The Source · Platforms

Get cited in Grok

xAI's assistant, built into X, with answers grounded heavily in real-time posts and the live web.

xAI · verified June 19, 2026

Grok is xAI's assistant, and its distinguishing trait is how heavily it leans on real-time signals (the live activity on X and the open web) when it forms an answer. That makes Grok the engine where current presence and active conversation count for more than on engines that lean on a slower-moving index. It is also, like Claude, an engine many visibility tools simply do not track, so brands often have no read on their Grok standing at all.

How Grok decides what to cite

Grok grounds its answers in a blend of real-time platform activity and live web retrieval, so recency and active discussion weigh heavily. The open web remains part of its grounding, which means crawlable, well-structured pages still matter alongside the real-time layer.

What Grok privileges

How CiteSurge wins Grok

CiteSurge includes Grok in the same observation set as every other engine, adjudicates each appearance, and pairs durable open-web citability work with the earned, real-time presence Grok rewards, covering a surface most tools leave dark.

Crawler access for Grok: Grok operates no dedicated public AI crawler: it blends live X activity with open-web retrieval, so there is no Grok-specific user-agent to allow. What matters is keeping your pages broadly crawlable so the open-web layer Grok draws on can reach them.

Why Grok matters

Grok reaches an engaged, conversation-led audience and rewards brands that are present in the current discussion. Measuring it closes a blind spot competitors may already be exploiting.

Questions about Grok

Grok pulls from X in real time, so can a website even influence it?

Yes. Grok blends real-time platform activity with live open-web retrieval, so crawlable, well-structured pages remain part of what it grounds on, alongside current discussion. CiteSurge works both the durable web layer and the earned-presence layer Grok rewards.

Why track Grok when most tools ignore it?

That is precisely why. An engine no one measures is an engine where a competitor can quietly win share while you have no read on it at all. CiteSurge observes Grok in the same price as the other six engines so the blind spot closes.

The other engines

Grok is one of seven engines CiteSurge observes in a single program, counted once per project with no per-engine credits. Compare how the others decide what to cite:

Engine behavior verified against CiteSurge's live observation pipeline. AI engines change models, crawlers, and citation behavior often, so confirm current specifics on xAI's own documentation before relying on a detail.