TL;DR: When you move your business to a new location, AI assistants don't automatically update. They pull from dozens of sources — and if most of those sources still show your old address, that's where AI will send people. Fixing your Google listing alone won't cut it.
You moved locations six months ago. You updated your Google Business Profile. Maybe you even updated your website. You're done, right?
Not for AI.
When someone asks ChatGPT or Perplexity "where's a good [your service] near me," AI doesn't just check Google. It pulls from a web of sources — directories, data aggregators, social profiles, industry listings, your website's structured data, and cached content from months ago.
If eight out of ten sources still show your old address, AI goes with the majority. It's not trying to be difficult. It's doing exactly what a careful person would do: going with the most consistent information available.
And consistent, outdated information beats inconsistent, correct information almost every time.
Think about how you'd verify a business address if you weren't sure. You'd check a few places. If most of them agree, you'd go with that answer.
AI does the same thing — just at scale.
It looks at your website, your Google listing, Yelp, Facebook, Apple Maps, industry directories, data aggregators like Foursquare and Data Axle, and any other source it can find. When those sources agree, AI feels confident sharing that information.
When they don't agree, AI has a problem. It doesn't know which address is right. So it either shares the one that appears most often (probably your old address) or hedges with vague language. Sometimes it skips recommending you entirely because it can't be sure it's giving accurate information.
That's the worst-case scenario: you're not wrong in AI's eyes. You're unreliable. And unreliable businesses don't get recommended.
Most business owners underestimate how many places their old address lives. You updated the obvious ones — Google, your website, maybe Facebook. But your old address is likely still sitting on:
Each one of these is a signal AI can read. And every one that still shows your old location makes the problem worse.
The SBA's guide to updating your business information reminds owners to update lenders and government records after a move, but the same principle applies to your digital presence — stale information creates real problems.
Your website's structured data — the JSON-LD schema in your code — is one of the strongest signals AI reads. It's essentially a direct message from your website saying "here's exactly who we are, what we do, and where we are."
If your schema still has your old address, you're actively telling AI the wrong thing in the format it trusts the most.
This is especially common because schema lives in the code, not on the visible page. A business owner might update the address in the footer and the contact page but never touch the schema because they don't know it exists.
Check this yourself: right-click on your homepage, click "View Page Source," and search for your old street address. If it appears in a block of code that starts with "@type": "LocalBusiness", your schema is still pointing AI to the wrong place.
Updating your Google Business Profile is necessary but nowhere near sufficient. AI doesn't have a single source of truth. It builds confidence from consistency across many sources.
The fix requires a full audit of everywhere your business information appears online. That means:
This isn't glamorous work. But until AI sees your correct address consistently across the web, it doesn't trust the update. It thinks maybe you have two locations, or maybe the new address is wrong, or maybe it shouldn't mention you at all.
AI doesn't weigh "most recently updated" the way you'd expect. It weighs "most consistently reported." A brand-new update on one platform doesn't override ten other platforms showing something different.
This is worth understanding because it applies to more than just your address. Phone numbers, business hours, service descriptions — AI checks all of it for consistency. But address changes are the most common trigger for a mismatch, and the most damaging, because a wrong address sends a real person to the wrong place.
If you've moved in the past year, do the audit. If AI's still giving out your old address, every recommendation it makes is sending potential customers somewhere you aren't.
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Modern Humans helps local businesses get discovered by AI assistants like ChatGPT, Google AI, and Perplexity.
Franklin, Tennessee
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