leaving it in place and accepting that it will naturally fade from AI visibility.
There is no single correct ratio of evergreen to seasonal content. The right mix depends on your industry's natural demand cycle, your content team's capacity, and your primary traffic objectives. That said, a few principles hold broadly.
For most B2B brands, professional services firms, and SaaS companies, a starting ratio of roughly 70% evergreen to 30% seasonal is defensible. This ratio maximizes the compounding authority that evergreen content builds over time, while preserving enough capacity to respond to trends, cover industry events, and publish timely commentary that earns short-term links and visibility.
News publishers, media companies, and consumer brands with strong seasonal demand curves (retail, travel, hospitality) should weight more heavily toward seasonal, sometimes as high as 60-70% seasonal, 30-40% evergreen. Their audiences expect current information, and much of their monetization depends on capturing demand during specific windows.
Educational brands, professional certification providers, and content-heavy platforms that serve durable informational queries should weight heavily toward evergreen. A well-maintained library of 200 high-quality evergreen guides will consistently outperform a collection of 400 trend-driven pieces whose relevance decays quickly.
Translating the evergreen/seasonal mix into an actual content calendar requires thinking in two parallel tracks: new production and ongoing maintenance. Both require dedicated capacity, a common mistake is treating evergreen refreshes as lower priority than new production, when in practice a well-executed refresh on a high-traffic page typically generates more traffic lift per hour of effort than most new pieces.
The quarterly audit in Q4 is particularly important. This is when to make archive-or-update decisions on seasonal content from the prior year and to identify evergreen pieces that have drifted outside the 13-week AI freshness window. Pages that drove strong traffic in a prior period but haven't been updated in 90+ days should be prioritized for substantive refresh before the new year.
Whether the piece is evergreen or seasonal, the structural signals that improve AI citation probability are consistent across both types. FAQPage schema on any article with a question-and-answer format provides a 2.7x citation lift over unstructured content. Answer-first structure in the opening paragraphs is critical because 44.2% of all AI citations are drawn from the first 30% of a page. A visible "Last Updated" date provides a 47% lift in citation rate on its own, a cheap, high-return addition to every piece.
For evergreen content specifically, the investment in semantic entity richness pays off at scale. Pages with 15 or more recognized semantic entities show 4.8x higher AI citation probability. This means evergreen guides should be structured to explicitly name and define related concepts, link to authoritative sources, include author attribution with structured Person schema, and where possible connect to a broader Knowledge Panel or Wikipedia entry for the primary topic.
Content freshness rule of thumb: Add a real data point, update a statistic to the current year, or expand a section based on reader questions at least once per quarter for your top 20 evergreen pages. This alone, the single highest-ROI AEO maintenance action available to most brands, keeps the page within the AI freshness window and earns compounding citation benefit.